Fallowfield Loop Line

Fallowfield Loop Line

St Werburgh's Road bridge over the Fallowfield Loop Cycleway
Overview
Type Local rail
System National Rail
Status Disused, re-purposed as cycle track
Locale Manchester, England, UK
Termini Manchester Central
Guide Bridge/Gorton
Stations 10
Operation
Opened 1892
Closed closed to passengers 1958;
fully closed 1988
Owner Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway; British Rail
Technical
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Route map
Map of the Fallowfield Loop Line

The Fallowfield Loop railway line was a local railway route in Greater Manchester, England. Trains on the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway line (later, the Great Central Railway line) from Sheffield Victoria and Guide Bridge used the 'Loop' to access Manchester Central railway station. Some express trains including the Harwich-Sheffield-Manchester-Liverpool boat train used the line.

The line was fully opened in 1892 and remained in use until 1988, the stations at Hyde Road, Levenshulme South, Fallowfield and Wilbraham Road having closed in 1958 following the withdrawal of passenger services.

Reddish Depot was built adjacent to the line in 1954 to maintain the new fleet of electric trains for the Woodhead Line, and remained open until 1983.

History

Manchester Central Station, terminus of the Fallowfield line
The light rail demonstration at Debdale Park in March 1987
The junction with the former Midland Railway at St Werburgh's Rd; the cycle path is seen veering off left towards Fallowfield

Fallowfield Loop Line

Legend
Metrolink / to Manchester Piccadilly

Manchester Central / Deansgate-Castlefield
Cornbrook Liverpool to Manchester Lines

Trafford Bar

MSJ&AR/Metrolink to Altrincham
Chorlton-cum-Hardy

St Werburgh's Road

South District Railway/Metrolink to Didsbury
Wilbraham Road
Fallowfield
Styal Line
West Coast Main Line
Levenshulme South
Reddish Depot
Hope Valley Line
Hyde Road to Manchester Piccadilly
Gorton

Fairfield
M60 motorway
Guide Bridge
Hope Valley Line to Sheffield
 Key 
Fallowfield Loop line
Present National Rail service
Metrolink

The initial section of the Fallowfield Loop line was opened by the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (Cheshire Lines Committee) between Chorlton-cum-Hardy and Fallowfield on 1 October 1891. The following year, the remaining section between Fallowfield and Fairfield opened on 2 May 1892.[1][2] The line provided a new route for the MS&LR to run trains from Sheffield into Manchester, and local stopping services ran from Fairfield and Gorton on the Hope Valley line to Manchester Central via Hyde Road, Fallowfield and Chorlton-cum-Hardy before joining a section of line from Old Trafford into Manchester Central.[3][4]

In 1897 the MSLR became the Great Central Railway and in 1923 the line was absorbed into the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER). Over this period the Fallowfield Loop 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. Briefly, consideration was given to electrification of the line, but instead the local stopping services were withdrawn and Fallowfield station closed to passenger services on 7 July 1958. 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.[5]

In 1954 a traction maintenance depot was built alongside the Fallowfield line at Reddish to service the new Class EM1 and EM2 electric locomotives and the Class 506 units on the newly electrified Woodhead Line. After the Woodhead line closed in 1981, the Reddish Depot activity was reduced to servicing trains on the Glossop Line until it was closed in May 1983. Servicing of the Class 506 units was then transferred to Longsight depot, until the Glossop line was converted to 25 kV AC in December 1984.[6] Following closure, Reddish Depot was demolished. The site remained derelict until the late 2000s when the site was redeveloped for housing.[7]

"Chorltonville"

On 7 May 1964, six years after passenger services had been withdrawn from the line, Wilbraham Road railway station featured in a Granada Television music programme, Blues and Gospel Train. Granada transformed the disused buildings into "Chorltonville", a fictional Southern U.S.-style station which was the setting for a televised performance by prominent Blues artists of the day, including Muddy Waters, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Rev. Gary Davis and others. The performers and artists are shown being taken by steam train from Manchester Central to Wilbraham Road and performances take place on the station platforms.[8][9]

Project Light Rail

Shortly before its demise, the Fallowfield Loop line played an important role in the early development of the Manchester Metrolink tram network when the stretch of track at Debdale Park on the site of the former Hyde Road railway station was used in 1987 for a public demonstration of "Project Light Rail", the working title for the development of a new light rail/tram network in Manchester. The event made use of a Docklands Light Railway train on loan from GEC Transportation Projects Ltd, DLR P86 number 11, prior to its introduction onto the fledgling Docklands system in London, and it was the first ever light rail vehicle seen in operation in Manchester. The event was jointly staged by GMPTE, British Rail, British Rail Engineering Ltd, GEC, Balfour Beatty and Fairclough Civil Engineering Ltd and was formally opened by David Mitchell MP, Minister of State for Transport, on 10 March 1987.[10][11]

Demonstrations were held on 14, 15, 20, 21 and 22 March 1987 at a specially-constructed railway station at Debdale Park and ticket holders were treated to a short ride on the DLR vehicle along a 1.6-kilometre (0.99 mi) stretch of track, from just north of the Hyde Road junction to just south of the closed Reddish depot. The DLR train was specially fitted with a pantograph and powered by overhead line, and was driven manually rather than in automatic mode, which was to be normal practice when in operation on the Docklands system. The test track was closed to normal heavy rail traffic on demonstration days, and at night the DLR train was stationed in a siding and the line was re-opened to freight trains. An exhibition also exhibited examples of street track, overhead line and platform facilities.[1][10]

After the public event, Debdale Park station was dismantled and the timber platform was used to build the new Hag Fold railway station near Wigan; and the electric overhead line equipment was taken down and re-used at the Heaton Park Tramway on the lakeside extension. The demonstration train DLR Number 11 was transported to London where it was put into operation on the Docklands Light Railway. It served as the "Royal train", transporting the Queen and Prince Philip on the formal opening of the DLR. In 1991, DLR Number 11 was the first of the P86 fleet to be sold to the City of Essen, Germany, where it is in service today on the EVAG Stadtbahn.[12]

Conversion to a cycle track

Main article: Fallowfield Loop

Following closure in 1988, the Fallowfield Loop line tracks were lifted and the line 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 rail trail cycle track. Today the Fallowfield Loop cycle route, run by Sustrans, runs from Debdale Park to St Werburgh's Road Metrolink station and forms part of Routes 6 and 60 of the National Cycle Network.[13][14]

Metrolink

The Metrolink light rail tram system, first demonstrated on the Fallowfield Line in 1987, eventually came into operation across Greater Manchester in 1992, making use of several former British Rail lines converted for light rail operation. Most of the disused Fallowfield Loop was not included in these plans, except for a short stretch of line between Central Station and St Werburgh's Road. This line was to be developed by re-opening the former Cheshire Lines Committee track which branches off the Fallowfield line south to East Didsbury. It remained disused for many years due to lack of funding until July 2011, when a new Metrolink extension was opened to passengers between Deansgate-Castlefield (adjacent to the former Central Station) and St Werburgh's Road. A further Metrolink extension along the Didsbury line opened in May 2013.

References

  1. 1 2 Holt, G O (1978). A regional history of the railways of Great Britain : vol 10 The North West. [S.l.]: David & Charles. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-7153-7521-1.
  2. Dow, George (1962). Great Central, Volume Two: Dominion of Watkin, 1864–1899. Shepperton: Ian Allan. p. 229. ISBN 0-7110-1469-8.
  3. "Railway Memories - Levenshulme South Station (Fallowfield Loop Line)". Archived from the original on 9 October 2007. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  4. "The Fallowfield Loop". Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  5. "Eyewitness in Manchester - South Manchester Loop Line Walk". Archived from the original on 19 July 2008. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  6. Boddy, M.G.; Fry, E.V.; Hennigan, W.; Hoole, Ken; Mallaband, Peter; Neve, E.; Price, J.H.; Proud, P.; Yeadon, W.B. (April 1990). Fry, E.V., ed. Locomotives of the L.N.E.R., part 10B: Railcars and Electric Stock. Lincoln: RCTS. p. 142. ISBN 0-901115-66-5.
  7. "Reddish Motive Power Depot". Subterranea Britannica. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  8. "Blues and Gospel train ticket, Wilbraham Road Railway Station". 7 May 1964.
  9. Tidman, Gareth (2006-11-09). "When the Blues train rolled into Chorlton". southmanchesterreporter.co.uk. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 2009-02-23.
  10. 1 2 "Debdale Park". Subterranea Britannica. Disused Stations. Retrieved 15 March 2010.
  11. Holt, David (1992). Manchester Metrolink. Sheffield: Platform 5 Pub. pp. 24–25. ISBN 1-872524-36-2.
  12. Pearce, Alan; Hardy, Brian; Stannard, Colin (2000). Docklands Light Railway Official Handbook. Capital Transport Publishing. ISBN 1-85414-223-2.
  13. "Fallowfield Loopline". Sustrans. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  14. "Friends of the Fallowfield Loop". Retrieved 14 March 2013.

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