Bede Metro station

Bede
Tyne & Wear Metro
Location
Place Jarrow
Local authority South Tyneside
WGS84 54°58′27″N 1°27′56″W / 54.9742°N 1.4656°W / 54.9742; -1.4656Coordinates: 54°58′27″N 1°27′56″W / 54.9742°N 1.4656°W / 54.9742; -1.4656
Fare zone information
Network One zone 2 & 3
Metro zone B & C
Original (1979) zone 37
Station code BDE
Usage
Metro Usage 0.155[1] million
History
Opened 1984-03-24
List of stations

Bede is the name of a Tyne and Wear Metro station in Jarrow, England. It is named after the Venerable Bede, a monk who established St Paul's monastery nearby during the 7th century. It serves an area mostly consisting of industrial estates, and is immediately adjacent to the J. Barbour & Sons clothing factory.

Bede station was new when the Metro line to South Shields opened, although the route had opened in 1872. It was the start of the double track section towards South Shields, as the parallel BR single-track freight line only ran as far as the nearby Simonside wagon works (it closed in the late 1980s), but now the double track starts further west, where the branch to Jarrow oil terminal diverges. Originally on the Green line, it is now on the Yellow line.

Some ¾ mile (1¼ km) west of the station is St Bedes Junction, the site of a 1915 rail crash in which 18 people were killed when a South Shields to Newcastle passenger train crashed into a banking engine.

It was one of the least used stations on the Tyne and Wear Metro during 2015/16, with just 155,000 passengers a year.

References

  1. "Automated Announcements / Track Map / Usage Statistics". 2015–2016. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
Preceding station   Tyne and Wear Metro   Following station
towards St James via the Coast
Yellow line
towards South Shields


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