Hagley railway station

Trains call in each direction, running to or through Kidderminster westwards and through Stourbridge and Birmingham Snow Hill eastwards.

[2] When it was refurbished in late 2011, the colours reverted from its former navy blue and white to the original GWR cream and salmon livery.

[4] The original village of Hagley was a mile away uphill; when its station first appeared in timetables in 1862 as part of the Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton Railway, it was a rough and ready structure with platforms built of old sleepers.

With the line subsequently being taken over by the Great Western Railway, and the expansion of Lower Hagley along the nearby road to Worcester, there was a demand for a proper building with a station approach up to it.

In the former goods yard north of the station on Brake Lane were coal merchants and the offices responsible for dealing with livestock brought by train for sale at the Monday cattle market, which was located uphill in the old village (at the junction of the A491 and the A456).