Skip to content

SideTracked - Maidstone Barracks Traditional Geocache

This cache has been archived.

Moonstone2001: This one won't stay around for long so time to say goodbye thanks for all the finders

More
Hidden : 11/9/2013
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Related Web Page

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:


We have Motorway Mayhem and we have A-Road Anarchy. Now a series for public transport users! 

SideTracked Caches are intended to provide quick cache-and-dashes at train stations.

For more information on SideTracked Caches, please visit SideTracked

 

The station opened later than the rest of the northern half of the Medway Valley Line, coming into use on 1st July 1874. It formed the SER's attempt to protect its Maidstone traffic from the LC&DR, which had reached the county town exactly a month previously by means of the independent ''Sevenoaks, Maidstone & Tunbridge Railway''. The rival's station was positioned closer to the town centre than the SER's Maidstone, thus the latter company was determined to level the playing field. Barracks station merely consisted of two platform faces and a timber shelter, the latter on the ''down'' side. A footbridge was not provided here, the existing road bridge being suffice for linking the platforms. The LC&DR's route to Maidstone soon began to gather momentum and importance with the doubling of the line from Otford in August 1875, and the SER followed with enhancements to Barracks the next year by erecting a fairly sizeable single-storey clapboard station building on the ''up'' platform, complete with a canopy which extended to approximately double this structure's length. Although this structure did not have the grandeur which Maidstone East latterly had when the LC&DR provided a brick building at the station, straddling the tracks, it was still a pleasing classic countryside design - at least it had toilets for waiting passengers! More development occurred once again in the following year, four parallel sidings being laid on the ''down'' side, trailing off in the north eastern direction and terminating behind the platform. Two additional sidings were soon provided on the same side to serve the adjacent malt houses.

 

Direct electric services from London via Dartford were possible from 2nd July 1939 with the extension of third rail from Gravesend to Maidstone West. For this, the four sidings at Barracks station were electrified and provided with concrete walkways, capable of accommodating four-car EMUs. The Southern Railway rebuilt the platforms in prefabricated concrete, delivered from its works at Exmouth Junction, but little else at this intriguing station changed. The 12th June 1961 saw the remaining half of the Medway Valley Line between Maidstone West and Paddock Wood electrified, but this also marked a time when those stations on the northern half of the route, which had already received the ''juice'' in 1939, acquire completely new features, or replacements. Cuxton received a pressed-steel footbridge, but although Barracks did not require such a structure, it did see a replacement of the wooden staircases leading down from the road bridge. The then new equivalents were of prefabricated concrete construction. The aforementioned industrial sidings here also went out of use around this time. In the early 1980s the main canopy on the ''up'' side was truncated, it subsequently stretching only the width of the timber station building. The EMU sidings went out of use just before this occurred, but further station reductions were still yet to occur. The most major of these took place in 1991 when both the delightful ''up'' clapboard building and ''down'' waiting shelter were demolished, subsequently being replaced by far more inferior accommodationthe dreaded bus shelter. Thereafter, no ticket issuing or proper passenger facilities were in evidence at Barracks and a single semaphore signal, located at the northern end of the ''up'' platform, broke the boredom for waiting passengers. This was until its own removal in October 2005 as the whole Medway Valley Line switched to colour aspect light control.

 

You are looking for a micro screw top tube

There is no need to enter the station to find this cache!

 

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Ng gur raq bs gur envyvatf arkg gb fbzr fgnvef ybbx qbja

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)