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goods yard

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English

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Goods yard in Braintree, Essex, UK

Noun

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goods yard (plural goods yards)

  1. An area associated with a railway station where freight is loaded and unloaded.
    • 1901, Rudyard Kipling, chapter 2, in Kim[1], New York: Doubleday, Page & Co., page 41:
      Kim led to the fort-like railway station, black in the end of night; the electrics sizzling over the goods-yard where they handle the heavy Northern traffic.
    • 1933, James Hilton, Knight Without Armour[2], London: Ernest Benn, Part 2:
      After marching into a goods yard beyond the station and halting beside a train, the manacled prisoners were pushed into cattle-trucks []
    • 1951 September, B. D. J. Walsh, “The Sudbury and Haverhill Line, Eastern Region”, in Railway Magazine, page 619:
      Here the line is joined by the Colne Valley branch, and both tracks are carried into Haverhill station upon a high embankment from which the town can be seen on the south side. The twin tracks, after traversing a scissors crossover, become the down and up roads through the station, which possesses an extensive goods yard.
    • 1978, Eva Figes, chapter 12, in Little Eden: A Child at War[3], New York: Persea Books, page 124:
      At the western perimeter the old railway station with its busy goods yards has become a bleak coach terminal: no bustle, no people, just an empty space and a timetable.

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