Slingsby railway station is a disused railway station that served the village of Slingsby in North Yorkshire, England.
It was built on the orders of the Earl of Carlisle, the local landowner, opened on 19 May 1853 and closed to regular passenger trains on 1 January 1931,[1] but remained open for freight traffic and occasional special passenger trains until 10 August 1964.
The station was the only one on the Thirsk and Malton line to be built of stone.
A passing loop on the latter siding that had been taken out of use early in the station's history was reinstated and lengthened in 1943 for unloading ammunition.
This article on a railway station in Yorkshire and the Humber is a stub.