Hampsthwaite railway station served the village of Hampsthwaite, North Yorkshire, England from 1866 to 1950 on the Nidd Valley Railway.
The station was opened on 1 July 1866 by the North Eastern Railway.
[2] Tenders for its construction were invited in 1864 after authorisation in August of that year; despite being an attractive design by Thomas Prosser, the NER Architect, it was not like his characteristic stepped-gable stone stations at Ripley, Birstwith, Dacre and Pateley Bridge.
There were never any freight facilities at Hampsthwaite, local goods traffic being handled at Birstwith or Ripley.
This article on a railway station in Yorkshire and the Humber is a stub.