PhotosLocation


Wilbraham_Road_railway_station Latitude and Longitude:

53°26′24″N 2°15′05″W / 53.4401°N 2.2515°W / 53.4401; -2.2515
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wilbraham Road
1937 OS map showing the location of Wilbraham Road railway station
General information
Location Whalley Range, Manchester, Manchester
England
Coordinates 53°26′24″N 2°15′05″W / 53.4401°N 2.2515°W / 53.4401; -2.2515
Grid reference SJ834937
Platforms2
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original company Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway
Pre-grouping Great Central Railway
Post-grouping London and North Eastern Railway
Key dates
2 May 1892Station opens as Alexandra Park [1]
1 July 1923Station renamed Wilbraham Road [1] [2]
7 July 1958Station closes [2]

Wilbraham Road railway station was in Whalley Range, Manchester, England, on the Fallowfield Loop line between Manchester Central and Fairfield, via Chorlton. Opened as Alexandra Park in 1892 by the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway, [3] it was near the junction of Alexandra Road South and Mauldeth Road West, close to Alexandra Park, and served the expanding residential suburb of Whalley Range. The railway line has since been converted into a shared use path.

History

Alexandra Park station opened on 2 May 1892. [1] From 1 August 1897 to 1 January 1923 the station was owned by the Great Central Railway (GCR). The GCR was absorbed by the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) during the Grouping of 1923. [4] The station was renamed Wilbraham Road on 1 July 1923 to avoid possible confusion with the north London suburb of Alexandra Park on the same network. [2] The naming was an unusual choice, since the station was about a 14 mile (400 m) from the A6010 Wilbraham Road, and was not visible from there.

During 1918–19 the station goods yard was used to receive aircraft fuselages, wings and other major components from Avro at Newton Heath and the National Aircraft Factory No. 2 at Heaton Chapel for assembly at the nearby Alexandra Park Aerodrome, which lay 300 yards (270 m) to the south. [5]

Passenger services on the Fallowfield Loop line were infrequent; the line suffered from competition from alternative rail services into Manchester provided by the LNER from Levenshulme and later from the electric trams. By the 1930s the LNER had greatly reduced the stopping services and mostly used the line for express trains. After 1948, the line was under the ownership of the nationalised British Railways.

The electrification of the line was briefly considered but, instead, the local stopping services were withdrawn and Wilbraham Road station was closed to passenger services by British Railways on 7 July 1958. [2] However, SELNEC PTE continued to run a scheduled motor-bus service from the station, timed according to the now-defunct passenger timetable. Express services out of Manchester Central continued to use the line until that terminus was closed in 1969 following the Beeching cuts. For another two decades the line was used by freight trains until the line closed completely in 1988. [6] Eventually the station buildings were demolished and today only some residual brickwork of the platform edges survives. The sidings at the other side of Alexandra Road South, however, remained in use by SPD Distribution until the line closed. The track bed of the line crosses a road on the former site, and the Station Master's house is still in use as a private residence.

Fallowfield Loop path

Following closure in 1988, the Fallowfield Loop railway line tracks were lifted; the route became derelict and overgrown for several years. Around 2001, a new use was found for the line and the old trackbed was converted into a public shared use path. Today, the Fallowfield Loop path is operated by Sustrans; it runs from Fairfield to Chorlton and forms part of Routes 6 and 60 of the National Cycle Network. [7] [8]

Blues and Gospel Train

On 7 May 1964, Granada Television transformed the disused buildings into Chorltonville, a southern U.S.-style station, for a programme called Blues and Gospel Train with Muddy Waters, Otis Spann, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Rev. Gary Davis and Cousin Joe Pleasant. [9]

Fallowfield Loop Line
Guide Bridge
Fairfield
Deansgate-Castlefield
Gorton
Manchester Central
Cornbrook
Hyde Road
Trafford Bar
Levenshulme South
 
Metrolink to Altrincham
Chorlton-cum-Hardy
St Werburgh's Road
Fallowfield
Wilbraham Road
Key
Fallowfield Loop line
present National Rail service
Metrolink

Railways in the area of Chorlton and Withington


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Chorlton-cum-Hardy   LNER
Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway
Fallowfield Loop
  Fallowfield

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Butt 1995, p. 15
  2. ^ a b c d Butt 1995, p. 250
  3. ^ "Wilbraham Road". Disused Stations. Retrieved 27 March 2013.
  4. ^ Awdry, Christopher, Encyclopedia of British Railway Companies, Guild Publishing, 1990, CN 8983, p. 133
  5. ^ Scholefield, R.A., Manchester's Early Airfields an extended chapter in Moving Manchester, Lancashire & Cheshire Antiquarian Society, 2004, ISSN  0950-4699, p. 216
  6. ^ "Eyewitness in Manchester – South Manchester Loop Line Walk". Archived from the original on 19 July 2008. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  7. ^ "Fallowfield Loopline". Sustrans. Archived from the original on 29 March 2013. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  8. ^ "Friends of the Fallowfield Loop". Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  9. ^ Muddy Waters and Sister Rosetta Tharpe's 'mind-blowing' station show, BBC News, 7 May 2014

Sources

External links