fbpx
Wikipedia

Manchester Liverpool Road railway station

Liverpool Road is a former railway station on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in Manchester, England that opened on 15 September 1830.[1] The station was the Manchester terminus of the world's first inter-city passenger railway in which all services were hauled by timetabled steam locomotives. It is the world's oldest surviving terminal railway station.[2][3] With tracks running at a second floor level behind the building, it could also be considered one of the world's first elevated railway stations.[4]

Liverpool Road
The station frontage in 2008.
General information
LocationCastlefield, Manchester
England
Coordinates53°28′38″N 2°15′30″W / 53.4772°N 2.2583°W / 53.4772; -2.2583Coordinates: 53°28′38″N 2°15′30″W / 53.4772°N 2.2583°W / 53.4772; -2.2583
Grid referenceSJ831978
Platforms2
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companyLiverpool and Manchester Railway
Key dates
15 September 1830 (1830-09-15)Opened: passenger services
4 May 1844 (1844-05-04)Closed: passenger services
1975Closed: goods yard

The station closed to passenger services on 4 May 1844 [5] when the line was extended to join the Manchester and Leeds Railway at Hunt's Bank. Liverpool Road was superseded by Manchester Victoria station for passenger services. Like its counterpart at Liverpool Crown Street the station was converted to a goods yard.[6] Since Liverpool Road ceased operation, the oldest railway station in use is Broad Green railway station in Liverpool which opened on 15 September 1830.[7] The Liverpool and Manchester Railway opened starting from Liverpool Crown Street, hence the older stations start from Liverpool.

The station, a Grade I listed building, is part of the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester.

Early history

 
1833 view of the bridges over the Irwell and Water Street

As a consequence of opposition from the proprietors of the Mersey and Irwell Navigation, it had been intended to terminate the railway on the Salford side of the Irwell. A last minute agreement brought about a change in plan. The river would be spanned by a two arched stone bridge, incorporating a cart road for the use of the Navigation company. The real problem was how to cross Water Street. The levels would not permit an arched bridge to the dimensions demanded by the Manchester Highway Commissioners. The only alternative was a flat span across a distance judged to be too wide. William Fairbairn, in the quest to perfect fireproof mill flooring, had developed a parabolic 'T' section girder that could span such a distance. Thus, the Water Street bridge might be said to be the first modern girder bridge.

The station itself comprised a slightly curved brick viaduct that terminated in the slope that led up from Water Street to Deansgate, alongside Liverpool Road. The viaduct fronted a solid brick warehouse, a construction that owed much to canal warehouses, beyond which was a low-level yard that was excavated into the hillside. There was a wooden transit shed at the viaduct end, on the corner of Liverpool Road and Byrom Street and turnplates gave access to coal drops at the end of the yard. Of course, at that time, goods traffic was considered the most important potential source of income, and for this, the terminus was well placed in the midst of the Castlefield canal and warehousing complex.

Provision for the passengers was something of an afterthought. An existing house on the corner of Liverpool Road and Water Street was purchased for the use of the 'Station Agent'. A brick structure was erected next to it, incorporating elaborate door and window surrounds, the whole being finished in stucco rendering, scored to imitate stonework. The most curious feature was the positioning of a sundial over the first class entrance.

Passenger services

 
Liverpool Road railway station, Manchester

The railway only carried first and second class passengers, and each class had its own booking hall and waiting room. As the station was some distance from the centre of Manchester, most passengers purchased a handwritten ticket from an agent at an inn or hotel. Several routes of horse omnibuses then conveyed them to the station. A clerk in the booking hall exchanged the ticket for a counterfoil, similar to a modern airline boarding pass, and made up a waybill from the ticket information for the train guard. The train guard thus had a passenger list indicating class of travel and destination, the only check against fraud.

The passengers proceeded upstairs to the waiting room, and licensed "outdoor porters" took charge of their luggage, being paid a set scale of fees. "Indoor porters" took charge of the luggage on the station platform and strapped it to the carriage roofs. The ringing of the station bell then announced that the passengers could go through the door on to the platform and board the train. The bell was also rung as a warning of departure, but the actual signal was given by the guard's trumpet or horn. The original bell is still exhibited in the station building. The planning of railway stations was clearly not so advanced at this time as supporting pillars of the building prevented certain carriage doors from opening fully.

Growth

The station buildings were extended in 1831 by the construction of a simple two-road carriage shed on top of a range of rooms along Liverpool Road. These were intended as shops but, due to the insalubrious surroundings, were only used as offices. Beyond this range was a gate and a ramp leading to viaduct level. This was used to load and unload gentlemen's carriages, which were conveyed on flat wagons, a popular form of travel for those who could afford it.

The Grand Junction Railway, Britain's first trunk line, was completed between Curzon Street railway station in Birmingham and Warrington Bank Quay railway station, Warrington, on 4 July 1837.[8] Through trains began to convey passengers from the station to Birmingham, and a separate booking office and waiting room were provided. From 17 September 1838 there were through carriages to London Euston by some trains after completion of the London and Birmingham Railway in that year.[9] This increase in long-distance services resulted in one of the first private railway hotels opening in Liverpool Road. Congestion required the opening of a separate arrival station across Water Street, on the site of a former dyeworks. Further goods warehouses were erected.

Goods yard

 
A 1910 Railway Clearing House of central Manchester showing Liverpool Road goods station served by the London & North Western Railway. The 1844 line from Ordsall to Victoria is shown in red.

Passenger services ended with the opening of an extension of the L&M line from Ordsall Lane to Hunt's Bank. All passenger services were then transferred to the new Victoria Station from 4 May 1844.[10]

Liverpool Road, which was turned into a goods yard, was developed under the ownership of the London and North Western Railway. An iron viaduct (an early girder-frame structure) was constructed to provide access to Byrom Street Warehouse; it was soon followed by the Grape Street Warehouse. The goods complex remained in operation post grouping under the London Midland and Scottish Railway from 1923 to 1948. In addition to LMS goods trains, Great Western Railway locomotives worked their goods trains to Liverpool Road from Chester via Warrington.[11] In 1948 the site was taken over by British Railways (BR) following the nationalisation of the UK railway system.

Closure

When the station and warehouses were abandoned in 1975 by British Rail,[3] the Grape Street Warehouse and surroundings buildings were purchased by Granada Television. Part of it was used for the Granada Studios Tour theme attraction, and other parts were used for the set of long-running British TV soap Coronation Street.

The station building and adjacent historic railway warehouses now form part of Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester which is located in the Castlefield Urban Heritage Park.

Mainline connection

Throughout its history, Liverpool Road station had retained a working rail connection to the operational mainline, allowing heritage trains to be run directly from the Manchester to Preston Line into the museum station. However, the Ordsall Chord rail link — a Network Rail project to create a new connection between Piccadilly and Victoria stations — involved the construction of a new bridge over the River Irwell which severed the 180-year-old link to Liverpool Road station. After this project was completed, it was no longer possible to run trains into or out of Liverpool Road station. The MOSI management had initially objected to the scheme and an inquiry was set up in 2014 to investigate the potential damage to the historic structure.[12] In May 2014, Network Rail reached an agreement with MOSI, in which the museum was to receive an undisclosed sum in compensation, and the objection was dropped.[13] In March 2015, Patrick McLoughlin, Secretary of State for Transport, announced that the Ordsall Chord project was to go ahead with an estimated completion date of 2017. It was confirmed that the operational rail link into Liverpool Road station would be severed as a result of this project,[14] and later in 2015 the main line connection was removed.

See also

References

  1. ^ Butt 1995, p. 153
  2. ^ "About us". Science and Industry Museum.
  3. ^ a b Former Liverpool Road Railway Station, and Station Master's House, Heritage Gateway, retrieved 7 January 2010
  4. ^ https://thebeautyoftransport.com/2016/09/21/house-of-train-liverpool-road-station-manchester-uk/ House of Train (Liverpool Road Station, Manchester, UK)
  5. ^ Butt 1995, p. 152
  6. ^ "First in the world: the making of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway". Science and Industry Museum.
  7. ^ Butt 1995, p. 45.
  8. ^ Ferneyhough 1980, p. 132
  9. ^ Holt 1978, p. 109
  10. ^ Ferneyhough 1980, pp. 103–105
  11. ^ Holt 1978, p. 240
  12. ^ Merrick, Jay (11 May 2014). "'Oldest railway station in the world' threatened by Network Rail plans". The Independent on Sunday. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  13. ^ Kirby, Dean (17 May 2014). "Steam trains will no longer run to historic Liverpool Road station at MOSI under 'Ordsall Chord' plan". from the original on 23 March 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
  14. ^ Charlotte, Cox (26 March 2015). "Manchester's Piccadilly and Victoria stations to be linked by rail as £85m Ordsall Chord gets go-ahead". Manchester Evening News. from the original on 27 March 2015. Retrieved 27 March 2015.

Bibliography

  • Butt, R. V. J. (October 1995). The Directory of Railway Stations: details every public and private passenger station, halt, platform and stopping place, past and present (1st ed.). Sparkford: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN 978-1-85260-508-7. OCLC 60251199. OL 11956311M.
  • Ferneyhough, Frank (1980), Liverpool & Manchester Railway 1830-1980, Book Club Associates
  • Holt, Geoffrey O. (1978), A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain - Volume 10- The North West, David & Charles, ISBN 0-7153-7521-0

External links

Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Ordsall Lane   London and North Western Railway
Liverpool and Manchester Railway
  Terminus

manchester, liverpool, road, railway, station, liverpool, road, former, railway, station, liverpool, manchester, railway, manchester, england, that, opened, september, 1830, station, manchester, terminus, world, first, inter, city, passenger, railway, which, s. Liverpool Road is a former railway station on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in Manchester England that opened on 15 September 1830 1 The station was the Manchester terminus of the world s first inter city passenger railway in which all services were hauled by timetabled steam locomotives It is the world s oldest surviving terminal railway station 2 3 With tracks running at a second floor level behind the building it could also be considered one of the world s first elevated railway stations 4 Liverpool RoadThe station frontage in 2008 General informationLocationCastlefield ManchesterEnglandCoordinates53 28 38 N 2 15 30 W 53 4772 N 2 2583 W 53 4772 2 2583 Coordinates 53 28 38 N 2 15 30 W 53 4772 N 2 2583 W 53 4772 2 2583Grid referenceSJ831978Platforms2Other informationStatusDisusedHistoryOriginal companyLiverpool and Manchester RailwayKey dates15 September 1830 1830 09 15 Opened passenger services4 May 1844 1844 05 04 Closed passenger services1975Closed goods yardThe station closed to passenger services on 4 May 1844 5 when the line was extended to join the Manchester and Leeds Railway at Hunt s Bank Liverpool Road was superseded by Manchester Victoria station for passenger services Like its counterpart at Liverpool Crown Street the station was converted to a goods yard 6 Since Liverpool Road ceased operation the oldest railway station in use is Broad Green railway station in Liverpool which opened on 15 September 1830 7 The Liverpool and Manchester Railway opened starting from Liverpool Crown Street hence the older stations start from Liverpool The station a Grade I listed building is part of the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester Contents 1 Early history 2 Passenger services 3 Growth 4 Goods yard 5 Closure 6 Mainline connection 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksEarly history Edit 1833 view of the bridges over the Irwell and Water Street As a consequence of opposition from the proprietors of the Mersey and Irwell Navigation it had been intended to terminate the railway on the Salford side of the Irwell A last minute agreement brought about a change in plan The river would be spanned by a two arched stone bridge incorporating a cart road for the use of the Navigation company The real problem was how to cross Water Street The levels would not permit an arched bridge to the dimensions demanded by the Manchester Highway Commissioners The only alternative was a flat span across a distance judged to be too wide William Fairbairn in the quest to perfect fireproof mill flooring had developed a parabolic T section girder that could span such a distance Thus the Water Street bridge might be said to be the first modern girder bridge The station itself comprised a slightly curved brick viaduct that terminated in the slope that led up from Water Street to Deansgate alongside Liverpool Road The viaduct fronted a solid brick warehouse a construction that owed much to canal warehouses beyond which was a low level yard that was excavated into the hillside There was a wooden transit shed at the viaduct end on the corner of Liverpool Road and Byrom Street and turnplates gave access to coal drops at the end of the yard Of course at that time goods traffic was considered the most important potential source of income and for this the terminus was well placed in the midst of the Castlefield canal and warehousing complex Provision for the passengers was something of an afterthought An existing house on the corner of Liverpool Road and Water Street was purchased for the use of the Station Agent A brick structure was erected next to it incorporating elaborate door and window surrounds the whole being finished in stucco rendering scored to imitate stonework The most curious feature was the positioning of a sundial over the first class entrance Passenger services EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Liverpool Road railway station Manchester The railway only carried first and second class passengers and each class had its own booking hall and waiting room As the station was some distance from the centre of Manchester most passengers purchased a handwritten ticket from an agent at an inn or hotel Several routes of horse omnibuses then conveyed them to the station A clerk in the booking hall exchanged the ticket for a counterfoil similar to a modern airline boarding pass and made up a waybill from the ticket information for the train guard The train guard thus had a passenger list indicating class of travel and destination the only check against fraud The passengers proceeded upstairs to the waiting room and licensed outdoor porters took charge of their luggage being paid a set scale of fees Indoor porters took charge of the luggage on the station platform and strapped it to the carriage roofs The ringing of the station bell then announced that the passengers could go through the door on to the platform and board the train The bell was also rung as a warning of departure but the actual signal was given by the guard s trumpet or horn The original bell is still exhibited in the station building The planning of railway stations was clearly not so advanced at this time as supporting pillars of the building prevented certain carriage doors from opening fully Growth EditThe station buildings were extended in 1831 by the construction of a simple two road carriage shed on top of a range of rooms along Liverpool Road These were intended as shops but due to the insalubrious surroundings were only used as offices Beyond this range was a gate and a ramp leading to viaduct level This was used to load and unload gentlemen s carriages which were conveyed on flat wagons a popular form of travel for those who could afford it The Grand Junction Railway Britain s first trunk line was completed between Curzon Street railway station in Birmingham and Warrington Bank Quay railway station Warrington on 4 July 1837 8 Through trains began to convey passengers from the station to Birmingham and a separate booking office and waiting room were provided From 17 September 1838 there were through carriages to London Euston by some trains after completion of the London and Birmingham Railway in that year 9 This increase in long distance services resulted in one of the first private railway hotels opening in Liverpool Road Congestion required the opening of a separate arrival station across Water Street on the site of a former dyeworks Further goods warehouses were erected Goods yard Edit A 1910 Railway Clearing House of central Manchester showing Liverpool Road goods station served by the London amp North Western Railway The 1844 line from Ordsall to Victoria is shown in red Passenger services ended with the opening of an extension of the L amp M line from Ordsall Lane to Hunt s Bank All passenger services were then transferred to the new Victoria Station from 4 May 1844 10 Liverpool Road which was turned into a goods yard was developed under the ownership of the London and North Western Railway An iron viaduct an early girder frame structure was constructed to provide access to Byrom Street Warehouse it was soon followed by the Grape Street Warehouse The goods complex remained in operation post grouping under the London Midland and Scottish Railway from 1923 to 1948 In addition to LMS goods trains Great Western Railway locomotives worked their goods trains to Liverpool Road from Chester via Warrington 11 In 1948 the site was taken over by British Railways BR following the nationalisation of the UK railway system Closure EditWhen the station and warehouses were abandoned in 1975 by British Rail 3 the Grape Street Warehouse and surroundings buildings were purchased by Granada Television Part of it was used for the Granada Studios Tour theme attraction and other parts were used for the set of long running British TV soap Coronation Street The station building and adjacent historic railway warehouses now form part of Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester which is located in the Castlefield Urban Heritage Park Mainline connection EditThroughout its history Liverpool Road station had retained a working rail connection to the operational mainline allowing heritage trains to be run directly from the Manchester to Preston Line into the museum station However the Ordsall Chord rail link a Network Rail project to create a new connection between Piccadilly and Victoria stations involved the construction of a new bridge over the River Irwell which severed the 180 year old link to Liverpool Road station After this project was completed it was no longer possible to run trains into or out of Liverpool Road station The MOSI management had initially objected to the scheme and an inquiry was set up in 2014 to investigate the potential damage to the historic structure 12 In May 2014 Network Rail reached an agreement with MOSI in which the museum was to receive an undisclosed sum in compensation and the objection was dropped 13 In March 2015 Patrick McLoughlin Secretary of State for Transport announced that the Ordsall Chord project was to go ahead with an estimated completion date of 2017 It was confirmed that the operational rail link into Liverpool Road station would be severed as a result of this project 14 and later in 2015 the main line connection was removed See also Edit Greater Manchester portalGrade I listed buildings in Greater Manchester Listed buildings in Manchester M3References Edit Butt 1995 p 153 About us Science and Industry Museum a b Former Liverpool Road Railway Station and Station Master s House Heritage Gateway retrieved 7 January 2010 https thebeautyoftransport com 2016 09 21 house of train liverpool road station manchester uk House of Train Liverpool Road Station Manchester UK Butt 1995 p 152 First in the world the making of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Science and Industry Museum Butt 1995 p 45 Ferneyhough 1980 p 132 Holt 1978 p 109 Ferneyhough 1980 pp 103 105 Holt 1978 p 240 Merrick Jay 11 May 2014 Oldest railway station in the world threatened by Network Rail plans The Independent on Sunday Retrieved 12 May 2014 Kirby Dean 17 May 2014 Steam trains will no longer run to historic Liverpool Road station at MOSI under Ordsall Chord plan Archived from the original on 23 March 2015 Retrieved 27 March 2015 Charlotte Cox 26 March 2015 Manchester s Piccadilly and Victoria stations to be linked by rail as 85m Ordsall Chord gets go ahead Manchester Evening News Archived from the original on 27 March 2015 Retrieved 27 March 2015 Bibliography Edit Butt R V J October 1995 The Directory of Railway Stations details every public and private passenger station halt platform and stopping place past and present 1st ed Sparkford Patrick Stephens Ltd ISBN 978 1 85260 508 7 OCLC 60251199 OL 11956311M Ferneyhough Frank 1980 Liverpool amp Manchester Railway 1830 1980 Book Club Associates Holt Geoffrey O 1978 A Regional History of the Railways of Great Britain Volume 10 The North West David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 7521 0External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manchester Liverpool Road railway station vteManchester railwaysLegendCity Centre and NorthPast present and futureManchester Metrolink Main line servicesto Rochdale to OldhamMoston Newton Heath to Bury Newton Heathand MostonBowker Vale to TamesideCrumpsall Clayton BridgeAbraham Moss ParkWoodlands Road to TamesideQueens Road Central ParkMonsall Edge LaneMiles Platting Clayton Hall VeloparkOldham Road Holt Town Manchester Victoria Etihad CampusExchange New Islingtonto Ordsall Chordand to Salford ArdwickShudehill AshburysHigh Street ManchesterPiccadilly MayfieldMarket Street PiccadillyGardens to South ManchesterExchange Square GortonMosley Street Manchester Oxford Road St Peter s Square to Belle VueManchesterCentral Deansgate Castlefield DeansgateLiverpool Road to Hyde Roadto Ordsall Chordand to Salford to TamesideCornbrook Cornbrook Pomona to Eccles Trafford Barto Trafford to Trafford Firswoodto Altrincham to ChorltonPreceding station Disused railways Following stationOrdsall Lane London and North Western RailwayLiverpool and Manchester Railway Terminus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manchester Liverpool Road railway station amp oldid 1093292081, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.