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Manchester Oldham Road railway station

Manchester Oldham Road station opened in 1839 as the terminus station of the Manchester and Leeds Railway (M&LR) in Collyhurst, Manchester. When the M&LR opened Manchester Victoria in 1844 as its new Manchester passenger station Oldham Road was converted to a goods station which it remained until its closure in 1968.

Manchester Oldham Road
General information
LocationManchester
England
Coordinates53°29′14″N 2°13′44″W / 53.487216°N 2.228851°W / 53.487216; -2.228851
Grid referenceSJ847989
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companyManchester and Leeds Railway
Pre-groupingLancashire and Yorkshire Railway
Post-groupingLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway
Key dates
4 July 1839 (1839-07-04)Station opened
1 January 1844Closed to passengers
7 October 1968Closed to freight

Opening edit

The station was formally opened on 3 July 1839 when two trains carrying the company directors and numerous guests departed for Littleborough where a cold collation was provided before the return to Manchester. The station opened to the public on 4 July 1839.[1]

The station was located on the north side of Oldham Road between Lees Street on its western boundary and St George's Street to the east.[2][a] The station was set back from Oldham Road, with access to the station building via both sides of the Railway Tavern; access was also available from St George's Street.[3]

In its early days, the station was known by several names, usually reflecting its geographical position, the M&LR opening notice called it St George's Street, Oldham Road[4][5] as did Love (1839) in his description of the station and services[6] and the local press in their article describing the opening of the railway.[1] An early guide to the railway doesn't name the station but describes it as "situate at the East end of the town, in Lees Street, Oldham Road",[7] Bradshaw's 1839 timetable merely says Manchester but does have a map showing the station set back from Oldham Road.[8]

Description edit

The line reached the station by a 730 yards (670 m) long, fifty-eight-arch brick viaduct, 30 feet above the surrounding streets.[9]

The station was described by Wishaw in 1842.

The Manchester station and depôt are situate between Lees Street and St. George's Street. There are several lines of way at this station, which is entirely elevated on arches. The passenger-shed is covered with a wooden roof in two spans. The booking-office is on the ground-floor: and the passenger-platform is approached by a flight of forty-five steps, each of 7½ inches rise. The whole length of the station is 176 yards, and the width 80 yards.[10]

The station was initially worked using a stationary winding engine at Miles Platting hauling trains out of the station and up the incline, trains worked into the station by gravity.[9]

The arches underneath the viaduct and the station were used to store goods and merchandise which created difficulties in moving items between the levels, in 1841 a steam-powered wagon hoist capable of handling 1,000 long tons (1,000 t) daily was installed, two lifts were eventually installed and they were still in use long after the incline down into the lower yard was installed, finally being demolished in 1946–1947.[9][11]

 
Railway Clearing House diagram of railways in central Manchester in 1910 showing the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway line from Oldham Road Junction to Oldham Road goods depot.

Passenger station 1839—1844 edit

Daily departures (except Sundays) to Littleborough on opening were at 0700, 0800, 1000, 1100, 1300, 1600, 1800 with a further departure to Rochdale at 1900.[4] By October services had been refined to 0800, 0900, 1000, 1100, 1300, 1500, 1600, 1700, 1800 and 1900, with Sunday services at 0800, 0900, 1730 and 1900.[12]

In 1839, both the M&LR and the Liverpool and Manchester Railway (LMR) realised that their respective stations were too far from the city centre and the gap between their stations was the only impediment to through travel between Liverpool and Hull. Despite the conflicting aspirations of the two companies, negotiations between the two resulted in agreement to build a new station, which became Manchester Victoria, at the central location of Hunt's Bank, with the M&LR being the principal owners and the LMR having limited rights of use.[13][14] An Act of Parliament, receiving royal assent on 1 July 1839, enabling construction of this extension and the "enlargement of stations, yards, warehouses, and other Conveniences in the Town of Manchester".[15]

Goods station 1844—1877 edit

Once Manchester Victoria opened to M&LR passengers on 1 January 1844, Oldham Road station was converted to a goods station.[b][16][5] Goods trains operated along what was now a short 72 chains (1,400 m) branch line from Oldham Road Junction near Miles Platting. The business offices (including the Superintendent's office) of the railway remained at the station.[17]

At least 8 acres (3.2 ha)s of land immediately to the North of the station was laid out as a goods yard accessed by multiple turntables.[3][18]

A five-storey brick warehouse was built c. 1845 at right angles to the end of the original passenger station, the warehouse had two railway tracks, reached by turntables from the original tracks, servicing wooden platforms at the side. There were chutes and hoppers between the floors and hoists mounted in the roof.[19]

In 1847 the Manchester & Leeds Railway amalgamated with several other railways to become the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway (L&YR).[20]

Goods station 1877—1916 edit

The amount of goods traffic, especially fruit and vegetables, into Oldham Road continued to expand. The use of hoists to transfer wagons between the levels of the goods yard eventually began to limit the amount of traffic which could be handled. It took three and a half minutes to effect an exchange of wagons, one up, the other down.[21] The station needed some sort of direct rail access into the goods yard in order to expand and in 1871 obtained an Act to allow it to acquire and remove St George's church and cemetery which stood in the way of the only possible route for an incline down into yard.[22][23] The Act stipulated that the church had to be replaced before the old church could be demolished, the company completed building a new church on Oldham Road in 1874 and a new Act was obtained in 1874 to authorise the 10.53 chains (212 m) 1 in 27 incline which came into use c. 1877.[24]

In 1874 the L&YR ceased to use the station for mineral traffic with the exception that coal was still delivered to Manchester Corporation Rochdale Road Gas Works via a siding that ran through the goods yard.[25]

A large goods warehouse was constructed in 1880—1881 and by 1893 two smaller warehouses had been built.[24] By 1886 the wholesale potato market was established adjacent to the goods station, between the original station building and Oldham Road, it was rail served with multiple tracks.[26][27]

In 1889 an Act was obtained to widen the double-track viaduct leading into Oldham Road station, a contract was let in December 1890, the opening date of the widened viaduct is not known but it was open in 1916 when the reconstructed goods yard opened.[28][29][30]

Goods station 1916—1968 edit

The goods depot was completely rebuilt and enlarged between 1913 and 1916, the remodelling provided space for an additional 250 wagons.[30] A large area of workers' houses to the west of the station were demolished with a widened Thompson Street becoming the new western boundary, the displaced people being rehoused by the company. The demolitions provided an extension of approximately 282 yards (258 m) long with an average of 88 yards (80 m) wide.[31]

A new three-storied office building was constructed with its frontage on Oldham Road in 1913–1914.[32] Access to the site was from both Oldham Road and Rochdale Road, two principal roads out of Manchester to the North.[33] A shipping and delivery shed with a new fruit shed was built, the former fruit warehouses being demolished and the earlier warehouse converted into a storage shed.[31]

A complete revision of the track layout was undertaken, with a "distributing line" being laid through the site enabling 74 of the 93 turntables to be replaced with points and crossings, the remaining turntables were replaced with larger ones to accommodate increased wagon sizes.[34] The distributor line started from the bottom of the incline running underneath the south-west end of the original station, along the gap between the original running lines and the potato market, to loop back under the viaduct to the base of the incline.[31][35]

The goods yard was at this time equipped with three gantry cranes:

  • an electrically operated crane of 5 long tons (5.1 t) capacity able to access both the higher and lower tracks,
  • a 10 long tons (10 t) capacity crane just outside the new shipping and delivery shed, and
  • a "Goliath" travelling crane of 20 long tons (20 t) capacity running parallel with the high-level viaduct.[31]

The new fruit shed was constructed to the north of the new shipping and delivery shed against the Rochdale Road boundary.[31] The whole site now occupying 23.25 acres (9.41 ha) within which there were 9 acres (3.6 ha) of buildings and 8.25 miles (13.28 km) of track.[32]

There were by now two potato sheds, one each side of the remaining stub of St George's Street. The westerly yard, known as top potato yard was roofed during the refurbishment, the yard could accommodate 110 wagons under the 6,212 square yards (5,194 m2) roof. The lower potato yard, better described as the Wholesale Potato Market was operated by the railway under an agreement with Manchester Corporation, had been roofed earlier. The two yards handled approximately 50,000 long tons (51,000 t) of potatoes each year.[36]

In its final form the goods station had a number of 'sheds', which were called the Fruit Shed, Provision Shed, Delivery Shed, Fish Shed, Cloth Shed, Grain Shed, Potato Shed and the Shipping Shed, indicating the diversity of traffic handled there.[37] British Railways London Midland Region continued to handle sundries traffic at Oldham Road for some years after the nationalisation of 1948.[38]

The goods station and yard closed to traffic on 7 October 1968.[39] The original M&LR buildings and the early warehouse were demolished in 1968.[32]

Current status edit

The area is very different from what it once was. The station and line no longer exist, although part of the viaduct which led to it is still visible from the railway line from Victoria to Miles Platting and from the eastern end of New Allen Street. Most of the old station and sidings have since been replaced by Manchester Central Community Fire Station, a large Royal Mail sorting depot and a Chinese supermarket.[40][41][42]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Not to be confused with Lees Street in Openshaw – Lees Street in Collyhurst was subsequently demolished and incorporated into the station.
  2. ^ In fact Oldham Road station's fate as a goods station was sealed before it opened, the Act for the extension into Manchester Victoria passing two days before the opening of the initial railway.[16]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Opening of the Manchester & Leeds Railway to Littleborough". The Manchester Guardian (1828-1900). 6 July 1839. p. 2. ProQuest 473454774.
  2. ^ Parkinson-Bailey 2000, p. 53.
  3. ^ a b Old Ordnance Survey Maps: Manchester (New Cross) 1849: Manchester Sheet 24 (Map). 1:1760. Cartography by Ordnance Survey. Alan Godfrey. 1988. ISBN 978-0-85054-312-4.
  4. ^ a b "Manchester and Leeds Railway". The Manchester Guardian (1828-1900). 29 June 1839. p. 2. ProQuest 473452740.
  5. ^ a b Quick 2022, p. 304.
  6. ^ Love 1839, p. 235.
  7. ^ Normington 1898, p. 19.
  8. ^ Bradshaw 1839, pp. 19 & 22.
  9. ^ a b c Dawson 2017, pp. 51−54.
  10. ^ Whishaw 1842, pp. 319–320.
  11. ^ Marshall 1969, p. 44.
  12. ^ Bradshaw 1839, p. 22.
  13. ^ Marshall 1969, p. 55.
  14. ^ Ferneyhough 1980, pp. 103–104.
  15. ^ "An Act for extending and for altering the Line of the Manchester and Leeds Railway, and for making Branches therefrom; and for amending the Acts relating thereto. Local and Personal Act, 2 & 3 Victoria I, c. lv". UK Parliamentary Archives. 1839. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  16. ^ a b Marshall 1969, p. 57.
  17. ^ "Manchester and Leeds Railway". The Law Times and Journal of Property. 2: 304. March 1844. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  18. ^ "Manchester & Leeds Railway: Opening of the Leeds Extension line to Hunts Bank and the Victoria Station". The Manchester Guardian (1828-1900). 3 January 1844. p. 6. ProQuest 473547650.
  19. ^ Ashmore 1969, pp. 194 & 287.
  20. ^ Grant 2017, p. 301.
  21. ^ Marshall 1970, pp. 45–46.
  22. ^ Axon 1886, p. 125.
  23. ^ "An Act for conferring further powers on the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Company. Local Act, 34 & 35 Victoria I, c. clxx". UK Parliamentary Archives. 1871. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  24. ^ a b Marshall 1970, p. 46.
  25. ^ "The Chambers Colliery Company v. The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Company". The Journal of Gas Lighting, Water Supply, & Sanitary Improvement. 23 (580): 871–872. 23 June 1874. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  26. ^ Axon 1886, p. 132.
  27. ^ "Ordnance Survey 25 inch map Lancashire CIV.7". National Library of Scotland. 1893. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  28. ^ Marshall 1970, pp. 46–47.
  29. ^ "Ordnance Survey 25 inch map Lancashire CIV.7". National Library of Scotland (Revised 1915 ed.). 1922. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  30. ^ a b Lake 1920, p. 8.
  31. ^ a b c d e Maw & Raworth 1917, p. 169.
  32. ^ a b c Marshall 1970, p. 48.
  33. ^ Lake 1920, p. 10.
  34. ^ Lake 1920, p. 13.
  35. ^ "Ordnance Survey 25 inch map Lancashire CIV.7". National Library of Scotland (Revised 1931—1932 ed.). 1934. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  36. ^ Lake 1920, p. 18.
  37. ^ Hall 1995, p. 58.
  38. ^ Hall 1995, p. 129.
  39. ^ Clinker 1978, p. 92.
  40. ^ "Manchester Fire Stations". Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  41. ^ "Manchester CDO Customer Service Point". Royal Mail. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  42. ^ "Wing Yip Manchester Superstore". Wing Yip. Retrieved 3 January 2022.

Bibliography edit

  • Ashmore, Owen (1969). The industrial archaeology of Lancashire. David & Charles. OCLC 1151446544.
  • Axon, William Edward Armytage (1886). The annals of Manchester a chronological record from the earliest times to the end of 1885. J. Heywood, Deansgate and Ridgefield. OCLC 1039511691.
  • Bradshaw, George (25 October 1839). Bradshaw's Railway Time Tables and assistant to railway Travelling with illustrative maps & plans. London: Shepherd and Sutton, and Wyld.
  • Clinker, C.R. (October 1978). Clinker's Register of Closed Passenger Stations and Goods Depots in England, Scotland and Wales 1830–1977. Bristol: Avon-Anglia Publications & Services. ISBN 0-905466-19-5. OCLC 5726624.
  • Dawson, Anthony (2017). The early railways of Manchester. ISBN 978-1-4456-6518-4. OCLC 1023171845.
  • Ferneyhough, Frank (1980). Liverpool & Manchester Railway. Book Club Associates.
  • Grant, Donald J. (2017). Directory of the Railway Companies of Great Britain (1st ed.). Kibworth Beauchamp, Leicestershire: Troubador Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78803-768-6.
  • Hall, Stanley (1995). Rail Centres: Manchester. Ian Allan Ltd. ISBN 0-7110-2356-5.
  • Lake, Chas S (January 1920). "A Modern Railway Goods Station in Manchester. Oldham Road, Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway". Railway Magazine. No. 271. pp. 8–18.
  • Love, Benjamin (1839). Manchester as it is. Love and Barton.
  • "The Manchester and Leeds Railway". The Law Times. Oxford University: Office of The Law times: 304. 1844.
  • Marshall, John (1969). The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway. Vol. 1. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-4352-4.
  • Marshall, John (1970). The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway. Vol. 2. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-4906-9.
  • Maw, William H; Raworth, B Alfred, eds. (23 February 1917). "Oldham Road Goods Station, Manchester: Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway". Engineering. 103 (2669): 169–170 & Plate XIV.
  • Normington, Thomas (1898). "A Companion to the Manchester & Leeds Railway (1841)". The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway: Being a Full Account of the Rise and Progress of this Railway, Together with Numerous Interesting Reminiscences and Incidents on the Line. John Heywood.
  • Parkinson-Bailey, John (2000). Manchester: An Architectural History. Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-5606-3.
  • Quick, Michael (2022) [2001]. (PDF). version 5.04. Railway & Canal Historical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 November 2022.
  • Whishaw, Francis (1842) [1840]. The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland practically described and illustrated (2nd ed.). London: John Weale (1840 publisher - Simpkin, Marshall & Co.). OCLC 36383414.


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Terminus   M&LR   Middleton Junction

manchester, oldham, road, railway, station, oldham, road, railway, station, redirects, here, closed, station, ashton, under, lyne, oldham, road, railway, station, ashton, under, lyne, manchester, oldham, road, station, opened, 1839, terminus, station, manchest. Oldham Road railway station redirects here For the closed station in Ashton under Lyne see Oldham Road railway station Ashton under Lyne Manchester Oldham Road station opened in 1839 as the terminus station of the Manchester and Leeds Railway M amp LR in Collyhurst Manchester When the M amp LR opened Manchester Victoria in 1844 as its new Manchester passenger station Oldham Road was converted to a goods station which it remained until its closure in 1968 Manchester Oldham RoadGeneral informationLocationManchesterEnglandCoordinates53 29 14 N 2 13 44 W 53 487216 N 2 228851 W 53 487216 2 228851Grid referenceSJ847989Other informationStatusDisusedHistoryOriginal companyManchester and Leeds RailwayPre groupingLancashire and Yorkshire RailwayPost groupingLondon Midland and Scottish RailwayKey dates4 July 1839 1839 07 04 Station opened1 January 1844Closed to passengers7 October 1968Closed to freight Contents 1 Opening 2 Description 3 Passenger station 1839 1844 4 Goods station 1844 1877 5 Goods station 1877 1916 6 Goods station 1916 1968 7 Current status 8 Notes 9 References 10 BibliographyOpening editThe station was formally opened on 3 July 1839 when two trains carrying the company directors and numerous guests departed for Littleborough where a cold collation was provided before the return to Manchester The station opened to the public on 4 July 1839 1 The station was located on the north side of Oldham Road between Lees Street on its western boundary and St George s Street to the east 2 a The station was set back from Oldham Road with access to the station building via both sides of the Railway Tavern access was also available from St George s Street 3 In its early days the station was known by several names usually reflecting its geographical position the M amp LR opening notice called it St George s Street Oldham Road 4 5 as did Love 1839 in his description of the station and services 6 and the local press in their article describing the opening of the railway 1 An early guide to the railway doesn t name the station but describes it as situate at the East end of the town in Lees Street Oldham Road 7 Bradshaw s 1839 timetable merely says Manchester but does have a map showing the station set back from Oldham Road 8 Description editThe line reached the station by a 730 yards 670 m long fifty eight arch brick viaduct 30 feet above the surrounding streets 9 The station was described by Wishaw in 1842 The Manchester station and depot are situate between Lees Street and St George s Street There are several lines of way at this station which is entirely elevated on arches The passenger shed is covered with a wooden roof in two spans The booking office is on the ground floor and the passenger platform is approached by a flight of forty five steps each of 7 inches rise The whole length of the station is 176 yards and the width 80 yards 10 The station was initially worked using a stationary winding engine at Miles Platting hauling trains out of the station and up the incline trains worked into the station by gravity 9 The arches underneath the viaduct and the station were used to store goods and merchandise which created difficulties in moving items between the levels in 1841 a steam powered wagon hoist capable of handling 1 000 long tons 1 000 t daily was installed two lifts were eventually installed and they were still in use long after the incline down into the lower yard was installed finally being demolished in 1946 1947 9 11 nbsp Railway Clearing House diagram of railways in central Manchester in 1910 showing the Lancashire amp Yorkshire Railway line from Oldham Road Junction to Oldham Road goods depot Passenger station 1839 1844 editDaily departures except Sundays to Littleborough on opening were at 0700 0800 1000 1100 1300 1600 1800 with a further departure to Rochdale at 1900 4 By October services had been refined to 0800 0900 1000 1100 1300 1500 1600 1700 1800 and 1900 with Sunday services at 0800 0900 1730 and 1900 12 In 1839 both the M amp LR and the Liverpool and Manchester Railway LMR realised that their respective stations were too far from the city centre and the gap between their stations was the only impediment to through travel between Liverpool and Hull Despite the conflicting aspirations of the two companies negotiations between the two resulted in agreement to build a new station which became Manchester Victoria at the central location of Hunt s Bank with the M amp LR being the principal owners and the LMR having limited rights of use 13 14 An Act of Parliament receiving royal assent on 1 July 1839 enabling construction of this extension and the enlargement of stations yards warehouses and other Conveniences in the Town of Manchester 15 Goods station 1844 1877 editOnce Manchester Victoria opened to M amp LR passengers on 1 January 1844 Oldham Road station was converted to a goods station b 16 5 Goods trains operated along what was now a short 72 chains 1 400 m branch line from Oldham Road Junction near Miles Platting The business offices including the Superintendent s office of the railway remained at the station 17 At least 8 acres 3 2 ha s of land immediately to the North of the station was laid out as a goods yard accessed by multiple turntables 3 18 A five storey brick warehouse was built c 1845 at right angles to the end of the original passenger station the warehouse had two railway tracks reached by turntables from the original tracks servicing wooden platforms at the side There were chutes and hoppers between the floors and hoists mounted in the roof 19 In 1847 the Manchester amp Leeds Railway amalgamated with several other railways to become the Lancashire amp Yorkshire Railway L amp YR 20 Goods station 1877 1916 editThe amount of goods traffic especially fruit and vegetables into Oldham Road continued to expand The use of hoists to transfer wagons between the levels of the goods yard eventually began to limit the amount of traffic which could be handled It took three and a half minutes to effect an exchange of wagons one up the other down 21 The station needed some sort of direct rail access into the goods yard in order to expand and in 1871 obtained an Act to allow it to acquire and remove St George s church and cemetery which stood in the way of the only possible route for an incline down into yard 22 23 The Act stipulated that the church had to be replaced before the old church could be demolished the company completed building a new church on Oldham Road in 1874 and a new Act was obtained in 1874 to authorise the 10 53 chains 212 m 1 in 27 incline which came into use c 1877 24 In 1874 the L amp YR ceased to use the station for mineral traffic with the exception that coal was still delivered to Manchester Corporation Rochdale Road Gas Works via a siding that ran through the goods yard 25 A large goods warehouse was constructed in 1880 1881 and by 1893 two smaller warehouses had been built 24 By 1886 the wholesale potato market was established adjacent to the goods station between the original station building and Oldham Road it was rail served with multiple tracks 26 27 In 1889 an Act was obtained to widen the double track viaduct leading into Oldham Road station a contract was let in December 1890 the opening date of the widened viaduct is not known but it was open in 1916 when the reconstructed goods yard opened 28 29 30 Goods station 1916 1968 editThe goods depot was completely rebuilt and enlarged between 1913 and 1916 the remodelling provided space for an additional 250 wagons 30 A large area of workers houses to the west of the station were demolished with a widened Thompson Street becoming the new western boundary the displaced people being rehoused by the company The demolitions provided an extension of approximately 282 yards 258 m long with an average of 88 yards 80 m wide 31 A new three storied office building was constructed with its frontage on Oldham Road in 1913 1914 32 Access to the site was from both Oldham Road and Rochdale Road two principal roads out of Manchester to the North 33 A shipping and delivery shed with a new fruit shed was built the former fruit warehouses being demolished and the earlier warehouse converted into a storage shed 31 A complete revision of the track layout was undertaken with a distributing line being laid through the site enabling 74 of the 93 turntables to be replaced with points and crossings the remaining turntables were replaced with larger ones to accommodate increased wagon sizes 34 The distributor line started from the bottom of the incline running underneath the south west end of the original station along the gap between the original running lines and the potato market to loop back under the viaduct to the base of the incline 31 35 The goods yard was at this time equipped with three gantry cranes an electrically operated crane of 5 long tons 5 1 t capacity able to access both the higher and lower tracks a 10 long tons 10 t capacity crane just outside the new shipping and delivery shed and a Goliath travelling crane of 20 long tons 20 t capacity running parallel with the high level viaduct 31 The new fruit shed was constructed to the north of the new shipping and delivery shed against the Rochdale Road boundary 31 The whole site now occupying 23 25 acres 9 41 ha within which there were 9 acres 3 6 ha of buildings and 8 25 miles 13 28 km of track 32 There were by now two potato sheds one each side of the remaining stub of St George s Street The westerly yard known as top potato yard was roofed during the refurbishment the yard could accommodate 110 wagons under the 6 212 square yards 5 194 m2 roof The lower potato yard better described as the Wholesale Potato Market was operated by the railway under an agreement with Manchester Corporation had been roofed earlier The two yards handled approximately 50 000 long tons 51 000 t of potatoes each year 36 In its final form the goods station had a number of sheds which were called the Fruit Shed Provision Shed Delivery Shed Fish Shed Cloth Shed Grain Shed Potato Shed and the Shipping Shed indicating the diversity of traffic handled there 37 British Railways London Midland Region continued to handle sundries traffic at Oldham Road for some years after the nationalisation of 1948 38 The goods station and yard closed to traffic on 7 October 1968 39 The original M amp LR buildings and the early warehouse were demolished in 1968 32 Current status editThe area is very different from what it once was The station and line no longer exist although part of the viaduct which led to it is still visible from the railway line from Victoria to Miles Platting and from the eastern end of New Allen Street Most of the old station and sidings have since been replaced by Manchester Central Community Fire Station a large Royal Mail sorting depot and a Chinese supermarket 40 41 42 Notes edit Not to be confused with Lees Street in Openshaw Lees Street in Collyhurst was subsequently demolished and incorporated into the station In fact Oldham Road station s fate as a goods station was sealed before it opened the Act for the extension into Manchester Victoria passing two days before the opening of the initial railway 16 References edit a b Opening of the Manchester amp Leeds Railway to Littleborough The Manchester Guardian 1828 1900 6 July 1839 p 2 ProQuest 473454774 Parkinson Bailey 2000 p 53 a b Old Ordnance Survey Maps Manchester New Cross 1849 Manchester Sheet 24 Map 1 1760 Cartography by Ordnance Survey Alan Godfrey 1988 ISBN 978 0 85054 312 4 a b Manchester and Leeds Railway The Manchester Guardian 1828 1900 29 June 1839 p 2 ProQuest 473452740 a b Quick 2022 p 304 Love 1839 p 235 Normington 1898 p 19 Bradshaw 1839 pp 19 amp 22 a b c Dawson 2017 pp 51 54 Whishaw 1842 pp 319 320 Marshall 1969 p 44 Bradshaw 1839 p 22 Marshall 1969 p 55 Ferneyhough 1980 pp 103 104 An Act for extending and for altering the Line of the Manchester and Leeds Railway and for making Branches therefrom and for amending the Acts relating thereto Local and Personal Act 2 amp 3 Victoria I c lv UK Parliamentary Archives 1839 Retrieved 2 January 2022 a b Marshall 1969 p 57 Manchester and Leeds Railway The Law Times and Journal of Property 2 304 March 1844 Retrieved 31 December 2021 Manchester amp Leeds Railway Opening of the Leeds Extension line to Hunts Bank and the Victoria Station The Manchester Guardian 1828 1900 3 January 1844 p 6 ProQuest 473547650 Ashmore 1969 pp 194 amp 287 Grant 2017 p 301 Marshall 1970 pp 45 46 Axon 1886 p 125 An Act for conferring further powers on the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Company Local Act 34 amp 35 Victoria I c clxx UK Parliamentary Archives 1871 Retrieved 2 January 2022 a b Marshall 1970 p 46 The Chambers Colliery Company v The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Company The Journal of Gas Lighting Water Supply amp Sanitary Improvement 23 580 871 872 23 June 1874 Retrieved 31 December 2021 Axon 1886 p 132 Ordnance Survey 25 inch map Lancashire CIV 7 National Library of Scotland 1893 Retrieved 3 January 2022 Marshall 1970 pp 46 47 Ordnance Survey 25 inch map Lancashire CIV 7 National Library of Scotland Revised 1915 ed 1922 Retrieved 3 January 2022 a b Lake 1920 p 8 a b c d e Maw amp Raworth 1917 p 169 a b c Marshall 1970 p 48 Lake 1920 p 10 Lake 1920 p 13 Ordnance Survey 25 inch map Lancashire CIV 7 National Library of Scotland Revised 1931 1932 ed 1934 Retrieved 3 January 2022 Lake 1920 p 18 Hall 1995 p 58 Hall 1995 p 129 Clinker 1978 p 92 Manchester Fire Stations Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service Retrieved 3 January 2022 Manchester CDO Customer Service Point Royal Mail Retrieved 3 January 2022 Wing Yip Manchester Superstore Wing Yip Retrieved 3 January 2022 Bibliography editAshmore Owen 1969 The industrial archaeology of Lancashire David amp Charles OCLC 1151446544 Axon William Edward Armytage 1886 The annals of Manchester a chronological record from the earliest times to the end of 1885 J Heywood Deansgate and Ridgefield OCLC 1039511691 Bradshaw George 25 October 1839 Bradshaw s Railway Time Tables and assistant to railway Travelling with illustrative maps amp plans London Shepherd and Sutton and Wyld Clinker C R October 1978 Clinker s Register of Closed Passenger Stations and Goods Depots in England Scotland and Wales 1830 1977 Bristol Avon Anglia Publications amp Services ISBN 0 905466 19 5 OCLC 5726624 Dawson Anthony 2017 The early railways of Manchester ISBN 978 1 4456 6518 4 OCLC 1023171845 Ferneyhough Frank 1980 Liverpool amp Manchester Railway Book Club Associates Grant Donald J 2017 Directory of the Railway Companies of Great Britain 1st ed Kibworth Beauchamp Leicestershire Troubador Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 78803 768 6 Hall Stanley 1995 Rail Centres Manchester Ian Allan Ltd ISBN 0 7110 2356 5 Lake Chas S January 1920 A Modern Railway Goods Station in Manchester Oldham Road Lancashire amp Yorkshire Railway Railway Magazine No 271 pp 8 18 Love Benjamin 1839 Manchester as it is Love and Barton The Manchester and Leeds Railway The Law Times Oxford University Office of The Law times 304 1844 Marshall John 1969 The Lancashire amp Yorkshire Railway Vol 1 Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 4352 4 Marshall John 1970 The Lancashire amp Yorkshire Railway Vol 2 Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 4906 9 Maw William H Raworth B Alfred eds 23 February 1917 Oldham Road Goods Station Manchester Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Engineering 103 2669 169 170 amp Plate XIV Normington Thomas 1898 A Companion to the Manchester amp Leeds Railway 1841 The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Being a Full Account of the Rise and Progress of this Railway Together with Numerous Interesting Reminiscences and Incidents on the Line John Heywood Parkinson Bailey John 2000 Manchester An Architectural History Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 5606 3 Quick Michael 2022 2001 Railway passenger stations in Great Britain a chronology PDF version 5 04 Railway amp Canal Historical Society Archived from the original PDF on 25 November 2022 Whishaw Francis 1842 1840 The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland practically described and illustrated 2nd ed London John Weale 1840 publisher Simpkin Marshall amp Co OCLC 36383414 Preceding station Disused railways Following station Terminus M amp LR Middleton Junction vteManchester railways Legend City Centre and NorthPast present and future Manchester Metrolink nbsp nbsp Main line services to Rochdale nbsp nbsp to Oldham Moston nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Newton Heath nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Bury nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Newton Heathand Moston Bowker Vale nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Tameside Crumpsall nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Clayton Bridge Abraham Moss nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Park Woodlands Road nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Tameside Queens Road nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Central Park Monsall nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Edge Lane Miles Platting nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Clayton Hall nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Velopark Oldham 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 Campus Exchange nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp New Islington to Ordsall Chordand to Salford nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Ardwick Shudehill nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Ashburys High Street ManchesterPiccadilly nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Mayfield Market Street PiccadillyGardens nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to South Manchester Exchange Square nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Gorton Mosley 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 Vue ManchesterCentral Deansgate Castlefield nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Deansgate Liverpool Road nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Hyde Road to Ordsall Chordand to Salford nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Tameside Cornbrook nbsp nbsp Cornbrook nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Pomona nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Eccles nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Trafford Bar to Trafford nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Trafford nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Firswood to Altrincham nbsp nbsp to Chorlton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manchester Oldham Road railway station amp oldid 1217595899, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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