Lowton railway station
Lowton | |
---|---|
Location | |
Place | Lowton |
Area | Wigan |
Coordinates | 53°27′29″N 2°35′55″W / 53.458112°N 2.598718°WCoordinates: 53°27′29″N 2°35′55″W / 53.458112°N 2.598718°W |
Grid reference | SJ604959 |
Operations | |
Original company | North Union Railway |
Pre-grouping | London and North Western Railway |
Post-grouping | London, Midland and Scottish Railway |
Platforms | 2 |
History | |
1 January 1847 | Station opened as "Preston Junction" |
1 February 1877 | Renamed "Lowton and Preston Junction" |
17 February 1880 | Renamed "Lowton" |
1 January 1917 | Closed as a wartime economy measure |
1 February 1919 | Reopened |
26 September 1949 | Station closed completely[1][2] |
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom | |
Closed railway stations in Britain A B C D–F G H–J K–L M–O P–R S T–V W–Z | |
UK Railways portal |
Lowton railway station was on a loop off the West Coast Main Line. It stood immediately east of the A572/A573 crossroads known locally as "Four Lane Ends", on the boundary between Newton-le-Willows and Lowton Common.[3][4][5][6] The station straddled Lowton Junction at the northern apex of a triangle of lines off the Stephensons' original Liverpool and Manchester Railway.[7]
History
Opened by the North Union Railway, the station became part of the London and North Western Railway, passing to the LMSR at the Grouping of 1923. The station passed to the London Midland Region of British Railways on nationalisation in 1948.
Services
In 1922 ten "down" (northbound) services called at Lowton on Mondays to Saturdays and one train on a Sunday. Most were local services, with a Saturdays Only "Parliamentary", calling at most stations in a five and a half journey from Crewe to Carlisle. The "up" service was similar.[8]
A wide-ranging set of timetable extracts has been published. Although Lowton stood at the apex of a triangle of lines, no service in the published set shows a service using the north to east curve which leads directly to Manchester.[9]
Closure and after
The station was closed completely in 1949 and progressively demolished over the years, but in 2015 clear evidence still remained.
The lines through the station underwent a transformation with the NW Electrification Programme in the mid-2000 teens. For many years the east to north curve had seen only occasional traffic. The west to north curve had occasional diversions, ECS working in the early hours and a north to west Northern service from Wigan North Western to Liverpool Lime Street, with no balancing working. Most of these trains were run to maintain staff route knowledge.
From the end of 2014 newly electrified Manchester Airport to Edinburgh and Glasgow services were diverted to run via the east to north curve and through the site of Lowton station. In 2015 engineering work in the WCML led to spikes of traffic through the station site through both northern arms of the triangle.
Preceding station | Disused railways | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Golborne South Line open, station closed |
London and North Western Railway North Union Railway |
Newton-le-Willows Line and station open | ||
Parkside Line open, station closed |
References
- ↑ The station via Disused Stations UK
- ↑ Butt 1995, p. 150
- ↑ Smith & Turner 2012, Map 45
- ↑ Station and line NGJ via railwaycodes
- ↑ The station on a 1948 OS Map via npe Maps
- ↑ Yonge, Padgett & Szwenk 2013, map 26C
- ↑ Fields, Gilbert & Knight 1980, Photo 42
- ↑ Bradshaw 1986, pp. 412-5
- ↑ The station via Disused Stations UK
Sources
- Bradshaw (1986), Bradshaw's July 1922 Railway Guide (reprint), Guild Publishing London
- Butt, R. V. J. (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 1-8526-0508-1. OCLC 60251199.
- Fields, N; Gilbert, A C; Knight, N R (1980), Liverpool to Manchester into the Second Century, Manchester Transport Museum Society, ISBN 0 900857 19 6
- Jowett, Alan (2000). Jowett's Nationalised Railway Atlas (1st ed.). Penryn, Cornwall: Atlantic Transport Publishers. ISBN 0-9068-9999-0. OCLC 228266687.
- Smith, Paul; Turner, Keith (2012), Railway Atlas Then and Now, Ian Allan Publishing, ISBN 978 0 7110 3695 6
- Yonge, John; Padgett, David; Szwenk, John (August 2013) [1990]. Bridge, Mike, ed. Railway Track Diagrams 4: Midlands & North West (3rd ed.). Bradford on Avon: Trackmaps. ISBN 978-0-9549866-7-4.
External links
- The station via Disused Stations UK
- Station and line NGJ via railwaycodes
- The station on a 1948 OS Map via npe Maps
- The station on a 1849 OS Map via National Library of Scotland