List of Great Western Railway Heritage Sites - Listed Structures - Grade II Listed

Grade II Listed

  • Ashburton goods shed, Devon
  • Bovey railway station, Devon
  • Bradford-on-Avon railway station, Wiltshire
  • Chippenham railway station, Wiltshire
  • Dawlish railway station, Devon
  • Devil's Bridge, Bleadon, Somerset
  • Exeter goods transfer shed, Devon
  • Exeter St Thomas railway station, Devon
  • Exminster railway station, Devon
  • Frome railway station, Somerset
  • Gatehampton Railway Bridge, Goring, Berkshire
  • Hele and Bradninch goods shed, Devon
  • Maiden Newton railway station, Dorset
  • Minehead railway station, Somerset
  • Moulsford Railway Bridge, Oxfordshire
  • Penzance railway station, Cornwall
  • Reading railway station, Berkshire
  • Redruth railway station, Cornwall
  • St Austell railway station, Cornwall
  • St Erth railway station, Cornwall
  • Salisbury goods shed, Wiltshire
  • Sandford and Banwell railway station, Somerset
  • Slough railway station, Berkshire
  • Stoke Canon signal box, Devon
  • Taunton railway station, Somerset
  • Torquay railway station, Devon
  • Torre railway station, Devon
  • Tregenna Castle Hotel, St Ives, Cornwall
  • Wells goods shed, Somerset
  • Weston-super-Mare signal box, Somerset
  • Williton railway station, Somerset
  • Windsor and Eton Central railway station, Berkshire
  • Yatton railway station, Somerset

Read more about this topic:  List Of Great Western Railway Heritage Sites, Listed Structures

Famous quotes containing the words grade and/or listed:

    Life begins at six—at least in the minds of six-year-olds. . . . In kindergarten you are the baby. In first grade you put down the baby. . . . Every first grader knows in some osmotic way that this is real life. . . . First grade is the first step on the way to a place in the grown-up world.
    Stella Chess (20th century)

    Although then a printer by trade, he listed himself in this early directory as an antiquarian. When he was asked the reason for this he replied that he always thought every town should have at least one antiquarian, and since none appeared for the post, he volunteered.
    —For the State of Iowa, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)