Liverpool, St Helens and South Lancashire Railway

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Liverpool, St Helens and
South Lancashire Railway
Overview
Statusclosed
LocaleNorth West England
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Route map

1900–1968
St Helens Central
(GCR)
Cowley Hill Works
St Helens Central
St Helens and
Runcorn Gap Railway
Haydock
Haydock Colliery Tunnel
Ashton-in-Makerfield
Haydock Park
Garswood Hall Colliery
Golborne Colliery
Edge Green Colliery
Golborne South
Golborne North
Lowton St Mary's
Liverpool–
Manchester lines
Kenyon Junction
Culcheth
Newchurch Halt
Risley Factory
Liverpool–
Manchester lines
Glazebrook
From 1968
Haydock Colliery Tunnel
Haydock Oil
1968–83
Old Boston Colliery
1963–1987
Lowton Metals
Ashton-in-
Makerfield
Race Traffic
1975
Haydock Park
Garswood Hall Colliery
1880–1989
Golborne Colliery
Haydock Branch curve
Kelbit
1987–
Golborne South
Golborne North

The Liverpool, St Helens and South Lancashire Railway, was formed in 1889, but no services ran until 1895 and then only freight. Passenger services did not start until 1900. It incorporated the St Helens and Wigan Junction Railway.[1] It was taken over by the Great Central Railway in 1906.[2]

History[edit]

The Railway was incorporated by Acts of Parliament in 1885-86 to enable the construction of a line from St Helens to Lowton (eight miles) and St Helens to Liverpool (ten miles). The lines had share capital of £210,000 and £340,000 respectively. The first sod was cut on 25 January 1888 by the Earl of Derby on the site of what became St Helens Central railway station. In July 1889 an Act of Parliament extended the completion time until July 1893. The opening ceremony took place on 2 January 1900.[3]

The original intention was to connect to the Cheshire Lines Committee North Liverpool Extension Line at Fazakerley junction, to form a route to Huskisson Dock and Southport, but nothing ever came of the scheme west of St Helens.

Henry Seton-Karr was chairman of the railway at its opening. [4]

Route[edit]

The line ran from St Helens Central (GCR) railway station to Lowton St Mary's.[5]

Closure[edit]

The line closed to passengers in 1952. It was reduced in stages as freight traffic ebbed and flowed. The key milestones were:

  • 1965 line closed and lifted west of Lowton Metals, Ashton (inclusive).
  • 1968 line reinstated west of Lowton Metals to serve a new oil depot at Haydock
  • 1968 new "Haydock Branch Curve" built to connect the line to the WCML north of Golborne
  • 1968 line east of the new connection closed and lifted (the bridge over the WCML was removed in 1971)
  • 1975 passenger trains ran to five race meetings, using Ashton station, experiment not repeated
  • 1983 Haydock oil depot traffic lost to road, line cut back to Lowton Metals, Haydock.
  • 1987 Lowton Metals ceased trading, line cut back to Golborne Colliery headshunt
  • 1987 Kelbit opened rail-served business at Edge Green, using trackbed of Edge Green Colliery branch
  • 1989 Golborne Colliery closed, line cut back to headshunt for the Kelbit traffic
  • after 2000 the Kelbit site was taken over by Hanson as their "Ashton" plant
  • In 2011 the site was purchased by PF Jones Ltd and began work to restore the Kelbit rail line

In 2015 very occasional trains still served the Hanson plant.

On 7 March 2015 an enthusiasts' excursion titled "Sabrina's Tea Train" traversed the line.[6]

A quarter-mile headshunt which ends at bufferstops approx 50 yards east of Bridge 13 over Edge Green Lane is the sole remaining section of the original route in use.

Re-Opening[edit]

After purchasing the land surrounding the line at Edge Green in 2011, PF Jones Ltd worked with Hansons to restore the Kelbit line off the Haydock Branch Curve. The Kelbit line re-opens in 2018 and will be used by Hanson's to transfer raw materials from Shap Quarry, Cumbria to distribute across the north west.

Between and Golborne and Glazebrook High Speed 2 proposed use of an alignment similar to the disused line in Phase 2b.[7] This "Golborne Link" was removed from HS2 plans before the northern leg was abandoned by the Conservative government in 2023.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "St. Helens Central Station". Disused Stations. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
  2. ^ Sweeney 2014, pp. 5–18
  3. ^ "Liverpool, St Helens and South Lancashire Railway". Lancashire Faces & Places. 1 (6): 94–96. June 1901.
  4. ^ "Mr Henry Seton-Karr, MP". Lancashire Faces & Places. 1 (6): 86. June 1901.
  5. ^ "Lowton St. Mary's Station". Disused Stations. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
  6. ^ The Railtour Files, via SixBellsJunction
  7. ^ "HS2 Phase 2b: Lowton to Bamfurlong route key plan" (PDF). gov.uk. Retrieved 16 November 2020.

Sources[edit]

  • Sweeney, Dennis J (2014). The St. Helens and Wigan Junction Railway. Leigh: Triangle Publishing. ISBN 0-85361-292-7.

External links[edit]