Longridge railway station

Longridge

Remains of the station buildings in 2007, viewed from the east
Location
Place Berry Lane, Longridge
Area Ribble Valley
Coordinates 53°49′53″N 2°36′14″W / 53.8315°N 2.6039°W / 53.8315; -2.6039Coordinates: 53°49′53″N 2°36′14″W / 53.8315°N 2.6039°W / 53.8315; -2.6039
Operations
Original company Preston and Longridge Railway
Pre-grouping Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway / London and North Western Railway (joint)
Post-grouping London Midland and Scottish Railway
Platforms 1
History
1 May 1840 Opened
1872 Station building erected
31 May 1930 Closed to passengers
November 1967 Line closed to goods
Disused railway stations in the United Kingdom
Closed railway stations in Britain
A B C D–F G H–J K–L M–O P–R S T–V W–Z
UK Railways portal
Viewed from the south, in 2007
Maps showing
Longridge Station
Old OS Maps (estimated 1925 to 1945)
NPE Maps (1947-48)
Vision of Britain  
OS 1:10000 Map on MARIO (about 1847)
Other maps

53°49′53″N 2°36′14″W / 53.8315°N 2.6039°W / 53.8315; -2.6039

Longridge railway station was a passenger terminus of the Preston and Longridge Railway. It served the town of Longridge in Lancashire, England.

The line first opened in 1840 to carry stone from the recently opened Tootle Heights quarry on the northeastern side of the village of Longridge, as it then was. Wagons carrying quarried stone ran downhill to Preston and were hauled in the other direction by horses.[1] There were rudimentary passenger facilities at a level crossing in Burey Lane (later called Berry Lane) which at the time was a rural lane with only a couple of houses; the village of Longridge was at the southeast end of the lane. A hotel was built next to the station, and was known as the Longridge Railway Tavern and the Station Hotel before being renamed in 1853 the Towneley Arms, as it is still known today.[2]

After the railway converted to steam power in 1848,[3] Longridge expanded rapidly. Four cotton mills were built alongside the railway and Berry Lane became the town centre.[4]

By 1867, the railway was owned jointly by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway and the London and North Western Railway, and three years later the railway bought the Towneley Arms. A station building was built on the side of the hotel in 1872.[5]

On the opposite side of Berry Lane were many goods sidings, for the local mills, gasworks and a coal merchant.[4] The line continued to the Tootle Heights quarries.

The line and the station closed to passengers on 31 May 1930. Goods traffic continued until November 1967;[6] within the next year the tracks were lifted.[7]

Today the former station building and canopy still exist and are used as the headquarters of Longridge Town Council.[8] Where the tracks once ran through the station is a war memorial, erected in 1981.[9] Part of the goods yard opposite has become a supermarket car park.[7]

In late 2008, a Heritage Lottery Fund grant of £221,600 was awarded to restore the former station building for use as a heritage centre and community area.[10][11] The restoration was completed in 2010.[12]

Notes

  1. Till, pp.8889; Pattinson, p.5
  2. Pattinson, p.19; Till, pp.127 & 158
  3. Suggitt, p.50; Pattinson, p.5; Till, p.92
  4. 1 2 Pattinson, p.6
  5. Suggitt, p.51; Pattinson, p.6
  6. Suggitt, pp.5253
  7. 1 2 Pattinson, p.16
  8. Suggitt, p.55; Pattinson, p.19
  9. Coppin, A, "War memorial links", Longridge News 25 May 2007, accessed online 11 July 2007.
  10. "Heritage Lottery Fund Committee for the North West Meeting on 17 September 2008" (minutes), retrieved 10 May 2009
  11. "...but HLF grant saves station". The Railway Magazine. Vol. 154 no. 1,292. December 2008. p. 10.
  12. Longridge Station retrieved 9 January 2011

References

Preceding station Disused railways Following station
Grimsargh
towards Preston
  Preston and Longridge Railway   Terminus
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