Widnes South railway station

Former railway station in England

53°21′30″N 2°44′02″W / 53.3583°N 2.7339°W / 53.3583; -2.7339Grid referenceSJ512848Platforms2[1]Other informationStatusDisusedHistoryOriginal companyLondon and North Western RailwayPre-groupingLondon and North Western RailwayPost-groupingLondon Midland and Scottish Railway
London Midland Region of British RailwaysKey dates1 March 1870Opened as Widnes5 January 1959Renamed Widnes South10 September 1962Closed to Passengers31 March 1969Closed completely
St Helens &
Runcorn Gap Railway
Legend
UpperRight arrow Liverpool & Bury Railway
Rainford Junction
Left arrow Skelmersdale branch
LowerLeft arrow Liverpool & Bury Railway
Rainford Village
Rookery
Old Mill Lane
Crank Halt
Moss Bank
Pilkington
Gerards Bridge
St Helens Central
(original GCR station)
St Helens Central
Peasley Cross
Hays Chemicals
Sutton Oak
Robins Lane Halt
St Helens Junction
Clock Face
Union Bank Farm Halt
Farnworth & Bold
Appleton
Ann Street Halt
Warrington Arpley
Warrington Bank Quay
High Level│Low Level
Whitecross
Sankey Bridges
Fidlers Ferry & Penketh
Fiddlers Ferry power station
Cuerdley
Tanhouse Lane
Widnes Central
Up arrowDown arrow
Cheshire Lines Committee
(Liverpool–Manchester)
Hough Green
Widnes South
Runcorn Gap
(second)
Runcorn Gap
(first)
Widnes Dock
Ditton Mill
Ditton Junction
Halebank
Speke
1864 extension
to Liverpool
Church Road Garston
Garston Container terminal
Garston Dock
Liverpool South Parkway
Allerton
West Allerton
Mossley Hill
Sefton Park
Wavertree
Edge Hill
Liverpool Lime Street
This diagram:
  • view
  • talk
  • edit

Widnes South railway station was located in the town of Widnes in Cheshire, England on the east side of Victoria Road. It was built by the London and North Western Railway and situated on their Widnes Deviation Line, opening to passengers and goods in March 1870.[2] This route was constructed by the LNWR to improve traffic flow on the busy Ditton Junction to Warrington Bank Quay Low Level and Manchester (the former Garston and Warrington Railway, later renamed as the St Helens Railway). It replaced an earlier station on the G&WR line located slightly further south and also had a connection to the St Helens and Runcorn Gap Railway, providing access towards the north.

Passenger services were primarily local in nature and provided by Liverpool Lime Street to Warrington Bank Quay & Manchester Oxford Road stopping trains and the Ditton Dodger between Ditton and St Helens Central[2] - this pattern continued after the 1923 Grouping brought the route under the control of the London, Midland & Scottish Railway and the subsequent nationalisation of the UK railway network in January 1948. The line was also heavily used by freight, with the LNWR treating it as a key artery for through east–west traffic.[3]

St Helens trains were withdrawn by the British Transport Commission in June 1951 – service levels on the route having been cut prior to World War II and never fully restored afterwards.[2] The station was subsequently renamed as Widnes South by BR in January 1959 to differentiate it from the neighbouring Widnes Central station on the former Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway & Midland Railway Joint Widnes Loop line and "North" (now known simply as Widnes) on the Cheshire Lines Committee main line. It then closed to regular passenger traffic on 10 September 1962 with the withdrawal of services on the Ditton to Manchester via Warrington route. Special excursions run in conjunction with Widnes rugby league club home matches continued to call until 1965, whilst the goods depot remained open until 1969.[4]

By December 2015 the route through the station was still used by freight traffic, the main flow being block coal trains to and from the power station at Fiddlers Ferry. The station buildings and one platform had been demolished, though the westbound platform still remained intact, albeit overgrown.[5] The connection towards St Helens was closed in 1982 (along with the station signal box), whilst the main line now terminates at Arpley yard, near Warrington Bank Quay station. The section east of Warrington towards Manchester and Stockport was closed in 1985.

In January 2016 the last remains of the station were demolished. Contractors began work at the beginning of the month; they demolished the remains of the platforms, filled in the subway and landscaped the resulting embankment sides.[6]


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Ditton Mill
Line open, station closed
  LNWR
St Helens Railway
  Ann Street Halt
Line and station closed
    Cuerdley
Line open, station closed

References

  1. ^ Fields, Gilbert & Knight 1980, Photos 249 & 250
  2. ^ a b c "Disused Stations - Widnes South" Disused Stations; Retrieved 2014-03-20
  3. ^ "Disused Stations - Widnes Deviation Railway" Retrieved 2014-03-20
  4. ^ "The 8D Association - The Deviation" www.8dassociation.btck.co.uk; Retrieved 2014-03-20
  5. ^ Shannon & Hillmer 2003, p. 112
  6. ^ Hollins 2016, p. 4.

Sources

  • 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.
  • Hollins, Chris (March 2016). Wright, Paul (ed.). "News Round Up". On Shed, The Journal of the 8D Association. 6 (1). Widnes: 8D Association.
  • Shannon, Paul; Hillmer, John (2003). British Railways Past and Present, Manchester and South Lancashire No 41. Kettering: Past & Present Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1 85895 197 6.

External links

  • The station on an 1888-1913 Overlay OS Map via National Library of Scotland
  • Widnes South station on a navigable 1946 O.S. map
  • Widnes South via Disused Stations
  • The station via railwaycodes
  • v
  • t
  • e
Closed railway stations in Cheshire
St Helens and Runcorn Gap Railway
Birkenhead Railway
Chester to Crewe
Macclesfield to Marple
Northwich to Sandbach
Winsford and Over Branch Line
Whitchurch and Tattenhall Railway
Sandbach to Kidsgrove
Warrington and Altrincham Junction Railway
Mid-Cheshire Line
Chester & Connah's Quay Railway
Helsby to Mouldsworth Junction
Nantwich to Market Drayton
Wirral Line
Other stations
icon Cheshire portal