Tyldesley Loopline

The Tyldesley Loopline was part of the London and North Western Railway's Manchester and Wigan Railway line from Eccles to the junction west of Tyldesley station and its continuance south west via Bedford Leigh to Kenyon Junction on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. The line opened on 1 September 1864 with stations at Worsley, Ellenbrook, Tyldesley, Leigh and Pennington before joining the Liverpool and Manchester Railway at Kenyon Junction.

Construction

The London and North Western Railway Bill received Royal Assent in July 1861 and the first sod was cut at Worsley by the Earl of Ellesmere in the September.[1] During construction, a Roman road was uncovered at Worsley. The railway was just over 16 miles long with 88 bridges, a sandstone cutting at Parr Brow, Tyldesley and a 22-arch viaduct which took the railway through Leigh and over the Bridgewater Canal. The work was expected to have been completed by May 1863 but lasted until the summer of 1864.[2]

Development

Stations between Tyldesley and Wigan at Chowbent, Hindley Green and Platt Bridge opened on the same day. A branch line leaving the Tyldesley to Eccles line at Roe Green with stations at Walkden, Little Hulton and Plodder Lane was authorised in 1865 and opened in 1870. The line was extended to Great Moor Street in Bolton in 1874. Monton Green station[3] between Eccles station and Worsley station[4] opened in 1877 to serve new housing. In 1876 Bedford Leigh was renamed Leigh & Bedford and in 1914 was again renamed to Leigh. Chowbent was renamed Howe Bridge in 1901.[5]

Stations on the line became part of the London Midland and Scottish Railway in 1923, and the London Midland Region of British Railways on nationalisation in 1948.

Collieries

Coal, and the many collieries that were being developed in the area, was the chief motivation for building a railway in the area and the railway's supporters included many local colliery owners and industrialists. These included the Earl of Ellesmere owner of the Bridgewater Collieries, the Fletchers of Fletcher, Burrows and Company and millowner Caleb Wright.[1] Collieries linked to the railway include Astley and Tyldesley Collieries' St George's, Nook and Gin Pit Collieries which were connected at Jackson's sidings, Bedford Colliery in Leigh was connected at Speakman's sidings on the Pennington branch and the Shakerley, Yew Tree and Cleworth Hall Collieries belonging to the Tyldesley Coal Company had a connection at Green's Sidings to the east of Tyldesley station and Ramsden's Shakerley Collieries had its own sidings.[6] Mosley Common Colliery was connected at Ellenbrook and mines connected to the Bridgewater Collieries system including Sandhole Colliery joined the line between Roe Green and Worsley at Sanderson's Sidings.[7]

Closure

The Tyldesley Loopline closed following the Beeching Axe on 5 May 1969 and Leigh, Tyldesley, Monton Green and Worsley stations were closed.[8] The former trackbed which passes through the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan area was reserved in the Unitary Development Plan in case the rail route could be reinstated. The guided bus route[9] is under construction along the former trackbed to Ellenbrook[10] before it joins the A580 East Lancashire Road but is not universally popular.[11] Salford City Council has used the trackbed of the railway for recreational purposes turning it into a rail trail.[12]

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Sweeney 1996, p. 71
  2. Sweeney 1996, p. 72
  3. Monton Green Station, Subterranea Britannica, retrieved 28 February 2010
  4. Worsley Station, Subterranea Britannica, retrieved 28 February 2010
  5. Sweeney 1996, p. 70
  6. Sweeney 1996, p. 92
  7. Sweeney 1996, p. 149
  8. Sweeney 1996, p. 114
  9. Leigh Salford Manchester Busway Project (PDF), brtuk.org, retrieved 28 February 2010
  10. What's happening and when (PDF), Transport for Greater Manchester, retrieved 7 August 2013
  11. Gomm, Brian (19 August 2009), "Busway 'off the rails'", Leigh Journal (Newsquest Media Group), retrieved 28 February 2010
  12. Monton Trail (PDF), Visit Salford, retrieved 28 February 2010

Bibliography

  • Sweeney, D. J. (1996), A Lancashire Triangle Part One, Triangle Publishing, ISBN 0-9529333-0-6 
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