Stanlow and Thornton railway station

Stanlow and Thornton
Station sign at entrance
Location
Place Stanlow
Local authority Cheshire West and Chester
Operations
Station code SNT
Managed by Northern Rail
Number of platforms 2
Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage
2004/05 * 40
2005/06 * 130
2006/07 * 326
2007/08 * 278
2008/09 * 480
2009/10 * 490
History
23 December 1940 Opened
National Rail - UK railway stations
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Stanlow and Thornton from Office of Rail Regulation statistics. Please note: methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

The unstaffed rail station at Stanlow & Thornton is located within the Stanlow Shell oil refinery in Cheshire, England.

The UK OS Grid Reference is SJ441760.

It lies on Northern Rail's line between Ellesmere Port and Helsby. The station is surrounded by the refinery site, so as a result most station users are refinery employees.[1]

A rail user group, the North Cheshire Rail User Group, supports and actively campaigns for an improved service at this station and for this railway line.[2]

There is no ticket office, so passengers buy tickets from a conductor on board the train.[3] Station usage statistics for 2004-5 showed 40 passengers using the station, less than one per week.[4] Passenger numbers began to increase at the station in 2005-6, with 130 people using it in 2005-06. This rose sharply to 326 in 2006-2007, despite the same rail services being operated.

Contents

Services

Four trains a day call here in each direction (towards Helsby and Ellesmere Port). Two of these trains each day (one early morning and the last service each afternoon) run to Warrington Bank Quay, whilst the first morning train of the day starts from there. The one afternoon train that formerly ran through to Liverpool Lime St now terminates at Warrington.

The Saturday service is effectively the same as the Monday - Friday equivalent, except that early morning services terminate at Helsby, not Warrington.

There is no service on Sundays. A Saturday service operates on most Bank Holidays.

In British Rail terminology, this station's rail service(s) would be referred to as a Parliamentary train. This means that the Train Operating Company only runs the minimum number of services required legally, and usually at the least busy times of day, in order to still comply with the law, but to keep operating costs down to an absolute minimum.

Facilities

At this station there are covered shelters, with three metal seats on either platform. There is a payphone located on the Helsby platform,[5] but only accepts phonecards from British Telecom.

A gently rising footpath leads from the road to a flight of 48 steps with 2 rest landings and a handrail onto a footbridge. From the footbridge to the left, the first flight of 30 steps with rest landing and handrail lead to the Helsby platform, and the second flight of 30 steps with rest landing and handrail lead to the Ellesmere Port platform. The station is definitely not accessible for people with mobility problems.[6]

The booking office is still standing at the Ellesmere Port platform, (number 1), but has been closed for some time. It now houses the electrics for the station and is boarded up.

Although not controlled by Northern Rail, the station does have CCTV monitored by the security services at the Shell oil refinery.

There is limited car parking at the entrance of the station.

Public Transport Interchange

Oil Sites Road, which is a private road owned by Shell, is now closed to the public. Shell cited increased commercial traffic to its refinery and the amount of public vehicles using the road, recklessly in some cases, as reasons for closure.[7] Only vehicles and their occupants that have business at the refinery are now permitted to use the road.

The station is located on Oil Sites Road. Although it is theoretically accessible by foot, it involves a long walk from either Ellesmere Port, Ince or Elton. There are no bus or taxi services at this station due to the access restrictions.

Previously the road also allowed quick access to the villages of Stanlow and Thornton from Ellesmere Port and beyond.

History

The station was opened on 23 December 1940 jointly by the Great Western Railway and the London, Midland and Scottish Railway.[8]. The station served the Shell Thornton Aero Engine Laboratory (AEL), which was responsible for developing fuels and oils for the aircraft of the Royal Air Force.

A short distance from the station was a signal box. This controlled all of the sidings used for freight. Shell stopped using rail as a method of transportation of goods, and subsequently, the sidings were removed. Eventually, the signal box was dismantled and donated to the Embsay & Bolton Abbey Steam Railway.[9] Today, the signals for this line and station are controlled at Helsby and Ellesmere Port signal boxes, operated by Network Rail.

The station was originally earmarked for closure under what is known today as the Beeching Axe, a report created by Dr. Beeching entitled "The Reshaping of Britain's railways". This was basically a report commissioned by the government to find out how money could be saved, as use of the railways began to decline.[10]

References

Notes

Sources

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. 

External links

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Ellesmere Port   Northern Rail
Ellesmere Port to Warrington Line
Mondays-Saturdays only
  Ince and Elton