Mid-Cheshire line

Last updated

Mid-Cheshire line
Mid-Cheshire Line at Chester.jpg
Overview
StatusOperational
Owner Network Rail
Locale Greater Manchester
Cheshire
Stockport
North West England
Termini
Service
System National Rail
Operator(s) Northern Trains
Rolling stock Class 150
Class 156
Technical
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Route map
Mid-Cheshire line.png
(Click to expand)
Mid-Cheshire line
BSicon CONTg.svg
BSicon hbKRZWae.svg
Roodee Viaduct, River Dee
BSicon STR.svg
BSicon exdCONTg.svg
BSicon exKBHFaq.svg
BSicon edKRZu.svg
BSicon exABZgr+r.svg
Chester Northgate
BSicon ABZgxl+l.svg
BSicon xdKRZo.svg
BSicon CONTfq.svg
BSicon BHF.svg
BSicon exdSTR.svg
Chester (General)
BSicon dSTR.svg
BSicon bMSTR.svg
BSicon exhbSTRae.svg
BSicon bv-SHI6l~R.svg
BSicon v-CONTf.svg
BSicon SHI3+l.svg
BSicon exSTR.svg
BSicon vSHI3r-.svg
BSicon vSTR-.svg
BSicon dSTR.svg
BSicon CONTf.svg
BSicon cRP2q.svg
BSicon SKRZ-G2u.svg
BSicon cRP2q.svg
BSicon eHST.svg
Mickle Trafford East
BSicon eHST.svg
Barrow for Tarvin
BSicon STR.svg
BSicon exCONTg.svg
BSicon STR.svg
BSicon excdSTRc2.svg
BSicon exdHST3.svg
Helsby and Alvanley
BSicon edSTR+c2.svg
BSicon exHST3+1.svg
BSicon exdSTRc4.svg
Manley
BSicon edABZg+1.svg
BSicon exSTRc4.svg
BSicon HST.svg
Mouldsworth
BSicon HST.svg
Delamere
BSicon exKHSTa.svg
BSicon STR.svg
Winsford and Over
BSicon exHST.svg
BSicon STR.svg
Whitegate
BSicon exKRWl.svg
BSicon eKRWg+r.svg
BSicon cRP2q.svg
BSicon SKRZ-G2u.svg
BSicon cRP2q.svg
BSicon HST.svg
Cuddington
BSicon dCONTgq.svg
BSicon STRq.svg
BSicon KRZo+k2.svg
BSicon kABZq+3.svg
BSicon dCONTfq.svg
BSicon kABZg+1.svg
Hartford Curve
BSicon HST.svg
Greenbank
BSicon ABZgl+l.svg
BSicon KDSTeq.svg
ICI Winnington
BSicon bWBRUCKE1.svg
Weaver Viaduct
BSicon CONTgq.svg
BSicon ABZgr+r.svg
Northwich – Sandbach Branch
(Freight only)
BSicon cRP2q.svg
BSicon SKRZ-G2o.svg
BSicon cRP2q.svg
BSicon BHF.svg
Northwich
BSicon KDSTaq.svg
BSicon ABZgr.svg
ICI Lostock
BSicon eABZg+l.svg
BSicon exCONTfq.svg
Salt Branches
BSicon HST.svg
Lostock Gralam
BSicon HST.svg
Plumley
BSicon eHST.svg
Plumbley West Platform
BSicon BHF.svg
Knutsford
BSicon HST.svg
Mobberley
BSicon HST.svg
Ashley
BSicon SKRZ-Bu.svg
BSicon HST.svg
Hale
BSicon dBHF-L.svg
BSicon udKBHFa-R.svg
Altrincham Metrolink generic.png
BSicon edSHI2gl.svg
BSicon udSTR.svg
BSicon exdSHI2+r.svg
BSicon dBHF-L.svg
BSicon udBHF-R.svg
Navigation Road Metrolink generic.png
BSicon exSTR+l.svg
BSicon edKRZu.svg
BSicon uemdKRZu.svg
BSicon exCONTfq.svg
BSicon exABZg+l.svg
BSicon edKRZu.svg
BSicon uemdKRZu.svg
BSicon exCONTfq.svg
BSicon exv-SHI3l.svg
BSicon uBS2c1.svg
BSicon eSHI3g+r.svg
BSicon uBS2+r.svg
BSicon eHST.svg
BSicon uLSTR.svg
Baguley
BSicon STR.svg
BSicon uHST.svg
Sale
BSicon CONTgq.svg
BSicon ABZg+r.svg
BSicon uLSTR.svg
BSicon BHF.svg
BSicon uvSTR-.svg
BSicon exvSHI2l-.svg
Stockport
BSicon vLSTR-.svg
BSicon udCONTf.svg
BSicon exdSTR.svg
BSicon LSTR2.svg
BSicon dSTRc3.svg
BSicon exKBHFe.svg
Manchester Central
BSicon STRc1.svg
BSicon KBHF4.svg
Manchester Piccadilly Metrolink generic.png

The Mid-Cheshire line is a railway line in the north-west of England that runs from Chester to Edgeley Junction, Stockport; it connects Chester with Manchester Piccadilly, via Knutsford. After Chester Northgate closed in 1969, the section between Mickle Trafford Junction and Chester was used for freight trains only until it closed in 1992; from Mickle Trafford, passenger trains use the Chester–Warrington line to Chester General instead. The route taken by passenger trains has changed over the years and now differs considerably from the original. Between 2001 and 2014, passenger journeys on the line increased to over 1.7 million per year. [1] A near doubling of the passenger service was expected to occur from December 2018, however this did not materialise.

Contents

History

Altrincham to Chester

The Mid-Cheshire line has its origins in railways promoted by three separate railway companies in the 19th century. The Cheshire Midland Railway was opened to passengers between Altrincham and Knutsford on 12 May 1862, then completed to Northwich on 1 January 1863. The West Cheshire Railway opened from Northwich to West Cheshire Junction in 1869. This railway was extended from Mouldsworth to a new terminus at Chester Northgate in 1874. The line from Altrincham to Manchester was the Manchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway (MSJAR), opened on 20 July 1849 and jointly owned by the London and North Western Railway and the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (MSLR, later the Great Central Railway). The line from Chester to Altrincham was vested in the Cheshire Lines Committee (CLC), a joint committee regulated by the Great Northern Railway (GNR), MSLR and the Midland Railway (MR). This committee became an independent company after 1867 and survived the 1923 Grouping intact. Services were operated by the CLC until nationalisation on 1 January 1948, when the line became part of British Railways London Midland Region. Between 1880 and 1969, CLC trains from Chester via Altrincham terminated at Manchester Central railway station.

The junction with the Sandbach branch became a triangular junction in 1957, with the addition of the single-line connection from Sandbach towards Chester. [2]

Before the Beeching closures in the 1960s, there were branch lines with services from the Mid-Cheshire line (see also the Winsford and Over branch). Beeching had no plans to close part or all of the Mid-Cheshire line, although in his proposed second phase of closures there were plans to close the line between Chester and Warrington Bank Quay, which would have increased the number of passengers using the Mid-Cheshire line. Although those proposed closures never went ahead, the original termini at Chester and Manchester were closed in 1969 and services were re-routed to Chester General, via a new junction at Mickle Trafford, and Manchester Oxford Road.

The route was double track between Chester and Altrincham, although the section between Mickle Trafford and Mouldsworth was reduced to single track after Chester Northgate station closed in 1969. For many years the line had the reputation of being one of the busiest double-track routes in the UK.

Manchester to Altrincham

CLC trains from Manchester to Chester departed from Manchester Central and joined the MSJ&A tracks at Old Trafford, sharing the MSJ&A line as far as Altrincham. These trains usually ran "express", some non-stop, others calling only at Sale. The frequency of trains over this section led to a large section of the MSJ&A route between Manchester and Altrincham being quadrupled, and the whole route (from Manchester to the former Bowdon railway station, which was used as carriage sidings and repair depot) was electrified at 1500 volts DC in 1931. Local services between Manchester London Road and Altrincham were then provided by electric multiple unit trains. From 1960, Manchester Oxford Road railway station became the terminus for the Altrincham electrics and through running from London Road (renamed Piccadilly in that year) ceased. The journey time by the electric trains from Oxford Road to Altrincham was typically 20 or 21 minutes. The CLC trains typically took 13 minutes to travel between Manchester Central (Oxford Road from 1969) and Altrincham with one stop at Sale.

The original electric trains, built in 1931, were withdrawn in 1971 and the system was changed to 25 kV AC. Through running to Manchester Piccadilly was reintroduced and some services from Altrincham to Manchester were extended through Manchester to Alderley Edge/Crewe/Stoke-on-Trent and occasionally Wolverhampton. Services were provided by 'AM4' (later British Rail Class 304) electric multiple units. Unlike the 1931-built trains, these had not been designed specifically for the Altrincham route and they lacked the acceleration of the older trains, causing the journey time from Manchester to Altrincham to be extended by 3 minutes.

1990 saw further changes as Mid-Cheshire line trains were diverted via Stockport in preparation for conversion of the Sale route to Metrolink. The electrification system between Manchester and Altrincham was changed for the second time, to 750 V DC, and the electric trains replaced by trams. The journey time by tram to Altrincham was 27 minutes and the faster diesel service (the Mid-Cheshire line trains) ceased as these trains were diverted via Stockport with considerably extended journey times. The journey time by train from Manchester to Hale, for example, doubled from 17 to 34 minutes. Manchester Metrolink trams now exclusively use the trackbed between Deansgate Junction (between Navigation Road and Timperley) and Manchester.

Present route

The line serves many small, rural settlements in Cheshire before reaching Chester. Services follow the Crewe line from Manchester Piccadilly as far as Stockport, where the line diverges westwards. The line then curves around the south of Manchester until it meets the Metrolink line. Metrolink and Mainline services run parallel between Deansgate Junction through Navigation Road railway station to Altrincham, where the Metrolink terminates. Part of the route is single track between Stockport and Altrincham. South of Altrincham, the route leaves Manchester's suburbs. There are no further passenger interchanges on the line until the service reaches Chester. There is a single-track freight-only branch to the west of Northwich which links Northwich to Sandbach on the Crewe to Manchester Line. There is a campaign for this line to be re-opened as a passenger line to allow interchange with services at Sandbach or Crewe and serve the town of Middlewich, the railway station of which closed in 1960. There is also a curve to access the West Coast Main Line further west, but passenger services do not use this. The line joins up with the line from Chester to Warrington just east of Chester at Mickle Trafford Junction.

As part of the (then) new Northern franchise, which commenced in April 2016, the new operator Arriva was required to run the existing service, as well as an additional service every hour on weekdays and Saturdays between Greenbank and Manchester. One service was required by the terms of the invitation to tender to run semi-fast and must call at Stockport, Altrincham, Knutsford and Northwich only, between Greenbank and Manchester in both directions. The announcement of Arriva as the franchise winner in December 2015 indicated that the future operator has gained agreement for the additional service to call at Hale although this was not specified in the invitation to tender. Services on Sunday from Chester to Manchester were planned to become every hour in each direction. [3]

The franchise agreement also required the removal and replacement of all Pacer trains by 2019. [4] However it was not until 2020 that all class 142 were retired. [5] [6]

Current services

Monday to Friday [7]
Manchester to Chester: 18 trains per day
Stockport to Chester: 2 trains per day
Chester to Manchester: 18 trains per day
Chester to Stockport: 2 trains per day

Saturday Manchester to Chester: 18 trains per day
Chester to Manchester: 18 trains per day

Sunday [8]
Chester to Manchester: 7 trains
Manchester to Chester: 7 trains

The above shows a cutback in the number of peak services to and from Manchester, which started in December 2008 and prompted an online petition. [9] It also included the loss of a daily direct service to Blackpool from Northwich and the loss of a limited stop afternoon train from Chester to Manchester, as well as improvements made to the Sunday service, which was previously a 3 hourly Chester to Altrincham service. Due to growing numbers of passengers, the new Northern franchise planned to include increased services.

Passenger numbers for the Mid-Cheshire line show that the station on the line with the highest number of people boarding and alighting Manchester to Chester via Altrincham services is Manchester Piccadilly. The second highest, and the highest station served only by this line, is Knutsford, followed by Stockport, Chester, and Altrincham respectively. Ashley contributes the fewest passengers to the service.[ citation needed ]

Passenger services in the off-peak period are better utilised than passenger services on similar lines, with Altrincham being in the top 10 busiest Greater Manchester stations (excluding Central Manchester stations) for the morning off-peak period; Hale and Altrincham also both perform well in the morning peak period. [10]

Future services

The following are proposals for future services to the line.

Additional services between Chester and Stockport
As part of Northern Trains' proposed December 2022 timetable (which focused on additional services within the Manchester area), an additional 4 trains per day between Chester and Stockport (2 in each direction) were proposed during peak hours on Mondays to Saturdays. These services were aimed at those who are commuting to and/or working in Manchester and Stockport. This change would have increase the number of trains departing Chester on the line to 20 per day, with the number departing Stockport also increased to 20 per day. The 2 hourly Sunday service would have remained the same, at 7 trains per day. [11] [12]

Reopening the Northwich to Sandbach line to passenger trains

This would allow a direct train service from stations along the line to access Crewe, without the need to change at Chester, which will should reduce journey times to destinations south of Chester, as well as reducing fares to those destinations. It would also allow the former station at Middlewich to re-open, and the possibility of a new station opening at Rudheath. An independent feasibility report found the Benefit to Cost Ratio for the reopening to be 5:1, [13] which is almost four times higher than the recently reopened Borders railway in Scotland. [14]

Manchester Airport western link
Proposals for a link to Manchester Airport from near Mobberley were first put forward in the 1990s, though little progress was made. However, in March 2009 it was mentioned in a Network Rail document as a possible project in the future, [15] although reopening the Northwich to Sandbach line to regular passenger services was not mentioned in that document. The link to Manchester Airport railway station would be a 3.5 mile new railway, starting north of Mobberley railway station and continuing under the airport campus in tunnel, before making an end-on junction with the southernmost platforms of the existing airport station, which was designed with this extension in mind.

As well as providing links from mid-Cheshire and Chester to Manchester Airport, the new line would enable services from North Wales, Liverpool and the Wirral to reach the airport by shorter routes than today. The route from Chester and North Wales, in particular, would cut off more than 20 miles from today's route via Warrington and Manchester.

Manchester Piccadilly via Styal Line
Additionally, by running services from Cheshire through the airport, these could hypothetically continue through to Manchester Piccadilly via the Styal Line. Such a route would cut more than 5 miles off the current Stockport route and would restore journey times between Cheshire and Manchester to the times achieved before 1990, when the Sale route was transferred to Manchester Metrolink. However, the Styal Line route between the Airport and Manchester Piccadilly has become one of the most congested routes on the national rail network, with commuter stations on the line now operating on a skip-stop basis since the May 2018 timetable and no spare capacity left. [16]

Running tram-trains directly to Manchester
The possibility of running tram-trains between Greenbank or Knutsford and central Manchester has been examined. [17] [18] However, it was decided in 2013 that the use of tram-trains alongside existing heavy rail passenger and freight services would provide poor value for money and alternative heavy rail options should be examined instead. [18]

Electrification
In March 2015, the Electrification Task Force said that the Mid-Cheshire line was a tier 1 priority for being electrified in the CP6 period (2019-2024). [19] [20]

New station at Cheadle
Stockport Council has proposed a new single-platform station at Cheadle, to be supported by the Towns Fund. [21]

Motive power and rolling stock

History

The CLC owned its own coaching stock but no locomotives (apart from four Sentinel steam railmotors). From the start of operations, motive power was provided by the MSLR and later the GCR, although locomotives and stock from the other CLC constituent companies could also be seen. This gave the Mid-Cheshire line a very "cosmopolitan" feel until well into the 1960s when older locomotives were replaced by British Railways (BR) standard designs.

Early passenger services were handled by MSLR/GCR class 12A (LNER class E3) 2-4-0 locomotives designed by Charles Sacre. These were replaced by John Robinson-built GCR class 11B (LNER class D9) 4-4-0, GCR class 11E (LNER class D10) 4-4-0 'Small Directors', GCR class 11F (LNER class D11) 4-4-0 'Large Directors' and GCR class 9K (LNER class C13) 4-4-2 tank locomotives. The 'Directors' and C13s lasted well into the nationalisation era and were eventually displaced by LMS and BR standard tank engines. Dieselisation of passenger services began in the early 1960s with class 108 and later class 101 diesel multiple units displacing the steam locomotives.

The route was a very busy freight artery – especially the section between Greenbank and Deansgate Junction. The I.C.I. works at Winnington and Lostock attracted much traffic, in particular heavy trains consisting of custom-built bogie hoppers, which carried limestone from Derbyshire. These trains required banking between Northwich and Winnington works and were the preserve of LMS class 8F 2-8-0 locomotives, later BR class 40, class 47 and class 20 diesels. Other locomotives to be seen included LMS class 4F, GCR class 8K (LNER class O4) and class 9D (LNER class J10) steam locomotives. Shunting and trip working was carried out by GCR class 9F (LNER class N5) steam and BR class 08 diesel locomotives.

The present

The line sees a mix of diesel traction. Many of the passenger trains used on this line are Class 150s and Class 156s.

In the past Class 142, Class 158 and Class 175s were used on some journeys on this line. Class 175s have not been used on services on this line since Northern Rail took over and the small fleet of Manchester-based Class 158s, which were used on the line until 2005, were transferred to Leeds to work services in the Yorkshire and North East areas. Class 175s occasionally travel along the line if engineering work is taking place on the Chester to Manchester via Warrington line.[ citation needed ]

Goods trains continue to use the line. The primary source of traffic for many years was limestone from quarries near Buxton, Derbyshire, to Brunner Mond's works at Winnington. This decreased sharply in 2014 when the works was closed by Tata Chemicals Europe. Since then, the majority of freight runs to and from the ICI plant and refuse incinerator at Folly Lane near Runcorn to destinations in and around Manchester (including one on the route itself at Northenden) using the Greenbank to Hartford spur line to enter or leave the route. Some limestone traffic from Buxton to the former ICI terminal near Lostock Gralam (serving Tata's other chemical plant in the area) continues to run. [22] [23]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manchester Piccadilly station</span> Railway station in Manchester, England

Manchester Piccadilly is the main railway station of the city of Manchester, in the metropolitan county of Greater Manchester, England. Opened originally as Store Street in 1842, it was renamed Manchester London Road in 1847 and became Manchester Piccadilly in 1960. Located to the south-east of the city centre, it hosts long-distance intercity and cross-country services to national destinations including London, Birmingham, Nottingham, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Cardiff, Bristol, Exeter, Plymouth, Reading, Southampton and Bournemouth; regional services to destinations in Northern England including Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield, Newcastle and York; and local commuter services around Greater Manchester. It is one of 19 major stations managed by Network Rail. The station has 14 platforms: 12 terminal and two through platforms. Piccadilly is also a major interchange with the Metrolink light rail system with two tram platforms in its undercroft.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cheshire Lines Committee</span> Railway in England: active from 1863 to 1947

The Cheshire Lines Committee (CLC) was formed in the 1860s and became the second-largest joint railway in Great Britain. The committee, which was often styled the Cheshire Lines Railway, operated 143 miles (230 km) of track in the then counties of Lancashire and Cheshire. The railway did not become part of the Big Four during the implementation of the 1923 grouping, surviving independently with its own management until the railways were nationalised at the beginning of 1948. The railway served Liverpool, Manchester, Stockport, Warrington, Widnes, Northwich, Winsford, Knutsford, Chester and Southport with connections to many other railways.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hale railway station</span> Railway station in Greater Manchester, England

Hale railway station serves the area of Hale in the south of Altrincham, Greater Manchester, England; it is also used by people living in the surrounding areas of Bowdon and Hale Barns. It is a stop on the Mid-Cheshire line between Chester and Manchester Piccadilly. The station is located on Ashley Road.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liverpool–Manchester lines</span> Railway line serving between Liverpool and Manchester

There once were four direct railway routes between Liverpool and Manchester in the North West of England; only two remain, the two centre routes of the four. The most northerly and the most southerly of the four routes are no longer direct lines. Of the remaining two direct routes, the northern route of the two is fully electric, while the now southern route is a diesel-only line. The most northerly of the four has been split into two routes: the western section operated by Merseyrail electric trains and the eastern section by diesel trains, requiring passengers to change trains between the two cities. The fourth route, the most southerly of the four, has been largely abandoned east of Warrington; the remaining section caters mainly for freight trains.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mouldsworth railway station</span> Railway station in Cheshire, England

Mouldsworth railway station opened on 22 June 1870 and serves the village of Mouldsworth in Cheshire, England. It is managed by Northern Trains. The station has two platforms and is on the Mid Cheshire Line, with hourly train services to Manchester Piccadilly and Chester.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Delamere railway station</span> Railway station in Cheshire, England

Delamere railway station opened on 22 June 1870. It serves both the village of Delamere and Delamere Forest in Cheshire, England. The station is 9½ miles (15 km) east of Chester on the Mid-Cheshire Line. There is an hourly service each way between Chester and Manchester in each direction, with Delamere being previously operated as a request stop only until the Spring 2010 timetable change. The station marks one end of the Baker Way footpath.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cuddington railway station</span> Railway station in Cheshire, England

Cuddington railway station serves the village of Cuddington in Cheshire, England. Opened in 1869 by the West Cheshire Railway, it is located 12+12 miles (20.1 km) north east of Chester. It has won a number of awards for its gardens, which are maintained by local volunteers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Greenbank railway station</span> Railway station in Cheshire, England

Greenbank railway station serves the village of Hartford, Cheshire as well as the Greenbank and Castle areas of Northwich, Cheshire, England. The station is situated on the A559 road from Northwich to Chester.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Northwich railway station</span> Railway station in Cheshire, England

Northwich railway station serves the town of Northwich in Cheshire, England. The station has two platforms in use. It is located on the Mid-Cheshire line 28+14 miles (45.5 km) southwest of Manchester Piccadilly.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lostock Gralam railway station</span> Railway station in Cheshire, England

Lostock Gralam railway station serves the village of Lostock Gralam in Cheshire, England. The station is on the Mid-Cheshire Line from Chester to Manchester Piccadilly, 18½ miles (30 km) east of Chester.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Plumley railway station</span> Railway station in Cheshire, England

Plumley railway station serves the village of Plumley in Cheshire, England. The station is 20½ miles (33 km) east of Chester on the Mid-Cheshire Line to Manchester Piccadilly.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Knutsford railway station</span> Railway station in Cheshire, England

Knutsford railway station serves the town of Knutsford in Cheshire, England. The station is 21+34 miles (35.0 km) south of Manchester Piccadilly on the Mid-Cheshire Line to Chester. The line is referred to as the Chester via Altrincham line at Manchester Piccadilly, but as the Manchester via Stockport line at Chester station.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Altrincham Interchange</span> Railway, bus and tram interchange in Greater Manchester, England

Altrincham Interchange is a transport hub in Altrincham, Greater Manchester, England. It consists of a bus station on Stamford New Road, a Northern Trains-operated heavy rail station on the Mid-Cheshire Line, and a light rail stop which forms the terminus of Manchester Metrolink's Altrincham line. The original heavy rail element of the station was opened by the Manchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway as Altrincham and Bowdon railway station in April 1881, changing to Altrincham railway station in May 1974. The Metrolink element opened in June 1992. The Interchange underwent a complete redevelopment, at a cost of £19 million, starting in mid-July 2013. The new bus station opened officially on 7 December 2014.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Navigation Road station</span> Railway station in Greater Manchester, England

Navigation Road is a station that serves both Northern Trains and Manchester Metrolink located in the east of Altrincham, in Greater Manchester, England. It consists of a Northern Trains-operated heavy rail station on the Mid-Cheshire Line, and an adjoining light rail stop on the Altrincham Line of Greater Manchester's Metrolink network. The original heavy rail element of the station was opened by the Manchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway in 1931, and the Metrolink element opened in 1992. A level crossing operates at the southern end of the station.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manchester, South Junction and Altrincham Railway</span> Suburban railway in Manchester

The Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway (MSJ&AR) was a suburban railway which operated an 8+12-mile (14 km) route between Altrincham in Cheshire and Manchester London Road railway station in Manchester.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Northenden railway station</span> Former railway station in England

Northenden railway station in Sharston, Manchester, England, was built by the Stockport, Timperley and Altrincham Junction Railway (ST&AJ) and opened for passenger and goods traffic on 1 February 1866.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Baguley railway station</span> Disused railway station in Manchester, England

Baguley railway station was a station in the south of Manchester, England, at the extreme western edge of Baguley near the southern end of Brooklands Road where Shady Lane crossed the railway line.

The Winsford and Over branch line was a railway line serving the town of Winsford in Cheshire. It was operated by the Cheshire Lines Committee (CLC) from 1870 until the railways were nationalised under the Transport Act 1947, which took effect on 1 January 1948. Thereafter the branch was operated by British Railways London Midland Region until the line's closure in 1967.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Skelton Junction</span>

Skelton Junction is a complex of railway junctions south of Manchester in Timperley, near Altrincham. The Cheshire Lines Committee's Liverpool to Manchester line, via the Glazebrook East Junction to Skelton Junction Line and the LNWR's Warrington and Altrincham Junction Railway, fed into the junction from Liverpool in the west. The Manchester, South Junction, and Altrincham Railway provided a connection from the Altrincham direction and a short spur from Timperley towards Stockport, while the CLC's Stockport, Timperley, and Altrincham Junction Railway continued east to Stockport.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Altrincham Line</span> Manchester Metrolink line

The Altrincham Line is a tram line of the Manchester Metrolink running from Manchester to Altrincham in Greater Manchester. Originally a railway line, it was, along with the Bury Line, converted into a tramway during 1991–92, as part of the first phase of the Metrolink system.

References

  1. Ross, Andrew; Hindle, Chris (23 June 2014). "Mid Cheshire Rail Line – Growth Aspirations" (PDF). Cheshire East Council. Cheshire & Warrington Local Transport Body.
  2. "Notes and News:New spur at Northwich". Railway Magazine. Vol. 103, no. 680. December 1957. p. 881.
  3. "Northern Franchise Improvements". Archived from the original on 24 July 2019. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  4. "Northern rail Pacer removal: Old trains go up for sale | News and Star". 12 December 2019.
  5. "Pacers to continue into 2020, operators confirm | Rail Business UK | Railway Gazette International".
  6. "Late start for new trains puts 'Pacer' withdrawal months behind schedule – The Railway Magazine". 2 March 2019.
  7. "Northern Mid Cheshire Line Timetable – December 2021" (PDF). Northern Rail. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  8. "Northern Mid Cheshire Line Timetable – December 2021" (PDF). Northern Rail. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  9. "Petition against local rail cutbacks".
  10. "Basic guide to Greater Manchester railways". Transport for Greater Manchester Committee. Archived from the original on 10 September 2011. Retrieved 27 July 2011.
  11. "Proposed northern December 2022 Mid Cheshire Line timetable" (PDF). Northern Rail. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  12. "Proposed northern December 2022 Mid Cheshire Line timetable" (PDF). Northern Rail. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  13. The Railway Consultancy Ltd. "Final Report July 2009" (PDF). Mid Cheshire Rail Users Association.
  14. "Warning £350m rail link not economically viable". HeraldScotland. 2 March 2013. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  15. "Network Rail – resource not found" (PDF). networkrail.co.uk. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  16. "Timetable recast: too much, too quickly". Railway Gazette. 4 June 2018. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
  17. Greater Manchester PTE (16 May 2007). "Extension of Metrolink to Northwich and Greenbank" (PDF). Mid Cheshire Rail Users Association.
  18. 1 2 "Transport For Greater Manchester Committee Report For Resolution" (PDF). 8 November 2013.
  19. "Electrification Task Force Final Report Revealed". Rail North. 5 March 2015. Archived from the original on 14 June 2017.
  20. "Chairmans Blog » Blog Archive » Mid Cheshire Line electrification! …". mcrua.org.uk. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  21. Tague, Neil (22 September 2020). "Railway connection key as Cheadle Towns Fund bid nears". Place North West.
  22. "Freight Views – Manchester Locomotive Society". manlocosoc.co.uk. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  23. Plumley West 8A Rail (Freight Directory)

Sources

Template:Attached KML/Mid-Cheshire Line
KML is from Wikidata