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Parkside railway station (Merseyside)

Parkside railway station was an original station on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. It then became the interchange station between lines when the Wigan Branch Railway opened in 1832, moving to the physical junction of the two lines in 1838. The station continued as an interchange until being by-passed in 1847 when a west curve was opened to facilitate north–south links that did not go through the station. Traffic declined further after the Winwick cut-off opened in 1864 leading to closure in 1878.

Parkside
General information
LocationNewton-le-Willows, St Helens
England
Coordinates53°27′22″N 2°35′22″W / 53.456°N 2.5895°W / 53.456; -2.5895
Grid referenceSJ609956
Platforms2
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companyLiverpool and Manchester Railway
Pre-groupingLondon and North Western Railway
Key dates
17 September 1830 (1830-09-17)Opened
31 October 1838Relocated
1 May 1878 (1878-05-01)Closed

First station edit

The original Parkside station opened on 17 September 1830 as part of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway (L&MR),[1] and was one of the oldest passenger railway stations in the world.

These early intermediate stations were often little more than halts, usually positioned where the railway was crossed by a road or turnpike.[2] This probably accounts for variations in the names of these stopping places, this station was located where Parkside Lane (later called Warrington Road, a road between Wigan and Warrington) crossed the line.[3] Quick (2022) reports that the station was variously known as Parkside, Park Side and Parkside & Wigan Junction in its first decade of existence before settling on Parkside.[1][4]

 
Huskisson Memorial 1913

During the opening ceremony the MP William Huskisson was killed in an accident at the station.[5] A memorial to Huskisson was paid for by the railway and erected at the trackside in 1831.[6] The memorial has subsequently been granted listed building status and remains at the site of the original station near Newton-le-Willows.[a][8]

Parkside was one of only two intermediate stops on the L&MR where locomotives could be fuelled and watered (the other was at Eccles), it was well placed to do so being about halfway along the line, 14 miles 58 chains (23.7 km) from Edge Hill[b] and 14 miles 29 chains (23.1 km) from Manchester Liverpool Road.[c] In the early days the water was pre-heated by a lineside boiler. The boiler's chimney can be seen on the right in Bury's print.[9][10]

 
Taking in water at Parkside, from Bury's Liverpool and Manchester Railway, 1831

The Wigan Branch Railway (WBR) opened on 3 September 1832 forming a junction with the L&MR to the East of Parkside station with an east curve (that is towards Manchester). A west curve and a flat crossing of the L&MR had been planned, and authorised, but weren't built because of financial considerations. One of these unconstructed sections had been intended to meet a similarly unconstructed east curve of the Warrington and Newton Railway which had also not been constructed for the same reason.[11][12]

Parkside area 1832
 
 
to Liverpool
 
 
Newton Junction
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Haydock Colliery
 
 
Projected branch of W&NR
 
 
 
Projected branch(es) of WBR
 
 
 
 
 
 
WBR to Wigan
 
 
 
Parkside first station
 
 
Bolton Junction
 
 
 
 
to Manchester

The lack of these two curves made through south–north journeys very difficult, for example a train or carriages coming from Warrington in the south heading to Wigan in the north would have to pass through Newton Junction station, reverse onto the mainline, pass through the station again, pass through Parkside station, then reverse again to take the WBR, avoiding any interference with the regular and busy traffic already using the L&MR. This would have undoubtedly have caused operational problems and therefore Parkside became the terminus station for trains on the WBR.[13] There is doubt about how any transfer of passengers took place between the lines, it is unlikely that WBR trains ran from their single-track railway into the station on the L&MR double track, they would have had to reverse to do so, the WBR train likely stopped before the junction and passengers simply walked to the L&MR station.[d][15]

Sweeney (2008) records there were complaints in October 1832 that passengers had to wait without shelter when changing trains, and the railways jointly funded the building of a waiting shed.[15]

In 1834 the WBR became part of the North Union Railway (NUR).[16] By 1837 there were 5 tracks at Parkside, Up and Down L&MR lines, Up and Down NUR lines (the NUR had by now installed its second running line) and a siding which ran into the point of the junction, this siding was probably used for an engine shed.[15] The illustration by Tate shows the new station with the four lines running away from the junction to where the first station was located before the overbridge in the distance, also to be seen are the two NUR lines going to the right towards Wigan.[15]

 
Parkside Station from Views on the London & North Western Railway - Tait, 1848

After the passenger station was moved to the junction this first station remained open as a goods station, being labelled a "Luggage Station" on the 1849 OS map. It is not recorded when the goods station closed but by the 1894 edition of the Ordnance Survey the site was labelled as a pumping station with a couple of sidings leading into it.[17]

Second station edit

On 31 October 1838, the station was relocated approximately 17 chains (340 m) east, to be at the junction of lines with the NUR which opened on the same day through to Preston.[18] The station was constructed jointly by the L&MR, NUR and Grand Junction Railway (GJR) which had by that time absorbed the Warrington and Newton Railway. The GJR apparently contributed to the cost of the new station as an alternative to having to build a direct connection between the Warrington and Wigan lines.[19] It was a two-storey building with a booking office, general waiting room, a ladies room and offices.[15] The station was gas-lit in 1841, the three companies shared the cost of the installation.[18]

Parkside area 1865
 
 
to Liverpool
 
 
Earlestown Junction
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  to Warrington
  Haydock Colliery
 
 
 
 
Newton Bridge
 
 
 
 
Winwick cut-off
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
WBR to Wigan
 
 
Parkside second station
 
 
 
Bolton Junction
 
 
 
 
to Manchester
notes
 
Luggage station
 
Preston Junction

This new station did not solve all the traffic problems, trains from the Liverpool, or Warrington (the east curve at Newton Junction had opened on 4 July 1837) directions still had to reverse at Parkside in order to access the northbound NUR line and vice versa. The Tate illustration does not appear to show any interconnection between the L&MR lines on the left and the NUR lines on the right, indeed it shows passengers making their way across the lines from one side of the station to the other, indicating a pedestrian changing of trains.[20]

In 1845 the L&MR and others amalgamated into an expanded Grand Junction Railway and a year later the GJR itself amalgamated to form the London and North Western Railway (L&NWR).[21]

Junctions edit

There were two junctions associated with Parkside station;

  • one to the east of the original station facing Manchester, to which the station was relocated in 1838, this junction was known at different times as Parkside East Junction, Parkside Manchester Junction, and since at least 2005, Parkside Junction.[22][23]
  • one to the west of both stations which opened in 1847 facing Newton Bridge (later called Newton-le-Willows) and Liverpool was known variously as Parkside West Junction, Parkside & Liverpool Junction, and since at least 2005, Newton-le-Willows Junction.[22][23]

The two curves from the above junctions joined to the north of Parkside where Preston Junction station was built, this junction was known initially as Preston Junction but then became Lowton Junction by which name it is still known.[23]

The lines from Newton-le-Willows through the west facing junction and Lowton junction formed a secondary West Coast Main Line (WCML) route that was electrified as part of the WCML modernisation which was completed in 1974.[24][25] The east facing curve and the main line between Newton-le-Willows and Castlefield Junction in Manchester was electrified on 9 December 2013.[26]

Services edit

What follows describes the passenger services that ran through Parkside, there were also freight trains, both owned by the companies and private operators.

1830-1832 edit

The L&MR started regular passenger services on 17 September 1830, they ran three first class trains in each direction daily and introduced second class trains a week later running two daily in each direction, there were fewer trains on Sundays.[27] The Company policy at the time was only to publish departure times from the termini, and there were no intermediate stations only recognised stopping places, of which Parkside was one as locomotives needed to take on water here.[e][31][32]

Quick (2022) documents the lack of timetables at this time, it is known how many trains ran but not where and when they stopped on-route.[33] the L&MR did publish fares from intermediate stations even if they didn't provide times, in 1832 it cost 3s 0d first class to Liverpool or Manchester, 2s 6d second class to Liverpool but only 2s 0d to Manchester.[f]

1832-1839 edit

The situation on the L&MR continued much as described above except the railway became more popular and therefore more trains were run, by 1836 the timetable had settled down to 10 trains daily each way between Liverpool and Manchester, with an extra two trains during the summer.[35]

The L&MR agreed to operate the WBR when it opened in September 1832, initially a passenger service was run utilising "an engine of the 'oldest' construction hauling four coaches", and the fares were fixed at 5s 0d and 3s 6d from Wigan to Liverpool or Manchester (or the reverse) for first and second class respectively.[g] The average journey time from Parkside to Wigan was 15 Minutes, and passengers would need to change trains at Parkside to continue their journey.[36]

The WBR arranged in October 1832 for a glass coach[h] to meet the morning first class trains at Newton Junction and transport first class passengers to Parkside.[9] These arrangements continued when the WBR amalgamated to become the North Union Railway (NUR) until the NUR line to Preston, and the relocated station opened on 31 October 1838.

1839-1842 edit

Services became more complicated in 1838–39 because the NUR opened between Wigan and Preston, and the Grand Junction Railway (GJR) opened between Newton and Birmingham, and between Birmingham and London. This enabled through journeys from south–north as well as the original east–west, and additionally from the south and north to both Liverpool and Manchester. This was three railways running trains through or connecting at Parkside.

The L&MR services continued much as normal with 11 trains each way between Liverpool and Manchester.[38]

From February 1839 the NUR ran four southbound passenger trains on weekdays, departing Preston for Liverpool, Manchester and Wigan at 0820 (mixed train), 1040 (first class), 1420 (second class) and 1620 (mixed train), on Sundays there were two mixed class trains at 0645 and 1715. Additionally, mail trains for Birmingham and London departed at 1710 and 0208, passengers were advised that in addition to the mail trains they could also proceed to the south by booking to Parkside and waiting for a short time for the next GJR train. All of these trains went through Parkside, and those in the opposite direction which are not mentioned in the company advertisement about return train times.[39]

The GJR had weekday trains leaving Manchester to Birmingham at 0330 (first class), 0600 (mixed class), 0815 (first class), 1030 (first class), 1215 (first class), 1600 (mixed class) and 1900 (first class), these trains all went through Parkside and Newton to connect with trains from Liverpool (which did not go through Parkside) at Warrington, most of them connected with London trains at Birmingham. In the opposite direction three of the GJR trains connected with NUR trains at Parkside.[40]

The L&MR and NUR companies agreed that each would operate its own passenger trains on its own line but that through coaches would be provided between Preston and Liverpool and Manchester.[41] The GJR ran its own trains over the L&MR to Manchester.[40]

This was probably the peak of services through the station.

Demise and closure edit

The stations importance declined gradually. Advances to locomotive technology meant locomotives could make their journey between Liverpool and Manchester without needing to stop at Parkside to refuel.[42]

In 1842 the Manchester and Birmingham Railway (M&BR) opened the direct line between Crewe and Manchester, this shorter route was used by the GJR in partnership with the M&BR and its trains to Manchester stopped running through Parkside.[43]

In 1843 the Bolton and Preston Railway (B&PR) opened the line between the NUR at Euxton and Bolton, the Manchester and Bolton Railway line was already operating between Bolton and Manchester. After the B&PR became part of the NUR in 1844 the NUR used both this more direct route and via parkside for trains from the north to Manchester, partly because it combined the service with that bound for Liverpool, dividing the train at Parkside. The February 1844 departure schedule from Preston shows 5 services each way via Parkside (2 of which continued on to London and one to Birmingham) and 4 services via Bolton.[44]

A west curve and Preston Junction station was opened by the L&NWR in 1847 which made north–south travel easier but reduced Parkside's importance as an interchange. The L&NWR used Preston Junction to exchange passengers with the North Union Railway, so passengers no longer changed trains at Parkside. From around this time trains going north towards Wigan from Warrington or Liverpool didn't pass through Parkside.[45]

By 1855 the station is only listed in the Liverpool to Manchester service table with four trains to Manchester and three to Liverpool.[46]

In 1864, the L&NWR constructed the Winwick cut-off which by-passed Parkside and its junctions, making the north–south journey much easier but effectively made Parkside redundant as an interchange.[47][48][49]

 
Map showing the rural area around Parkside railway junctions and former station sites

Finally, there was very limited local demand as Parkside, even today, remains relatively rural.

The station closed on 1 May 1878, although the buildings continued in use as cottages for some time afterwards.[1][17][50]

Preceding station Historical railways Following station
  East-West line  
Newton Junction   Liverpool and Manchester Railway
1830 – 1843
  Bolton Junction
Newton Junction   Liverpool and Manchester Railway
1843 – 1845
  Kenyon Junction
Station renamed
Newton Bridge
New station
  Grand Junction Railway
Liverpool and Manchester Railway
1845 – 1846
Amalgamated
  Kenyon Junction
Newton Bridge   London and North Western Railway
Grand Junction Railway
Liverpool and Manchester Railway
1846 – 1878
Amalgamated
  Kenyon Junction
  Northbound line  
Wigan Chapel Lane   Wigan Branch Railway
1832 – 1834
  Terminus
Wigan Chapel Lane   North Union Railway
Wigan Branch Railway
1834 – 1838
Amalgamated
  Terminus
Wigan
Station rebuilt and renamed
  North Union Railway
Wigan Branch Railway
1838 – 1847
  Terminus
Preston Junction
New station
  London and North Western Railway
North Union Railway
Wigan Branch Railway
1847 – 1878
Leased line
  Terminus
  Current situation  
Newton-le-Willows
Formerly Newton Bridge
Line and station open
  Parkside
Lines open, station closed 1878
  Kenyon Junction
Line open, station closed
Lowton
Formerly Preston Junction
Line open, station closed
   

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The tablet displayed in the memorial is a reproduction of the original which is kept at the National Railway Museum in York.[7]
  2. ^ Measured from Edge Hill as that is where locomotives were attached to trains, stationary steam engines were used on the inclines on the other side of the station.
  3. ^ Railways in the United Kingdom are, for historical reasons, measured in miles and chains. A chain is 22 yards (20 m) long, there are 80 chains to the mile.
  4. ^ Reversing engines in this era was no easy task, see for example Ahrons (1927).[14]
  5. ^ The L&MR had first and second class coaches but they ran them as first and second class trains, first class trains were composed of only first class coaches, were faster because they had fewer stops, usually only Newton Junction, whereas second class trains stopped wherever required, initially they had only second class coaches but later also had first class for the convenience of first class passengers who wished to use intermediate stations.[28][29][30]
  6. ^ 3s (£0 3s 0d), 2s 6d (£0 2s 6d) and 2s (£0 2s 0d) would be approximately £14, £11.70 and £9.36 in 2019[34]
  7. ^ 5s (£0 5s 0d) and 3s 6d (£0 3s 6d) would be approximately £23.40 and £16.34 in 2019[34]
  8. ^ On the L&MR some first class carriages had curtains instead of windows, after their introduction the regular, glazed, carriages were known as "glass coaches".[37]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Quick 2022, p. 354.
  2. ^ Ferneyhough 1980, p. 101.
  3. ^ "Ordnance Survey Lancashire CII map of 1849 showing Parkside station locations:Stations are at the bottom left, the first station is marked as a luggage station". National Library of Scotland. 1849. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  4. ^ Holt 1965, p. 22.
  5. ^ Garfield 2002, p. 169.
  6. ^ Carlson 1969, p. 237.
  7. ^ "Huskisson Memorial". National Railway Museum. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  8. ^ Historic England. "Huskisson Memorial on south side of railway, 60 metres from road (1075900)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  9. ^ a b Sweeney 2008, p. 11.
  10. ^ Reed 1969, p. 35.
  11. ^ Sweeney 2008, p. 9.
  12. ^ Booth 1830, frontespiece map.
  13. ^ Sweeney 2008, p. 10.
  14. ^ Ahrons 1927, p. 12.
  15. ^ a b c d e Sweeney 2008, p. 12.
  16. ^ Greville 1981, p. 11.
  17. ^ a b "Ordnance Survey Lancashire CII.SW map of 1894 showing Parkside area: Original station is bottom left, marked as a pumping station, the newer station building is still shown but not marked as a station". National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  18. ^ a b Thomas 1980, p. 101.
  19. ^ Reed 1996, pp. 18&19.
  20. ^ Sweeney 2008, p. 16.
  21. ^ Grant 2017, pp. 230–231.
  22. ^ a b Jacobs 2005, map 26C.
  23. ^ a b c Sweeney 2008, pp. 14 & 17.
  24. ^ British Railways Board 1968, p. 83.
  25. ^ British Railways Board 1974.
  26. ^ Network Rail. "Network Rail delivers first phase of North West electrification". Network Rail. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  27. ^ Carlson 1969, pp. 235–236.
  28. ^ Simmons 1997, p. 56.
  29. ^ Carlson 1969, p. 241.
  30. ^ Donaghy 1972, p. 110.
  31. ^ Simmons 1995, p. 31.
  32. ^ Simmons 1978, p. 266.
  33. ^ Quick 2022, p. 500.
  34. ^ a b "Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1270 to Present". MeasuringWorth. 2020.
  35. ^ Thomas 1980, p. 190.
  36. ^ Sweeney 2008, pp. 11–12.
  37. ^ Thomas 1980, p. 181.
  38. ^ Donaghy 1972, p. 115.
  39. ^ "North Union Railway". Preston Chronicle. 26 January 1839. p. 2. Retrieved 8 August 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  40. ^ a b "Grand Junction Railway". Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. 17 December 1839. p. 4. Retrieved 13 August 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  41. ^ "Liverpool and Manchester Railway". Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser. 23 October 1838. p. 1. Retrieved 8 August 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  42. ^ Simmons 1995, pp. 76–77.
  43. ^ Bradshaw 1843, pp. 13–16.
  44. ^ "Railway Departures North Union". Preston Chronicle. 10 February 1844. p. 4. Retrieved 13 August 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  45. ^ Bradshaw 2012, pp. 46–47.
  46. ^ Bradshaw 1855, tables 60 & 61.
  47. ^ Sweeney 2008, p. 27.
  48. ^ Greville 1981, p. 5.
  49. ^ Reed 1969, pp. 31–32.
  50. ^ Sweeney 2008, pp. 12 & 16.

Sources edit

  • Ahrons, Ernest Leopold (1927). The British steam railway locomotive, 1825-1925. London: Locomotive Publishing Company. OCLC 1041663104.
  • Booth, Henry (1830). An Account of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Liverpool.
  • Bradshaw, George (1843). Bradshaw's Railway Companion, containing the times of departure, fares, &c. of the railways in Great Britain and Ireland. London: Bradshaw's Railway Information Office. pp. 13–16.
  • Bradshaw, George (2012) [March 1850]. Bradshaw's Rail Times for Great Britain and Ireland March 1850: A reprint of the classic timetable complete with period advertisements and shipping connections to all parts. Midhurst: Middleton Press. ISBN 978-1-908174-13-0.
  • Bradshaw, George (1855). Bradshaw's General Railway and Steam Navigation Guide, for Great Britain and Ireland. Manchester: Bradshaw & Blacklock.
  • British Railways Board (April 1968). Route Improvements Electrification: Weaver Junction to Glasgow (PDF) (Report). British Railways Board.
  • British Railways Board (1974). Electric All The Way (PDF). British Railways Board.
  • Carlson, Robert Eugene (1969). The Liverpool & Manchester Railway Project, 1821-1831. Newton Abbot: David & Charles.
  • Donaghy, Thomas J. (1972). Liverpool & Manchester Railway operations, 1831-1845. Newton Abbot, Devon: David and Charles. ISBN 0-7153-5705-0.
  • Ferneyhough, Frank (1980). Liverpool & Manchester Railway, 1830-1980. R. Hale. ISBN 978-0-7091-8137-8.
  • Garfield, Simon (2002). The Last Journey of William Huskisson. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-21048-1.
  • 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.
  • Greville, M.D. (1981). Chronology of the Railways of Lancashire and Cheshire (Revised and Combined ed.). Railway & Canal Historical Society. ISBN 0-901461-30-X.
  • Holt, G.O. (1965). A short history of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway (Second ed.). The Railway and Canal Historical Society.
  • Jacobs, Gerald, ed. (2005). Railway Track Diagrams Book 4:Midlands & North West. Bradford on Avon: Trackmaps. ISBN 0-9549866-0-1.
  • Quick, Michael (2022) [2001]. (PDF). version 5.04. Railway & Canal Historical Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 November 2022.
  • Reed, Brian (1969). Crewe to Carlisle. Shepperton, Surrey: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-0057-3.
  • Reed, Malcolm C. (1996). The London & North Western Railway: A History. Atlantic Transport. ISBN 978-0-906899-66-3.
  • Simmons, Jack (1978). The Railway in England and Wales 1830-1914:Volume 1:The system and its working. Leicester University Press. ISBN 0-7185-1146-8.
  • Simmons, Jack (1995). The Victorian Railway (1st Paperback ed.). London: Thames & Hudson Ltd. ISBN 978-0-500-28810-8.
  • Simmons, Jack (1997). "Class distinctions". In Simmons, Jack; Biddle, Gordon (eds.). The Oxford Companion to British Railway History From 1603 to the 1990s (1st ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 84–87. ISBN 0-19-211697-5.
  • Sweeney, Dennis (2008). The Wigan Branch Railway. Triangle Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9550030-3-5.
  • Thomas, R. H. G. (1980). The Liverpool & Manchester Railway. London: Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-0537-6.

External links edit

  • The station sites on a 1948 OS Map npe maps
  • The 1st station Disused Stations UK
  • The 2nd station Disused Stations UK
  • The line and mileages railwaycodes

parkside, railway, station, merseyside, this, article, about, parkside, station, liverpool, manchester, railway, other, parkside, stations, parkside, railway, station, parkside, railway, station, original, station, liverpool, manchester, railway, then, became,. This article is about the Parkside station on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway For other Parkside stations see Parkside railway station Parkside railway station was an original station on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway It then became the interchange station between lines when the Wigan Branch Railway opened in 1832 moving to the physical junction of the two lines in 1838 The station continued as an interchange until being by passed in 1847 when a west curve was opened to facilitate north south links that did not go through the station Traffic declined further after the Winwick cut off opened in 1864 leading to closure in 1878 ParksideGeneral informationLocationNewton le Willows St HelensEnglandCoordinates53 27 22 N 2 35 22 W 53 456 N 2 5895 W 53 456 2 5895Grid referenceSJ609956Platforms2Other informationStatusDisusedHistoryOriginal companyLiverpool and Manchester RailwayPre groupingLondon and North Western RailwayKey dates17 September 1830 1830 09 17 Opened31 October 1838Relocated1 May 1878 1878 05 01 Closed Contents 1 First station 2 Second station 3 Junctions 4 Services 4 1 1830 1832 4 2 1832 1839 4 3 1839 1842 5 Demise and closure 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Sources 7 External linksFirst station editThe original Parkside station opened on 17 September 1830 as part of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway L amp MR 1 and was one of the oldest passenger railway stations in the world These early intermediate stations were often little more than halts usually positioned where the railway was crossed by a road or turnpike 2 This probably accounts for variations in the names of these stopping places this station was located where Parkside Lane later called Warrington Road a road between Wigan and Warrington crossed the line 3 Quick 2022 reports that the station was variously known as Parkside Park Side and Parkside amp Wigan Junction in its first decade of existence before settling on Parkside 1 4 nbsp Huskisson Memorial 1913 During the opening ceremony the MP William Huskisson was killed in an accident at the station 5 A memorial to Huskisson was paid for by the railway and erected at the trackside in 1831 6 The memorial has subsequently been granted listed building status and remains at the site of the original station near Newton le Willows a 8 Parkside was one of only two intermediate stops on the L amp MR where locomotives could be fuelled and watered the other was at Eccles it was well placed to do so being about halfway along the line 14 miles 58 chains 23 7 km from Edge Hill b and 14 miles 29 chains 23 1 km from Manchester Liverpool Road c In the early days the water was pre heated by a lineside boiler The boiler s chimney can be seen on the right in Bury s print 9 10 nbsp Taking in water at Parkside from Bury s Liverpool and Manchester Railway 1831 The Wigan Branch Railway WBR opened on 3 September 1832 forming a junction with the L amp MR to the East of Parkside station with an east curve that is towards Manchester A west curve and a flat crossing of the L amp MR had been planned and authorised but weren t built because of financial considerations One of these unconstructed sections had been intended to meet a similarly unconstructed east curve of the Warrington and Newton Railway which had also not been constructed for the same reason 11 12 vteParkside area 1832 Legend nbsp nbsp to Liverpool nbsp nbsp Newton Junction nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp W amp NR nbsp Haydock Colliery nbsp nbsp Projected branch of W amp NR nbsp nbsp nbsp Projected branch es of WBR nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp WBR to Wigan nbsp nbsp nbsp Parkside first station nbsp nbsp Bolton Junction nbsp nbsp nbsp K amp LJR to B amp LR to Bolton nbsp to Manchester The lack of these two curves made through south north journeys very difficult for example a train or carriages coming from Warrington in the south heading to Wigan in the north would have to pass through Newton Junction station reverse onto the mainline pass through the station again pass through Parkside station then reverse again to take the WBR avoiding any interference with the regular and busy traffic already using the L amp MR This would have undoubtedly have caused operational problems and therefore Parkside became the terminus station for trains on the WBR 13 There is doubt about how any transfer of passengers took place between the lines it is unlikely that WBR trains ran from their single track railway into the station on the L amp MR double track they would have had to reverse to do so the WBR train likely stopped before the junction and passengers simply walked to the L amp MR station d 15 Sweeney 2008 records there were complaints in October 1832 that passengers had to wait without shelter when changing trains and the railways jointly funded the building of a waiting shed 15 In 1834 the WBR became part of the North Union Railway NUR 16 By 1837 there were 5 tracks at Parkside Up and Down L amp MR lines Up and Down NUR lines the NUR had by now installed its second running line and a siding which ran into the point of the junction this siding was probably used for an engine shed 15 The illustration by Tate shows the new station with the four lines running away from the junction to where the first station was located before the overbridge in the distance also to be seen are the two NUR lines going to the right towards Wigan 15 nbsp Parkside Station from Views on the London amp North Western Railway Tait 1848 After the passenger station was moved to the junction this first station remained open as a goods station being labelled a Luggage Station on the 1849 OS map It is not recorded when the goods station closed but by the 1894 edition of the Ordnance Survey the site was labelled as a pumping station with a couple of sidings leading into it 17 Second station editOn 31 October 1838 the station was relocated approximately 17 chains 340 m east to be at the junction of lines with the NUR which opened on the same day through to Preston 18 The station was constructed jointly by the L amp MR NUR and Grand Junction Railway GJR which had by that time absorbed the Warrington and Newton Railway The GJR apparently contributed to the cost of the new station as an alternative to having to build a direct connection between the Warrington and Wigan lines 19 It was a two storey building with a booking office general waiting room a ladies room and offices 15 The station was gas lit in 1841 the three companies shared the cost of the installation 18 vteParkside area 1865 Legend nbsp nbsp to Liverpool nbsp nbsp Earlestown Junction nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp to Warrington nbsp Haydock Colliery nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Newton Bridge nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Winwick cut off nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp WBR to Wigan nbsp nbsp Parkside second station nbsp nbsp nbsp Bolton Junction nbsp nbsp nbsp K amp LJR to B amp LR to Bolton nbsp to Manchester notes nbsp Luggage station nbsp Preston Junction This new station did not solve all the traffic problems trains from the Liverpool or Warrington the east curve at Newton Junction had opened on 4 July 1837 directions still had to reverse at Parkside in order to access the northbound NUR line and vice versa The Tate illustration does not appear to show any interconnection between the L amp MR lines on the left and the NUR lines on the right indeed it shows passengers making their way across the lines from one side of the station to the other indicating a pedestrian changing of trains 20 In 1845 the L amp MR and others amalgamated into an expanded Grand Junction Railway and a year later the GJR itself amalgamated to form the London and North Western Railway L amp NWR 21 Junctions editThere were two junctions associated with Parkside station one to the east of the original station facing Manchester to which the station was relocated in 1838 this junction was known at different times as Parkside East Junction Parkside Manchester Junction and since at least 2005 Parkside Junction 22 23 one to the west of both stations which opened in 1847 facing Newton Bridge later called Newton le Willows and Liverpool was known variously as Parkside West Junction Parkside amp Liverpool Junction and since at least 2005 Newton le Willows Junction 22 23 The two curves from the above junctions joined to the north of Parkside where Preston Junction station was built this junction was known initially as Preston Junction but then became Lowton Junction by which name it is still known 23 The lines from Newton le Willows through the west facing junction and Lowton junction formed a secondary West Coast Main Line WCML route that was electrified as part of the WCML modernisation which was completed in 1974 24 25 The east facing curve and the main line between Newton le Willows and Castlefield Junction in Manchester was electrified on 9 December 2013 26 Services editWhat follows describes the passenger services that ran through Parkside there were also freight trains both owned by the companies and private operators 1830 1832 edit The L amp MR started regular passenger services on 17 September 1830 they ran three first class trains in each direction daily and introduced second class trains a week later running two daily in each direction there were fewer trains on Sundays 27 The Company policy at the time was only to publish departure times from the termini and there were no intermediate stations only recognised stopping places of which Parkside was one as locomotives needed to take on water here e 31 32 Quick 2022 documents the lack of timetables at this time it is known how many trains ran but not where and when they stopped on route 33 the L amp MR did publish fares from intermediate stations even if they didn t provide times in 1832 it cost 3s 0d first class to Liverpool or Manchester 2s 6d second class to Liverpool but only 2s 0d to Manchester f 1832 1839 edit The situation on the L amp MR continued much as described above except the railway became more popular and therefore more trains were run by 1836 the timetable had settled down to 10 trains daily each way between Liverpool and Manchester with an extra two trains during the summer 35 The L amp MR agreed to operate the WBR when it opened in September 1832 initially a passenger service was run utilising an engine of the oldest construction hauling four coaches and the fares were fixed at 5s 0d and 3s 6d from Wigan to Liverpool or Manchester or the reverse for first and second class respectively g The average journey time from Parkside to Wigan was 15 Minutes and passengers would need to change trains at Parkside to continue their journey 36 The WBR arranged in October 1832 for a glass coach h to meet the morning first class trains at Newton Junction and transport first class passengers to Parkside 9 These arrangements continued when the WBR amalgamated to become the North Union Railway NUR until the NUR line to Preston and the relocated station opened on 31 October 1838 1839 1842 edit Services became more complicated in 1838 39 because the NUR opened between Wigan and Preston and the Grand Junction Railway GJR opened between Newton and Birmingham and between Birmingham and London This enabled through journeys from south north as well as the original east west and additionally from the south and north to both Liverpool and Manchester This was three railways running trains through or connecting at Parkside The L amp MR services continued much as normal with 11 trains each way between Liverpool and Manchester 38 From February 1839 the NUR ran four southbound passenger trains on weekdays departing Preston for Liverpool Manchester and Wigan at 0820 mixed train 1040 first class 1420 second class and 1620 mixed train on Sundays there were two mixed class trains at 0645 and 1715 Additionally mail trains for Birmingham and London departed at 1710 and 0208 passengers were advised that in addition to the mail trains they could also proceed to the south by booking to Parkside and waiting for a short time for the next GJR train All of these trains went through Parkside and those in the opposite direction which are not mentioned in the company advertisement about return train times 39 The GJR had weekday trains leaving Manchester to Birmingham at 0330 first class 0600 mixed class 0815 first class 1030 first class 1215 first class 1600 mixed class and 1900 first class these trains all went through Parkside and Newton to connect with trains from Liverpool which did not go through Parkside at Warrington most of them connected with London trains at Birmingham In the opposite direction three of the GJR trains connected with NUR trains at Parkside 40 The L amp MR and NUR companies agreed that each would operate its own passenger trains on its own line but that through coaches would be provided between Preston and Liverpool and Manchester 41 The GJR ran its own trains over the L amp MR to Manchester 40 This was probably the peak of services through the station Demise and closure editThe stations importance declined gradually Advances to locomotive technology meant locomotives could make their journey between Liverpool and Manchester without needing to stop at Parkside to refuel 42 In 1842 the Manchester and Birmingham Railway M amp BR opened the direct line between Crewe and Manchester this shorter route was used by the GJR in partnership with the M amp BR and its trains to Manchester stopped running through Parkside 43 In 1843 the Bolton and Preston Railway B amp PR opened the line between the NUR at Euxton and Bolton the Manchester and Bolton Railway line was already operating between Bolton and Manchester After the B amp PR became part of the NUR in 1844 the NUR used both this more direct route and via parkside for trains from the north to Manchester partly because it combined the service with that bound for Liverpool dividing the train at Parkside The February 1844 departure schedule from Preston shows 5 services each way via Parkside 2 of which continued on to London and one to Birmingham and 4 services via Bolton 44 A west curve and Preston Junction station was opened by the L amp NWR in 1847 which made north south travel easier but reduced Parkside s importance as an interchange The L amp NWR used Preston Junction to exchange passengers with the North Union Railway so passengers no longer changed trains at Parkside From around this time trains going north towards Wigan from Warrington or Liverpool didn t pass through Parkside 45 By 1855 the station is only listed in the Liverpool to Manchester service table with four trains to Manchester and three to Liverpool 46 In 1864 the L amp NWR constructed the Winwick cut off which by passed Parkside and its junctions making the north south journey much easier but effectively made Parkside redundant as an interchange 47 48 49 nbsp Map showing the rural area around Parkside railway junctions and former station sites Finally there was very limited local demand as Parkside even today remains relatively rural The station closed on 1 May 1878 although the buildings continued in use as cottages for some time afterwards 1 17 50 Preceding station Historical railways Following station East West line Newton Junction Liverpool and Manchester Railway1830 1843 Bolton Junction Newton Junction Liverpool and Manchester Railway1843 1845 Kenyon JunctionStation renamed Newton BridgeNew station Grand Junction RailwayLiverpool and Manchester Railway1845 1846Amalgamated Kenyon Junction Newton Bridge London and North Western RailwayGrand Junction RailwayLiverpool and Manchester Railway1846 1878Amalgamated Kenyon Junction Northbound line Wigan Chapel Lane Wigan Branch Railway1832 1834 Terminus Wigan Chapel Lane North Union RailwayWigan Branch Railway1834 1838Amalgamated Terminus WiganStation rebuilt and renamed North Union RailwayWigan Branch Railway1838 1847 Terminus Preston JunctionNew station London and North Western RailwayNorth Union RailwayWigan Branch Railway1847 1878Leased line Terminus Current situation Newton le WillowsFormerly Newton BridgeLine and station open ParksideLines open station closed 1878 Kenyon JunctionLine open station closed LowtonFormerly Preston JunctionLine open station closed References editNotes edit The tablet displayed in the memorial is a reproduction of the original which is kept at the National Railway Museum in York 7 Measured from Edge Hill as that is where locomotives were attached to trains stationary steam engines were used on the inclines on the other side of the station Railways in the United Kingdom are for historical reasons measured in miles and chains A chain is 22 yards 20 m long there are 80 chains to the mile Reversing engines in this era was no easy task see for example Ahrons 1927 14 The L amp MR had first and second class coaches but they ran them as first and second class trains first class trains were composed of only first class coaches were faster because they had fewer stops usually only Newton Junction whereas second class trains stopped wherever required initially they had only second class coaches but later also had first class for the convenience of first class passengers who wished to use intermediate stations 28 29 30 3s 0 3s 0d 2s 6d 0 2s 6d and 2s 0 2s 0d would be approximately 14 11 70 and 9 36 in 2019 34 5s 0 5s 0d and 3s 6d 0 3s 6d would be approximately 23 40 and 16 34 in 2019 34 On the L amp MR some first class carriages had curtains instead of windows after their introduction the regular glazed carriages were known as glass coaches 37 Citations edit a b c Quick 2022 p 354 Ferneyhough 1980 p 101 Ordnance Survey Lancashire CII map of 1849 showing Parkside station locations Stations are at the bottom left the first station is marked as a luggage station National Library of Scotland 1849 Retrieved 18 March 2020 Holt 1965 p 22 Garfield 2002 p 169 Carlson 1969 p 237 Huskisson Memorial National Railway Museum Retrieved 13 August 2020 Historic England Huskisson Memorial on south side of railway 60 metres from road 1075900 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 18 March 2020 a b Sweeney 2008 p 11 Reed 1969 p 35 Sweeney 2008 p 9 Booth 1830 frontespiece map Sweeney 2008 p 10 Ahrons 1927 p 12 a b c d e Sweeney 2008 p 12 Greville 1981 p 11 a b Ordnance Survey Lancashire CII SW map of 1894 showing Parkside area Original station is bottom left marked as a pumping station the newer station building is still shown but not marked as a station National Library of Scotland Retrieved 18 March 2020 a b Thomas 1980 p 101 Reed 1996 pp 18 amp 19 Sweeney 2008 p 16 Grant 2017 pp 230 231 a b Jacobs 2005 map 26C a b c Sweeney 2008 pp 14 amp 17 British Railways Board 1968 p 83 British Railways Board 1974 Network Rail Network Rail delivers first phase of North West electrification Network Rail Retrieved 4 August 2020 Carlson 1969 pp 235 236 Simmons 1997 p 56 Carlson 1969 p 241 Donaghy 1972 p 110 Simmons 1995 p 31 Simmons 1978 p 266 Quick 2022 p 500 a b Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount 1270 to Present MeasuringWorth 2020 Thomas 1980 p 190 Sweeney 2008 pp 11 12 Thomas 1980 p 181 Donaghy 1972 p 115 North Union Railway Preston Chronicle 26 January 1839 p 2 Retrieved 8 August 2020 via British Newspaper Archive a b Grand Junction Railway Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser 17 December 1839 p 4 Retrieved 13 August 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Liverpool and Manchester Railway Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser 23 October 1838 p 1 Retrieved 8 August 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Simmons 1995 pp 76 77 Bradshaw 1843 pp 13 16 Railway Departures North Union Preston Chronicle 10 February 1844 p 4 Retrieved 13 August 2020 via British Newspaper Archive Bradshaw 2012 pp 46 47 Bradshaw 1855 tables 60 amp 61 Sweeney 2008 p 27 Greville 1981 p 5 Reed 1969 pp 31 32 Sweeney 2008 pp 12 amp 16 Sources edit Ahrons Ernest Leopold 1927 The British steam railway locomotive 1825 1925 London Locomotive Publishing Company OCLC 1041663104 Booth Henry 1830 An Account of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Liverpool Bradshaw George 1843 Bradshaw s Railway Companion containing the times of departure fares amp c of the railways in Great Britain and Ireland London Bradshaw s Railway Information Office pp 13 16 Bradshaw George 2012 March 1850 Bradshaw s Rail Times for Great Britain and Ireland March 1850 A reprint of the classic timetable complete with period advertisements and shipping connections to all parts Midhurst Middleton Press ISBN 978 1 908174 13 0 Bradshaw George 1855 Bradshaw s General Railway and Steam Navigation Guide for Great Britain and Ireland Manchester Bradshaw amp Blacklock British Railways Board April 1968 Route Improvements Electrification Weaver Junction to Glasgow PDF Report British Railways Board British Railways Board 1974 Electric All The Way PDF British Railways Board Carlson Robert Eugene 1969 The Liverpool amp Manchester Railway Project 1821 1831 Newton Abbot David amp Charles Donaghy Thomas J 1972 Liverpool amp Manchester Railway operations 1831 1845 Newton Abbot Devon David and Charles ISBN 0 7153 5705 0 Ferneyhough Frank 1980 Liverpool amp Manchester Railway 1830 1980 R Hale ISBN 978 0 7091 8137 8 Garfield Simon 2002 The Last Journey of William Huskisson London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 21048 1 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 Greville M D 1981 Chronology of the Railways of Lancashire and Cheshire Revised and Combined ed Railway amp Canal Historical Society ISBN 0 901461 30 X Holt G O 1965 A short history of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Second ed The Railway and Canal Historical Society Jacobs Gerald ed 2005 Railway Track Diagrams Book 4 Midlands amp North West Bradford on Avon Trackmaps ISBN 0 9549866 0 1 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 Reed Brian 1969 Crewe to Carlisle Shepperton Surrey Ian Allan ISBN 0 7110 0057 3 Reed Malcolm C 1996 The London amp North Western Railway A History Atlantic Transport ISBN 978 0 906899 66 3 Simmons Jack 1978 The Railway in England and Wales 1830 1914 Volume 1 The system and its working Leicester University Press ISBN 0 7185 1146 8 Simmons Jack 1995 The Victorian Railway 1st Paperback ed London Thames amp Hudson Ltd ISBN 978 0 500 28810 8 Simmons Jack 1997 Class distinctions In Simmons Jack Biddle Gordon eds The Oxford Companion to British Railway History From 1603 to the 1990s 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 84 87 ISBN 0 19 211697 5 Sweeney Dennis 2008 The Wigan Branch Railway Triangle Publishing ISBN 978 0 9550030 3 5 Thomas R H G 1980 The Liverpool amp Manchester Railway London Batsford ISBN 0 7134 0537 6 External links editThe station sites on a 1948 OS Map npe maps The 1st station Disused Stations UK The 2nd station Disused Stations UK The line and mileages railwaycodes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parkside railway station Merseyside amp oldid 1153969136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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