The intensity of its service was reflected in the 1,650
locomotives it owned – it was by far the most densely-trafficked system in the British Isles with more locomotives per mile than any other company[citation needed] – and that one third of its 738
signal boxes controlled junctions averaging one every 3+1⁄2 miles (6 km). No two adjacent stations were more than 5+1⁄2 miles (9 km) apart and its 1,904 passenger services occupied 57 pages in Bradshaw, a number exceeded only by the
Great Western Railway, the
London and North Western Railway, and the
Midland Railway. It was the first mainline railway to introduce
electrification of some of its lines, and it also ran
steamboat services across the
Irish Sea and
North Sea, being a bigger shipowner than any other British railway company.[citation needed]
The L&YR was incorporated in 1847, being an amalgamation of several important lines, the chief of which was the
Manchester and Leeds Railway (itself having been incorporated in 1836).
Constituent companies
The following companies, in order, were amalgamated into the L&YR. The dates shown are, in most cases, the Acts of Parliament authorising the incorporation and amalgamation of each company. In a few instances the effective date is used.[2]
The system consisted of many branches and alternative routes, so that it is not easy to determine the location of its
main line. For working purposes the railway was split into three divisions:
Whereas there were various lines split between the Central and Western Divisions there was only one route connecting the Eastern and Central Divisions. This line cut through the
Pennines between Lancashire and Yorkshire using a number of long tunnels, the longest of which was
Summit Tunnel (2,885 yards (2,638 m) in length) near
Rochdale. There were six other tunnels each more than 1,000 yards (900 m) long.
Manchester Victoria railway station was one of the largest
railway stations in the country at the time. It occupied 13+1⁄2 acres (55,000 m2) and had 17
platforms with a total length of 9,332 feet (2,844 m). After the grouping, a structural change led platform 11 to run through and join with platform 3 in the
LNWR's adjacent
Exchange station; at 2,238 feet (682 m) between ramps it became the longest railway platform in Britain.[4] Lately the station capacity has been reduced to two platforms for
Metrolink trams, two
bay platforms, and four
through platforms under
Manchester Arena, which now replaces a significant area once occupied by the station. The main façade and station building of the original Hunts Bank station still exist and are kept in relatively good condition.
The L&YR was the first in the country to electrify a mainline route. In
Liverpool, the
fourth rail system pioneered by
the tube railways in London was used at 600
VDC, although this was later converted to a
third rail system. Suburban lines in the Liverpool area were electrified to reach a total of 37 miles (60 km).
In 1912
Dick, Kerr & Co.'s
Preston factory was considering tendering for a Brazilian contract, and approached the L&YR to use the
Bury to Holcombe Brook Line for test purposes at Dick, Kerr's expense. The line from
Bury Bolton Street to
Holcombe Brook was electrified with the
overhead 3.5 kV DC system; rolling stock was also supplied at their cost. After prolonged trials the trains entered public use on 29 July 1913. The L&YR purchased the equipment and stock on the successful completion of the trials in 1916.
In 1913 a decision was taken to electrify the
Manchester to Bury route at 1.2 kV DC in an attempt to overcome competition from electric
trams. Using the third rail system, trains powered by electric motor cars (or carriages) began running on 17 April 1916 but as
Horwich was by then involved in
war work, deliveries of the new electric stock were delayed and it was not until August 1916 that steam trains were withdrawn from the route. In 1920 the L&YR also considered electrifying the
Manchester–Oldham–Shaw and Royton lines, but no work was carried out. During 1917 work began to convert the Bury to Holcombe Brook line to a third rail system, matching the Manchester to Bury system. Third-rail trains started to run on 29 March 1918.
Livery
Locomotives of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway were originally painted dark green with ornate brasswork and copper-capped chimneys. Lining was black and white. In 1876 the dark green was changed to a light green and goods engines were painted plain black. 1878 saw the goods locomotives also appearing in light green. This livery was discontinued from 1883 when all locomotives were painted black. Lining was red and white for passenger locomotives and, if present, red only for goods locomotives.
Passenger coaching stock was originally painted teak, changing in 1875 to an overall light brown. In 1879 a decision was made to use 'a little brighter shade'. Finally in June 1881 it was announced that the lower panels were to be painted 'lake colour'. Between 1896 and 1914 the upper panels became buff with the lower in purple-brown, ends were dark brown. Roofs were normally dark grey but some did appear in red oxide.
Wagons were unpainted until 1902 except for the ironwork which was black. After 1902 it was painted dark grey. The graphical symbol of an inverted solid triangle within a circle was replaced in 1902–03 with the letters LY. Brake vans were black and special traffic wagons were painted in various colours, such as red for
gunpowder, white for fish, and pale blue for butter.
On 25 March 1921, the L&YR and LNWR agreed terms under which the two railways would amalgamate. Before this could occur, the
Railways Act 1921 became law on 19 August 1921, under which the L&YR and LNWR would be forced to amalgamate on 1 January 1923 with each other and with other railways, such as the
Midland Railway and the
Caledonian Railway. The Act included provisions for two or more railways to amalgamate voluntarily before 1923; and the L&YR and LNWR took the opportunity to implement their March 1921 agreement, and on 1 January 1922 both railways were dissolved and a new company was formed, which was also named the London and North Western Railway; its board of twenty directors included six from the former L&YR.[5] The 1923 Grouping duly occurred one years later, which involved the expanded LNWR forming part of the new
London Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS). The general manager, secretary and chief mechanical engineer positions of the expanded company were taken by L&YR employees. Ex-L&YR lines formed the core of the LMS's Central Division.
The LMS did little to develop the former L&YR routes, which in many places ran parallel to ex-LNWR or ex-Midland routes now forming part of the same network.
Nationalisation followed in 1948 followed by a period of rationalisation and modernisation. The L&YR system has survived largely intact, although the following routes have been closed, many within the L&YR's old East Lancashire division:
Most ex-L&YR routes are now operated by
Northern.
Manchester Victoria station has been rebuilt in a more modest form and retains the former terminal building. The
Caldervale Line, as named by
West Yorkshire Metro, is also operated by Northern and uses a large part of the former L&YR.
Accidents and incidents
The
Helmshore rail accident on 4 September 1860 saw 11 people killed and 77 injured when the rear portion of a Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway passenger excursion train became detached and ran back down the line where it collided with an oncoming passenger excursion train.[10]
A passenger train ran into a goods train near
Mosesgate on 27 October 1880. Several passengers were injured and about a dozen carriages and a number of wagons were damaged.[13]
An excursion train was in collision with a
West Lancashire Railway passenger train at
Preston Junction, Lancashire on 3 August 1896 due to the driver of the excursion train misreading signals. One person was killed and seven were injured.[14]
A passenger train was derailed on 15 July 1903 at
Waterloo station, then in
Lancashire (now
Merseyside) caused by a broken spring and spring bridle on the locomotive, while negotiating a 23-chain-radius (460 m) curve at speed. Seven people were killed and 116 were injured.[15]
An express passenger train collided with a light engine at
Sowerby Bridge,
Yorkshire on 22 October 1903 due to a signalman's error. A third train collided with the wreckage at low speed. One person was killed.[16]
A collision between a
London and North Western Railway (LNWR) empty stock train and a passenger train at
Huddersfield,
Yorkshire on 21 April 1905 killed two people. The driver of the LNWR train had overrun signals, but fatigue was a contributory factor.[17]
The
Hall Road rail accident at
Blundellsands in what is now
Merseyside on 27 July 1905 saw 20 killed and 48 injured when two Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway electric passenger trains collided due to human error on the part of a
signalman and a train driver.
Two locomotives were shunted into a siding at Hindley & Blackrod Junction, Lancashire on 22 January 1909, but one of them remained foul of the main line. A passenger train collided with it, killing one person and injuring 33.[17]
A passenger train was derailed on the Charlestown Curve when the track spread under it on 21 June 1912. Four people were killed and twelve were injured.[17]
A freight train became divided on 28 October 1913. The rear portion ran back and was derailed at
Lockwood,
Yorkshire.[18]
On 18 March 1915, an express passenger train overran signals and was in a rear-end collision with an empty stock train at
Smithy Bridge,
Lancashire. Four people were killed and 33 were injured.[19]
A viaduct at
Penistone,
Yorkshire collapsed on 2 February 1916 due to subsidence. A locomotive was on the bridge at the time, but its crew had time to escape before it fell.[20]
A freight train became divided at
Pendlebury, Lancashire. The rear portion was too heavy for the banking locomotive to hold, and it was pushed back downhill and derailed by catch points, as were the wagons.[21]
The
Lostock Junction train collision near
Bolton on 17 July 1920 saw four fatalities and 148 injured as the result of a near head-on collision between two Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway passenger trains due to a signal having been passed at danger[22]
Surviving coaching stock of L&YR origin go as far as 1878, with Directors Saloon No. 1 being privately preserved at the
Keighley & Worth Valley Railway.[23] Multiple coaches are preserved by Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Trust,[24] at the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway, 6-wheel 5-comp third No. 1507,[25] Blackpool Club Car No. 47,[26] 6-wheel 4-comp First No. 279[27] and Brake third No. 1474.[28]
Many L&YR carriages, that were sold to the Barry Railway Company also survive, one being a birdcage brake from 1882.[29]
A dynamometer car also survives at the Midland Rail Centre in Butterley.[30]
The L&YR had the largest ship fleet of all the pre-grouping railway companies. In 1902 the assets of the
Drogheda Steam Packet Company were acquired for the sum of £80,000[31] (equivalent to £9,240,000 in 2021).[32] In 1905 they took over the
Goole Steam Shipping Company.
^Major E Druitt, Report of inquiry into the causes of the accident which occurred on the 15th July to an express passenger train which was derailed at Waterloo on the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, Railway Department, Board of Trade, 10 August 1903
^Hall, Stanley (1990). The Railway Detectives. London: Ian Allan. p. 65.
ISBN0-7110-1929-0.
^
abcEarnshaw, Alan (1989). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 5. Penryn: Atlantic Books. pp. 6, 8, 13.
ISBN978-0-906899-35-9.
^Earnshaw, Alan (1990). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 6. Penryn: Atlantic Books. p. 14.
ISBN978-0-906899-37-3.
^Earnshaw, Alan (1991). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 7. Penryn: Atlantic Books. p. 17.
ISBN978-0-906899-50-2.
^Trevena, Arthur (1980). Trains in Trouble. Vol. 1. Redruth: Atlantic Books. pp. 18, 29.
ISBN978-0-906899-01-4.
^Earnshaw, Alan (1993). Trains in Trouble: Vol. 8. Penryn: Atlantic Books. p. 10.
ISBN978-0-906899-52-6.
Awdry, C. (1990). Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies. Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens Ltd.
ISBN978-1-85260-049-5.
Beaumont, Martin (2015). Sir John Hawkshaw 1811–1891. Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Society.
ISBN978-0-9559467-7-6.
Blakemore, Michael (1984) The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, Ian Allan,
ISBN0-7110-1401-9
Coates, Noel (1997) 150 Years of the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway, Hawkshill Publishing,
ISBN1-900349-11-6
Earnshaw, Alan (1992) The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway: Then & Now, Ian Allan,
ISBN0-7110-2058-2
Haigh, A (1978) Railways in West Yorkshire, Dalesman Books,
ISBN0-85206-459-4
Haws, Duncan (1993). Merchant Fleets – Britain's Railway Steamers – Eastern & North Western + Zeeland and Stena. Hereford: TCL Publications.
ISBN978-0-946378-22-7.
Littleworth, Chris (2002). Signal Boxes on Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Lines - North-East Lancashire. Signalling Record Society.
ISBN978-1-873228-21-0.
Littleworth, Chris (2013). Signal Boxes on Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Lines - North and West of Manchester: Part One. Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Society.
ISBN978-0-9559467-5-2.
Littleworth, Chris (2014). Signal Boxes on Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Lines - North and West of Manchester: Part Two. Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Society.
ISBN978-0-9559467-6-9.
Wells, Jeffrey (1995). An Illustrated Historical Survey of the Railways in and Around Bury. Challenger Publications.
ISBN1-899624-29-5.
Further reading
Normington, Thomas (1898). The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway — being a full account of the rise and progress of this railway, together with numerous interesting reminiscences and incidents on the line. Manchester: J. Heywood.
OCLC26345942.
OL10713324W.