Colwich Junction

Colwich Junction is a rail junction near the town of Little Haywood, Staffordshire, England. It is the junction between two routes of the West Coast Main Line: The Trent Valley Line and the Stone to Colwich cutoff Line. The junction was the site of the 1986 Colwich rail crash.

Routes

Situated on the Trent Valley Line section of the WCML between Rugeley Trent Valley and Stafford, it accesses a twin track, electrified (25 kV AC overhead line) cut off line through to Stone, where it joins the North Staffordshire Railways main line (Stafford to Cheadle Hulme Junction via Stoke-on-Trent). This provides a shorter route to Manchester Piccadilly than using lines via Stafford or Crewe, although the route via Crewe and Wilmslow is technically a faster route due to fewer speed restrictions on the route.

South of the junction, the line is quadruple tracked towards Nuneaton & Rugby but to the north both lines continue as double track only (though the WCML remains so only for two miles before quadrupling once more again on the approaches to Stafford). The main line dates from 1847 and was opened by the London and North Western Railway, whilst the branch towards Stone was opened by the NSR two years later.

Prior to June 2005, the junction was worked locally from a British Rail LMR Type 15 brick and timber electro-mechanical signal box, but this has since been closed and the lines in the area transferred to the control of the signalling centre at Stoke-on-Trent.[1]

Stations

There are currently no stations on the Colwich Junction to Stone line, local stopping services having been withdrawn by the LMS in January 1947. Although there were platforms on this line at Stone, they have been demolished. There was a station at Colwich itself, but this closed in 1958.

Accident history

There was a rail accident here on Friday 19 September 1986, when two express passenger trains collided - see Colwich rail crash.

References

  1. The Signal Box: Section C - 2005 www.signalbox.org; Retrieved 2015-02-28

Coordinates: 52°47′17″N 1°58′45″W / 52.78806°N 1.97917°W / 52.78806; -1.97917

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, June 30, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.