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Deansgate railway station

Deansgate is a railway station in Manchester city centre, England, 1,100 yards (1 km) west of Manchester Piccadilly, close to Castlefield at the junction of Deansgate and Whitworth Street West. It is part of the Manchester station group.

Deansgate
General information
LocationManchester city centre, City of Manchester
England
Coordinates53°28′27″N 2°15′03″W / 53.4742°N 2.2508°W / 53.4742; -2.2508
Grid referenceSJ834975
Managed byNorthern Trains
Transit authorityGreater Manchester
Platforms2
Other information
Station codeDGT
ClassificationDfT category D
History
Original companyManchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway
Pre-groupingManchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway
Post-groupingManchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway
London Midland Region of British Railways
Key dates
20 July 1849 (1849-07-20)Opened as Knot Mill and Deansgate
?Renamed Knott Mill and Deansgate
3 May 1971Renamed Deansgate
Passengers
2017/18 0.420 million
2018/19 0.456 million
2019/20 1.323 million
2020/21 0.213 million
2021/22 0.805 million
Location
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

It is linked to Deansgate-Castlefield tram stop and the Manchester Central Convention Complex by a footbridge built in 1985; Deansgate Locks, The Great Northern Warehouse and the Science and Industry Museum are also nearby.

The platforms are elevated, reached by lift or stairs, or by the walkway from the Manchester Central Complex. The ticket office, staffed full-time, is between street and platform levels. There are no ticket barriers, although manual ticket checks take place on a daily basis.

It is on the Manchester to Preston and the Liverpool to Manchester lines, both heavily used by commuters. Most tickets purchased by passengers to Deansgate are issued to Manchester Stations or Manchester Central Zone, therefore actual usage is not reflected in these statistics, due to the difficulty in splitting the ticket sales correctly between the four grouped stations (Piccadilly, Victoria, Oxford Road and Deansgate).

History Edit

The original station buildings were situated on Hewitt Street.[1] The station was opened as Knot Mill and Deansgate on 20 July 1849 by the Manchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway[2] (MSJAR) near the Manchester terminus ('the Knot Mill station'[3]) of the Bridgewater Canal from which in 1849 travellers could catch a fast packet which could get them to Liverpool in four and a half hours for as little as sixpence.[4][5] This fare was anomalously low because of a temporary outbreak of competition between the canal and the London and North Western Railway (L&NWR);[6] it was back up to sixteen pence by 1853.[7]

When a celebratory train ran over the line at the beginning of July 1849, a reporter for the Manchester Courier observed that most stations had permanent buildings and "at Knott Mill and Oxford-street temporary stations will in the meantime be erected".[8] When the line opened for passenger traffic a fortnight later, the Courier reported the station at Knott Mill had opened with temporary wooden buildings.[9] The booking office was at street level; from it "narrow, steep, troublesome steps, enough to tire anyone but athletes"[10] led to the platforms. The station proved – according to its critics -to be "inconvenient of approach, ugly in appearance, and with platform, booking office, and waiting-room accommodation much cramped"[11] but accessibility was the biggest issue: for the aged, the invalid or children it was "a most difficult not to say dangerous task to climb the steep flights of steps to the platforms."[11]

(The area was also the site of the annual Easter-tide[12] Knott Mill Fair,[13] a decades-old event, which (until its abolition in 1876)[12] hosted acts such as Pablo Fanque's Circus Royal and George Wombwell's Menagerie.[14][15]

In 1860, special trains laid on in connection with the fair by both the L&NWR and the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (MS&LR), the joint owners of the MSJAR were not advertised as running to Knott Mill station; the LNWR excursion ran to Ordsall Lane,[16] the MS&L excursion to London Road (now Piccadilly station).[17])

If the station was originally named "Knot Mill and Deansgate" by the MSJAR, from its opening onwards it was simply 'Knott Mill' (or 'Knot Mill') to the Manchester papers[9] and by 1860 the railway was following suit in its advertisements.[18][19] In 1864, the MS&LR gave the required notice of a bill to be brought forward in the next session of Parliament for widening part of the MSJAR "from or near Knott Mill Station to Old Trafford Station";[20] however in the same year the accident return for an accident at Old Trafford noted that the train involved had stopped at "Knot Mill, and left that station..."[21]

Following the widening and improvement of the southern portion of Deansgate, in 1880 a correspondent to the Manchester Courier suggested that the station be renamed Deansgate "Very few lady passengers who have shopping to do in Deansgate make use of the Knot Mill Station. If they are aware of its nearness, perhaps they are waiting for the station and its approaches to be improved"[22] A public meeting in October 1884 complained that Knott Mill station was altogether inadequate for the newly improved district; the MSJAR was therefore in breach of its Act of Parliament which required it to provide sufficient station accommodation: the Improvement Committee of Manchester Corporation was called upon to exert pressure on the MSJAR.[23] A deputation from the Improvement Committee duly met directors of the railway to urge them to improve the "dingy" and "long-neglected" station.[24] Improvement plans were drawn up but an impasse was reached; the MSJAR's joint owners (the L&NWR and the MS&LR) disagreed on how much they should spend on improvement[25] and Manchester Corporation were unhappy with any narrowing of adjacent streets to accommodate an enlarged station.[26] Not until 1892 was a plan devised that was acceptable to all of the interested parties.[27] Negotiations to purchase the required land were protracted, with Manchester Corporation eventually offering to exercise its powers of compulsory purchase to assist the railway, but the work finally went out for tender in January 1895.[28] Work started in March 1895 (by June 1895 a temporary entrance from Gaythorn Street had to be used and the previous entrance from Deansgate closed);[29] it was completed in September 1896;[30] the latter year appears (in a shield) as part of the decorative stonework over the entrance. The station name is given there as simply "Knott Mill Station". The station is now a Grade II listed building.[31] Its battlemented architectural feature, visible at its corner, is intended to mirror similar features in the nearby viaducts, all of which in turn incorporated the design in recognition of the Roman fort that once stood in the Castlefield area.[1]

The station became Knott Mill and Deansgate[2] (for railway purposes: to the local press it remained Knott Mill station) around 1900 and Deansgate on 3 May 1971.[32] It is sometimes known as Manchester Deansgate, and on many station information boards it is Deansgate G-Mex.

(The station name Deansgate was formerly used for the Great Northern Railway goods station[33] serving the Great Northern Warehouse next to Manchester Central railway station. This is now a Grade II* listed (as Deansgate Goods Station) building.[34] )

Services Edit

 
Platform 2 in 2011.
 
Station concourse
 
Entrance from Whitworth St. West

All services at this station are operated by Northern. As of December 2022, the typical off-peak service pattern is:[35]

All eastbound trains call at Manchester Oxford Road, and those that continue to Manchester Airport also call at Manchester Piccadilly.

Metrolink Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b Parkinson-Bailey, John J. (2000). Manchester: An Architectural History. Manchester University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-71905-606-2.
  2. ^ a b Butt, R.V.J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations. Yeovil: Patrick Stephens Ltd. p. 137. ISBN 1-85260-508-1. R508.
  3. ^ (advert.)"Bridgewater Canal Packets". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 7 December 1844. p. 1.
  4. ^ "Cheap Trips to the Manufacturing Districts". Liverpool Mail. 6 October 1849. p. 5.
  5. ^ (advert.) "Cheap Travelling between Manchester and Liverpool". Bradford Observer. 27 September 1849. p. 1.
  6. ^ Howarth, W J (18 November 1892). "Answers and Comments: Travelling between Manchester and Liverpool". Manchester Times. p. 5.
  7. ^ (advert.) "Bridgewater Canal Tide Packets". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 23 April 1853. p. 1.
  8. ^ "Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway – Contractors' Excursion". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 7 July 1849. p. 9.
  9. ^ a b "Opening of the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 21 July 1849. p. 7.
  10. ^ "The Jubilee of the Bowdon Railway". Manchester Times. 5 May 1899. p. 5.
  11. ^ a b "Railway Improvements in Manchester". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 6 May 1893. p. 7.
  12. ^ a b (advert.) "Manchester Fairs". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 12 August 1876. p. 1.
  13. ^ "Knott Mill Fair". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 26 April 1848. p. 6. which noted the absence of Wombwell's
  14. ^ Gretchen Holrook Gerzina, Editor, "Black Victorians-Black Victoriana" (Rutgers University Press: New Brunswick, NJ, 2003)
  15. ^ The Manchester Guardian (11 April 1850). . The Fairground Heritage Trust. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2011.
  16. ^ (advert.) "London and North-Western Railway – Knott Mill Fair". Bolton Chronicle. 7 April 1860. p. 1.
  17. ^ (advert.) "Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire Railway – Cheap Pleasure Trip from Sheffield to Manchester – Manchester Knott Mill Fair will be held in Easter week". Sheffield Daily Telegraph. 27 March 1860. p. 1.
  18. ^ (advert.) "Manchester South Junction and Altrincham and Cheshire Midland Railways – Illumination of Salt Mines at Northwich". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 20 May 1864. p. 1.
  19. ^ (advert.)"Manchester, South Junction, and Altrincham Railway". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 12 May 1860. p. 1.
  20. ^ "In Parliament – Session 1865: Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire Railway: (Widening of Part of Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway, &c,)". Morning Post. 28 November 1864. p. 7 (columns 4–5).
  21. ^ Tyler, H W. "Accident at Old Trafford on 6th August 1864". Railways Archive : Accident Archive. (originally Board of Trade accident return). Retrieved 6 February 2018.
  22. ^ Lever, Ellis (3 July 1880). "Manchester and Salford One City". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. p. 10.
  23. ^ "The Accommodation at Knott Mill Railway Station". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 10 October 1884. p. 7.
  24. ^ "The Municipal Elections: Manchester: St John's Ward". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 29 October 1884. p. 8.
  25. ^ "Railway Communication with North Wales". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 25 May 1889. p. 8.
  26. ^ as noted (for example) in "Proposed New Railway Station at Knott Mill". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 2 January 1892. p. 7.
  27. ^ "Manchester City Council". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 28 May 1892. p. 9.
  28. ^ (advert.) "Contracts – To Builders and Contractors". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 21 January 1895. p. 1.
  29. ^ (advert.) "Manchester, South Junction, and Altrincham Railway – Knott Mill Station Alterations". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 17 June 1895. p. 1.
  30. ^ "Knott Mill Station". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 19 September 1896. p. 18.
  31. ^ "Whitworth Street West – Deansgate Railway Station. Grade II. 20.8.98" "Listed buildings in Manchester by street (W)". Manchester City Council: A-Z of Listed Buildings in Manchester. Manchester City Council. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  32. ^ Butt 1995, pp. 137, 77
  33. ^ "Railway Enterprise in Manchester: The Great Northern Company's Goods Station". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser. 1 July 1898. p. 8.
  34. ^ "Watson Street – Deansgate Goods Station. Grade II*. 4.5.79. (Upgraded 2.4.96.)" "Listed buildings in Manchester by street (W)". Manchester City Council: A-Z of Listed Buildings in Manchester. Manchester City Council. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  35. ^ "Northern Trains – Timetables". Northern. Retrieved 11 December 2022.

Further reading Edit

  • "Deansgate station refurbished". RAIL. No. 110. EMAP National Publications. 30 November – 13 December 1989. p. 9. ISSN 0953-4563. OCLC 49953699.

External links Edit

  • Train times and station information for Deansgate railway station from National Rail
Preceding station     National Rail   Following station
Northern Trains
Liverpool to Manchester via Warrington Central
Northern Trains
Barrow-in-Furness/Windermere to Manchester Airport
Northern Trains
Blackpool North to Manchester Airport
Northern Trains
Manchester to Southport
Northern Trains
Liverpool Lime Street to Manchester Airport
Disused railways
Cornbrook
1856–65
Line and station closed
  Manchester, South Junction
and Altrincham Railway
  Manchester Oxford Road
Line and station open
Old Trafford
1849–56, 1865–1991
Line closed, station open
   

deansgate, railway, station, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Deansgate railway station news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Deansgate is a railway station in Manchester city centre England 1 100 yards 1 km west of Manchester Piccadilly close to Castlefield at the junction of Deansgate and Whitworth Street West It is part of the Manchester station group DeansgateGeneral informationLocationManchester city centre City of ManchesterEnglandCoordinates53 28 27 N 2 15 03 W 53 4742 N 2 2508 W 53 4742 2 2508Grid referenceSJ834975Managed byNorthern TrainsTransit authorityGreater ManchesterPlatforms2Other informationStation codeDGTClassificationDfT category DHistoryOriginal companyManchester South Junction and Altrincham RailwayPre groupingManchester South Junction and Altrincham RailwayPost groupingManchester South Junction and Altrincham RailwayLondon Midland Region of British RailwaysKey dates20 July 1849 1849 07 20 Opened as Knot Mill and Deansgate Renamed Knott Mill and Deansgate3 May 1971Renamed DeansgatePassengers2017 180 420 million2018 190 456 million2019 201 323 million2020 210 213 million2021 220 805 millionLocationNotesPassenger statistics from the Office of Rail and RoadIt is linked to Deansgate Castlefield tram stop and the Manchester Central Convention Complex by a footbridge built in 1985 Deansgate Locks The Great Northern Warehouse and the Science and Industry Museum are also nearby The platforms are elevated reached by lift or stairs or by the walkway from the Manchester Central Complex The ticket office staffed full time is between street and platform levels There are no ticket barriers although manual ticket checks take place on a daily basis It is on the Manchester to Preston and the Liverpool to Manchester lines both heavily used by commuters Most tickets purchased by passengers to Deansgate are issued to Manchester Stations or Manchester Central Zone therefore actual usage is not reflected in these statistics due to the difficulty in splitting the ticket sales correctly between the four grouped stations Piccadilly Victoria Oxford Road and Deansgate Contents 1 History 2 Services 3 Metrolink 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditThe original station buildings were situated on Hewitt Street 1 The station was opened as Knot Mill and Deansgate on 20 July 1849 by the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway 2 MSJAR near the Manchester terminus the Knot Mill station 3 of the Bridgewater Canal from which in 1849 travellers could catch a fast packet which could get them to Liverpool in four and a half hours for as little as sixpence 4 5 This fare was anomalously low because of a temporary outbreak of competition between the canal and the London and North Western Railway L amp NWR 6 it was back up to sixteen pence by 1853 7 When a celebratory train ran over the line at the beginning of July 1849 a reporter for the Manchester Courier observed that most stations had permanent buildings and at Knott Mill and Oxford street temporary stations will in the meantime be erected 8 When the line opened for passenger traffic a fortnight later the Courier reported the station at Knott Mill had opened with temporary wooden buildings 9 The booking office was at street level from it narrow steep troublesome steps enough to tire anyone but athletes 10 led to the platforms The station proved according to its critics to be inconvenient of approach ugly in appearance and with platform booking office and waiting room accommodation much cramped 11 but accessibility was the biggest issue for the aged the invalid or children it was a most difficult not to say dangerous task to climb the steep flights of steps to the platforms 11 The area was also the site of the annual Easter tide 12 Knott Mill Fair 13 a decades old event which until its abolition in 1876 12 hosted acts such as Pablo Fanque s Circus Royal and George Wombwell s Menagerie 14 15 In 1860 special trains laid on in connection with the fair by both the L amp NWR and the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway MS amp LR the joint owners of the MSJAR were not advertised as running to Knott Mill station the LNWR excursion ran to Ordsall Lane 16 the MS amp L excursion to London Road now Piccadilly station 17 If the station was originally named Knot Mill and Deansgate by the MSJAR from its opening onwards it was simply Knott Mill or Knot Mill to the Manchester papers 9 and by 1860 the railway was following suit in its advertisements 18 19 In 1864 the MS amp LR gave the required notice of a bill to be brought forward in the next session of Parliament for widening part of the MSJAR from or near Knott Mill Station to Old Trafford Station 20 however in the same year the accident return for an accident at Old Trafford noted that the train involved had stopped at Knot Mill and left that station 21 Following the widening and improvement of the southern portion of Deansgate in 1880 a correspondent to the Manchester Courier suggested that the station be renamed Deansgate Very few lady passengers who have shopping to do in Deansgate make use of the Knot Mill Station If they are aware of its nearness perhaps they are waiting for the station and its approaches to be improved 22 A public meeting in October 1884 complained that Knott Mill station was altogether inadequate for the newly improved district the MSJAR was therefore in breach of its Act of Parliament which required it to provide sufficient station accommodation the Improvement Committee of Manchester Corporation was called upon to exert pressure on the MSJAR 23 A deputation from the Improvement Committee duly met directors of the railway to urge them to improve the dingy and long neglected station 24 Improvement plans were drawn up but an impasse was reached the MSJAR s joint owners the L amp NWR and the MS amp LR disagreed on how much they should spend on improvement 25 and Manchester Corporation were unhappy with any narrowing of adjacent streets to accommodate an enlarged station 26 Not until 1892 was a plan devised that was acceptable to all of the interested parties 27 Negotiations to purchase the required land were protracted with Manchester Corporation eventually offering to exercise its powers of compulsory purchase to assist the railway but the work finally went out for tender in January 1895 28 Work started in March 1895 by June 1895 a temporary entrance from Gaythorn Street had to be used and the previous entrance from Deansgate closed 29 it was completed in September 1896 30 the latter year appears in a shield as part of the decorative stonework over the entrance The station name is given there as simply Knott Mill Station The station is now a Grade II listed building 31 Its battlemented architectural feature visible at its corner is intended to mirror similar features in the nearby viaducts all of which in turn incorporated the design in recognition of the Roman fort that once stood in the Castlefield area 1 The station became Knott Mill and Deansgate 2 for railway purposes to the local press it remained Knott Mill station around 1900 and Deansgate on 3 May 1971 32 It is sometimes known as Manchester Deansgate and on many station information boards it is Deansgate G Mex The station name Deansgate was formerly used for the Great Northern Railway goods station 33 serving the Great Northern Warehouse next to Manchester Central railway station This is now a Grade II listed as Deansgate Goods Station building 34 Services Edit nbsp Platform 2 in 2011 nbsp Station concourse nbsp Entrance from Whitworth St WestAll services at this station are operated by Northern As of December 2022 the typical off peak service pattern is 35 1tph to Lancaster including 11tpd continuing to Barrow in Furness 4tpd continuing to Windermere 2tph to Blackpool North 1tph to Southport via Bolton 1tph to Liverpool Lime Street via Newton le Willows 1tph to Liverpool Lime Street via Warrington Central 2tph to Manchester Oxford Road 4tph to Manchester AirportAll eastbound trains call at Manchester Oxford Road and those that continue to Manchester Airport also call at Manchester Piccadilly Metrolink EditMain article Deansgate Castlefield tram stopSee also Edit nbsp Greater Manchester portalListed buildings in Manchester M3Notes Edit a b Parkinson Bailey John J 2000 Manchester An Architectural History Manchester University Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 71905 606 2 a b Butt R V J 1995 The Directory of Railway Stations Yeovil Patrick Stephens Ltd p 137 ISBN 1 85260 508 1 R508 advert Bridgewater Canal Packets Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 7 December 1844 p 1 Cheap Trips to the Manufacturing Districts Liverpool Mail 6 October 1849 p 5 advert Cheap Travelling between Manchester and Liverpool Bradford Observer 27 September 1849 p 1 Howarth W J 18 November 1892 Answers and Comments Travelling between Manchester and Liverpool Manchester Times p 5 advert Bridgewater Canal Tide Packets Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 23 April 1853 p 1 Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway Contractors Excursion Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 7 July 1849 p 9 a b Opening of the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 21 July 1849 p 7 The Jubilee of the Bowdon Railway Manchester Times 5 May 1899 p 5 a b Railway Improvements in Manchester Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 6 May 1893 p 7 a b advert Manchester Fairs Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 12 August 1876 p 1 Knott Mill Fair Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 26 April 1848 p 6 which noted the absence of Wombwell s Gretchen Holrook Gerzina Editor Black Victorians Black Victoriana Rutgers University Press New Brunswick NJ 2003 The Manchester Guardian 11 April 1850 Knott Mill Fair Manchester 1850 The Fairground Heritage Trust Archived from the original on 23 October 2013 Retrieved 7 September 2011 advert London and North Western Railway Knott Mill Fair Bolton Chronicle 7 April 1860 p 1 advert Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Cheap Pleasure Trip from Sheffield to Manchester Manchester Knott Mill Fair will be held in Easter week Sheffield Daily Telegraph 27 March 1860 p 1 advert Manchester South Junction and Altrincham and Cheshire Midland Railways Illumination of Salt Mines at Northwich Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 20 May 1864 p 1 advert Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 12 May 1860 p 1 In Parliament Session 1865 Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Widening of Part of Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway amp c Morning Post 28 November 1864 p 7 columns 4 5 Tyler H W Accident at Old Trafford on 6th August 1864 Railways Archive Accident Archive originally Board of Trade accident return Retrieved 6 February 2018 Lever Ellis 3 July 1880 Manchester and Salford One City Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser p 10 The Accommodation at Knott Mill Railway Station Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 10 October 1884 p 7 The Municipal Elections Manchester St John s Ward Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 29 October 1884 p 8 Railway Communication with North Wales Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 25 May 1889 p 8 as noted for example in Proposed New Railway Station at Knott Mill Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 2 January 1892 p 7 Manchester City Council Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 28 May 1892 p 9 advert Contracts To Builders and Contractors Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 21 January 1895 p 1 advert Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway Knott Mill Station Alterations Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 17 June 1895 p 1 Knott Mill Station Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 19 September 1896 p 18 Whitworth Street West Deansgate Railway Station Grade II 20 8 98 Listed buildings in Manchester by street W Manchester City Council A Z of Listed Buildings in Manchester Manchester City Council Retrieved 6 December 2017 Butt 1995 pp 137 77 Railway Enterprise in Manchester The Great Northern Company s Goods Station Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 1 July 1898 p 8 Watson Street Deansgate Goods Station Grade II 4 5 79 Upgraded 2 4 96 Listed buildings in Manchester by street W Manchester City Council A Z of Listed Buildings in Manchester Manchester City Council Retrieved 6 December 2017 Northern Trains Timetables Northern Retrieved 11 December 2022 Further reading Edit Deansgate station refurbished RAIL No 110 EMAP National Publications 30 November 13 December 1989 p 9 ISSN 0953 4563 OCLC 49953699 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Deansgate railway station Train times and station information for Deansgate railway station from National RailPreceding station nbsp National Rail Following stationUrmstonNorthern Trains Liverpool to Manchester via Warrington CentralManchester Oxford RoadTrafford ParkBoltonNorthern Trains Barrow in Furness Windermere to Manchester AirportSalford CrescentNorthern Trains Blackpool North to Manchester AirportNorthern Trains Manchester to SouthportEcclesNorthern Trains Liverpool Lime Street to Manchester AirportDisused railwaysCornbrook1856 65Line and station closed Manchester South Junctionand Altrincham Railway Manchester Oxford RoadLine and station openOld Trafford1849 56 1865 1991Line closed station open vteManchester railwaysLegendCity Centre and NorthPast present and futureManchester Metrolink nbsp nbsp Main line servicesto Rochdale nbsp nbsp to OldhamMoston nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Newton Heath nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Bury nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Newton Heathand MostonBowker Vale nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to TamesideCrumpsall nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Clayton BridgeAbraham Moss nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp ParkWoodlands Road nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to TamesideQueens Road nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Central ParkMonsall nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Edge LaneMiles Platting nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Clayton Hall nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp VeloparkOldham Road nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Holt Town nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Manchester Victoria nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Etihad CampusExchange nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp New Islingtonto Ordsall Chordand to Salford nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp ArdwickShudehill nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp AshburysHigh Street ManchesterPiccadilly nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp MayfieldMarket Street PiccadillyGardens nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to South ManchesterExchange Square nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp GortonMosley Street nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Manchester Oxford Road nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp St Peter s Square nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Belle VueManchesterCentral Deansgate Castlefield nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp DeansgateLiverpool Road nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Hyde Roadto Ordsall Chordand to Salford nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to TamesideCornbrook nbsp nbsp Cornbrook nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Pomona nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Eccles nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Trafford Barto Trafford nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Trafford nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Firswoodto Altrincham nbsp nbsp to Chorlton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deansgate railway station amp oldid 1126892680, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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