Lostock Hall railway station
Lostock Hall | |
---|---|
Lostock Hall railway station in 2009 | |
Location | |
Place | Lostock Hall |
Local authority | South Ribble |
Grid reference | SD547255 |
Operations | |
Station code | LOH |
Managed by | Northern |
Number of platforms | 2 |
DfT category | F2 |
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections from National Rail Enquiries | |
Annual rail passenger usage* | |
2004/05 | 38,731 |
2005/06 | 32,848 |
2006/07 | 32,555 |
2007/08 | 30,151 |
2008/09 | 28,490 |
2009/10 | 27,422 |
2010/11 | 33,344 |
2011/12 | 36,996 |
2012/13 | 38,600 |
2013/14 | 41,190 |
2014/15 | 41,442 |
History | |
Key dates | Opened May 1984 |
National Rail – UK railway stations | |
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Lostock Hall from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year. | |
UK Railways portal |
Lostock Hall railway station is 2 3⁄4 miles (4.4 km) south of Preston station, England. It is on the East Lancashire Line and is managed by Northern, who also provide all passenger trains serving it.
History
The first railway in the area was the Blackburn & Preston Railway, which opened its route from Blackburn to Farington Junction (on the North Union Railway, 3 miles south of Preston) in June 1846. The company was almost immediately taken over by the ambitious East Lancashire Railway, which was undergoing a rapid expansion of its network of routes in the area. The ELR encountered problems almost from the outset over the use of the NUR route between Farington & Preston, with congestion and the high tolls charged by the latter company for access to its metals causing considerable friction between the two. The ELR sought parliamentary permission to build its own route to Preston to resolve this issue, which was granted in 1848 despite initial opposition from Preston Corporation. The following year saw the arrival from the west of the Liverpool, Ormskirk and Preston Railway, which had received parliamentary assent in 1846 but had been bought out by the ELR before construction work had started upon it. This route gave the ELR direct access for its traffic to the docks in Liverpool and joined the B&PR at Lostock Hall by means of a junction facing towards Blackburn.[1] A station was built on this line a short distance to the west of the junction[2] (adjacent to the bridge carrying the main Preston to Wigan across the railway) to serve Lostock Hall village, which had by this time been chosen by the ELR as the site for one its main locomotive depots.
The ELR Preston Extension was finally opened to traffic on 2 September 1850[3] - this left the original B&PR line at a triangular junction just east of Lostock Hall and ran roughly parallel to the NUR en route to new platforms alongside the latter's station, with a connection to the main line beyond. Thereafter, the old B&P line between Lostock Hall Junction and Farington was rendered redundant & closed - not seeing regular traffic again until the mid-1880s. Services from the station ran to Liverpool Exchange westbound and to both Preston and Blackburn (with some extensions through to Colne) eastbound. Traffic levels continued to increase in subsequent years, particularly after the ELR's absorption by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway in May 1859 - the L&Y then routing significant quantities of trans-Pennine freight over the route to the port of Liverpool.
By 1877 traffic demands had reached the point that the 2-road depot adjacent to the junction was deemed inadequate by the L&Y and work on a new, much larger facility began. This was built on a site between the LO&P and B&P lines immediately south of the passenger station and was opened in 1881, with the old depot then becoming a carriage & wagon repair shop. The new shed would become the L&Y’s main loco servicing facility for the entire Preston area (and beyond) and in due course the volume of traffic utilising it and the routes it served became so great that additional trackwork improvements had to be made to alleviate matters. These began with the re-opening of the Farington line in 1886, with the junction there altered to face south rather than north as previously, followed by the construction of two new connections between the East Lancs line and the newly quadrupled (and by now jointly owned) main line from Wigan north of where the two lines crossed each other. The first of these (from west to north) was commissioned in 1891 as part of the main line upgrade works,[4] whilst the second (east to north) followed in May 1908, creating a second triangular junction to the west of the station and a second route to Preston.[1] This complex network of lines allowed for considerable operational flexibility in the years that followed, as both full trains & light locos could be routed from there towards either side of Preston station without conflicting with the main line. It was also possible for trains from the north heading towards Blackpool or vice versa to be routed through Lostock Hall to avoid the need for an awkward & time-consuming reversal manoeuvre at Preston station and this became a regular feature of the timetable at peak times during the summer months right up until the end of the 1960s.
The lines would pass briefly into the hands of the London and North Western Railway from January 1922, before the 1923 Grouping saw the London, Midland and Scottish Railway take over. The station & depot then became part of the London Midland Region area of British Railways upon nationalisation in January 1948.
By the 1960s, the loco shed was still a busy location and would remain so right up until the end of steam on the UK rail network in August 1968. The station & LO&PR line by contrast were amongst those planned for closure in the 1963 Beeching Report, the route being considered by Beeching as a duplicate to that via Wigan and St Helens. Public opposition to the plans soon led to the southern portion as far as Ormskirk being safeguarded, but it wasn’t until 1969 that the rest of the line was reprieved by the Labour government of Harold Wilson. Lostock Hall station though wasn’t so fortunate, losing its passenger services on 6 October 1969[5] when the last few through trains between Blackburn & Liverpool were withdrawn and the other services on the Ormskirk line routed via Farington Curve Junction and the WCML. The connections either side of Lostock Hall toward Todd Lane Jcn (Preston ELR) & Moss Lane Jcn (Ormskirk) were closed at the same time and subsequently dismantled, whilst the station itself was also demolished at some point in the early 1970s.
Services over the ex-ELR Preston extension from the Bamber Bridge direction finally ended in the autumn of 1972, when the line was closed (as a result of the Preston area re-signalling scheme) along with the remaining manual signal boxes in the area[6] (though a short section remained in use for freight to Lostock Hall gas works until 1977). East Lancashire line trains were thereafter routed via the original 1846/49 lines as far as Lostock Hall, then over the 1908 connection to reach the WCML.
The loco depot eventually lost its role as a maintenance facility in 1971, thereafter taking over the role of its predecessor further east as the area carriage & wagon repair shops. It closed altogether in 1988 and was finally demolished in January 1990. The adjacent Lostock Hall Jcn to Farington Jcn line (which hasn't had a timetabled passenger service since 1850) is still open and sees use by a variety of freight services heading to and from the S&C route and occasional diverted passenger trains & railtours. Part of the old Preston extension route is now a footpath & cycle way, whilst another portion has been utilised for road improvements.
The Current Station
By the early 1980s, local pressure for a station to serve the Lostock Hall area had become considerable and so on 14 May 1984 a new station was opened on the opposite side of the Watkin Lane bridge by British Rail with financial backing from Lancashire County Council.
The new facility was (and still is) quite basic – there are waiting shelters, a long-line P.A system & passenger information screens on each concrete platform, but no manned ticket office or ticket vending machines (so tickets must be bought prior to travel or on the train). Step-free access is available to both platforms.[7]
Services
Monday to Saturdays, there is an hourly service from Lostock Hall towards Preston and Blackpool South, westbound and Blackburn, Burnley and Colne eastbound.[8] There is a two-hourly service in each direction on Sundays. In addition there are two additional morning peak services from York & Leeds to Blackpool North that call here, and one extra service in the evening in the opposite direction to Leeds & York.
Direct bus services between Chorley, Leyland and Preston and beyond run through Lostock Hall on a much more frequent service.
Notes
- 1 2 "Railway Development in Preston" Greville, M.D & Holt, G.O Railway Magazine 1960, pp 197-203; Retrieved 21 November 2016
- ↑ Lostock Hall station (Original Site) Thompson, Nigel Geograph.org; Retrieved 2013-10-30
- ↑ Marshall. p.39
- ↑ Suggitt, p.59
- ↑ Marshall, p.143
- ↑ Preston Signalling Ingham, D Preston Station, Past and Present; Retrieved 21 November 2016
- ↑ Lostock Hall station facilities National Rail Enquiries; Retrieved 25 November 2016
- ↑ GB National Rail Timetable May 2016 Edition, Table 97
References
- Marshall, J (1981). Forgotten Railways North-West England. David & Charles (Publishers) Ltd, Newton Abbott. ISBN 0-7153-8003-6.
- Suggitt, G (2003). Lost Railways of Lancashire. Countryside Books, Newbury. ISBN 1-85306-801-2.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lostock Hall railway station. |
- Train times and station information for Lostock Hall railway station from National Rail
- Lostock Hall MPD (engine shed)
- Railscot - Lostock Hall
Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Preston | Northern East Lancashire Line |
Bamber Bridge |
Coordinates: 53°43′26″N 2°41′13″W / 53.724°N 2.687°W