Waterloo Goods | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Vauxhall, Liverpool England |
Coordinates | 53°24′55″N2°59′53″W / 53.4154°N 2.998°W |
Grid reference | SJ337914 |
Other information | |
Status | Disused |
History | |
Original company | London & North Western Railway |
Key dates | |
1 August 1849 | Opens |
30 September 1963 | Closed to goods traffic |
6 September 1970 | Station closes |
Waterloo Goods railway station was a station located on the Waterloo Branch, Liverpool. It opened in 1849 to serve the docks which were expanding to the north of the city.
To cater for the increased freight traffic from the docks, Liverpool & Manchester Railway succeeded in gaining an Act of Parliament in 1845 to build the Waterloo branch. Work finally began on the line in 1845, by which point the Liverpool & Manchester Railway had been absorbed by the London & North Western Railway. The line was accessed via the Victoria and Waterloo tunnels. The station itself was completed and opened in 1849.
During the Second World War, Liverpool and its docks were extensively targeted by German bombers and the station was hit. Despite being badly damaged, the station remained open though parts of its roofed sheds had to be demolished. By the 1950s the road network was taking more freight and use of the station began to decline leading to the station's eventual closure in 1963. The station was demolished in the early 1970s and is now the site of one of the ventilation shafts for the Kingsway Tunnel. [1] Although the lines have been lifted the tunnels remain. In August 2016, the Great Howard Street bridge that spanned the lines was demolished to be replaced with a new one. This would allow the line to be brought back into use in the future to serve Liverpool Docks. [2]
The Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (MS&LR) was formed in 1847 when the Sheffield, Ashton-under-Lyne and Manchester Railway joined with authorised but unbuilt railway companies, forming a proposed network from Manchester to Grimsby. It pursued a policy of expanding its area of influence, especially in reaching west to Liverpool, which it ultimately did through the medium of the Cheshire Lines Committee network in joint partnership with the Great Northern Railway (GNR) and the Midland Railway.
The Waterloo Tunnel in Liverpool, England, is a former railway tunnel, 852 yd (779 m) long, which opened in 1849. Its western end was at 53.414829, -2.994385, underneath Pall Mall. From here the line continued under Great Howard Street to Waterloo Goods railway station, now the site of the Kingsway Tunnel Ventilation Shaft, after 1895 continuing beyond to the dock railway system and on to Liverpool Riverside at the Pier Head for direct connection to the passenger liners. The eastern end opens into a short cutting, four tracks wide between Byrom Street and Fontenoy Street, which connects to the Victoria Tunnel, which emerges at Edge Hill station. It is effectively one long tunnel from Edge Hill to Liverpool Waterloo Dock with two names along its route. The tunnels were given two different names because initially trains in the Victoria Tunnel were cable hauled and in the Waterloo Tunnel locomotive hauled. Both tunnels closed on 19 November 1972.
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