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East Lancashire Railway 1844-1859 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

East Lancashire Railway 1844-1859

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article concerns the original railway of that name: for the heritage railway see East Lancashire Railway

The East Lancashire Railway (ELR) was created by an Act of Parliament in 1846, as an amalgamation of two railway schemes.

Contents

[edit] Formation

The original Act of the Manchester and Bolton Railway authorised a branch to Bury, but this was not constructed, and the powers were allowed to lapse. In 1843, the Manchester and Leeds Railway decided to extend their Heywood coal branch to Bury, and the sight of the surveyors caused considerable anxiety in the town. The Leeds company (described as the "Lies and Mancheater Railway" in a contemporary poster, and "the most brutal line in the kingdom" by the inhabitants of Huddersfield) was not popular, and some of the influential inhabitants (led by John Grundy, a rich cloth merchant) decided to take matters into their own hands. A meeting was held in the Old Red Lion, Bury, in September, 1843, promoting the railway as a means of affording direct communication between Bury and Manchester, with the extension to Rawtenstall as an afterthought. The promoters wished to reach the intended Manchester station at Hunts Bank (Victoria Station) by means of a junction with the Manchester and Leeds Railway at Collyhurst, hoping that this would induce the Leeds company to abandon its own scheme.

However, the Leeds directors played them along, while pressing ahead with their own plans. Fortunately, the Bury Provisional Committee saw through this trickery, and came to an agreement with the Manchester and Bolton Railway, reaching Victoria Station by means of a junction at Clifton. (All the land between there and Bury was owned by the Earl of Derby and the Earl of Wilton, who were both prepared to give immediate possession.)

The Manchester, Bury, and Rossendale Railway was thus incorporated in 1844. Public interest was aroused by the scheme, and pressure was exerted to extend the line further, but it was too late to incorporate this in the Parliamentary Bill. Consequently, a separate Bill was promoted, incorporating the Blackburn, Burnley, Accrington and Colne Extension Railway in 1845, though clauses enabled subsequent amalgamation with the original company.

[edit] The routes

The united line (known as the East Lancashire Railway from 1846) was opened in stages:

In the meantime, the Liverpool, Ormskirk and Preston Railway was acquired. This gave direct access from the East Lancashire towns to Liverpool Docks.

The ELR was now guided by Cornelius Nicholson, something of a Victorian polymath - he was an ex-mayor of Kendal, a promoter of the Caledonian Railway, and a correspondent of Wordsworth. Nicholson modelled himself upon George Hudson, the Railway King, and proposed a railway empire based upon Bury. His wilder schemes (which included promoting a line to Scotland) came to nothing, but the ELR certainly expanded.

A separate approach to Preston was constructed, to avoid paying tolls to the North Union Railway; the original line was extended from Rawtenstall to Bacup in 1852; and branches constructed to Southport and Skelmersdale.

The East Lancashire Railway built the Skelmersdale Branch from Ormskirk to Skelmersdale and Rainford Junction, which opened on 1 March 1858. Passenger services ended on 5 November 1956, goods to Rainford finished on 16 November 1961 and Skelmersdale on 4 November 1963.

[edit] Battle of Clifton Junction

Unfortunately, Nicholson's ambitions, especially the promotion of the ELR as part of an alternative trans-Pennine route, had made a serious enemy. In 1847 the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (L&Y) had been formed from the Manchester and Leeds Railway and the Manchester and Bolton Railway, upon which the ELR relied for access to Manchester. The Leeds company tried to cause delays by insisting upon inspecting every ticket at Clifton Junction. The result was the so-called Battle of Clifton Junction in 1849.

This curious episode began when L&Y inspectors stopped a Manchester-bound ELR train and demanded to see the tickets. The ELR guard said that they had all been collected at the previous station. The train was forbidden to proceed. To make sure, a large baulk of wood had been placed upon the track, and an empty L&Y train stood beyond it. (The L&Y were intending to convey the ELR passengers to Manchester after their point had been made). But the ELR had hidden a gang of navvies on their train. While the two sides argued, they removed the baulk. The order was given to proceed. Alas, there was still the train on the line in front of them! The ELR train tried to push it, but the L&Y train was put into reverse. While these two trains grappled, the ELR remembered that they had a ballast (stone) train in the vicinity. They reversed it down the opposite line directly on to the Bolton line, effectively blockading it. The contest continued for several hours until both sides gave up.

[edit] Amalgamation

In August 1859 the ELR and the L&Y amalgamated.

[edit] References

  • Biddle, G. (1989). The Railways Around Preston - A Historical Review, Scenes From The Past: 6, Foxline Publishing. ISBN 1-870119-05-3. 
  • Littleworth, C. (2002). Signal Boxes on Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Lines - North-East Lancashire. Signalling Record Society. ISBN 1-873228-21-X. 
  • Rush, R.W. (1983). The East Lancashire Railway. The Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-85361-295-1. 

[edit] External links


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