Royton branch

Oldham Lines

Legend
 Past, Present and Future 
Kirklees South Lines
to Huddersfield

Delph
Diggle
Measurements
Dobcross
Saddleworth
Uppermill
Moorgate Halt
Friezland
Tameside Lines
to Tameside

Rochdale Lines
to Rochdale
Greenfield
Shaw and Crompton
Tameside Lines
to Tameside

Royton
Grasscroft
Royton Junction

Grotton and Springhead
Derker
Lees
Oldham Mumps
Oldham Glodwick Road

Oldham Central
Oldham Central(L&YR)
Oldham King Street
Oldham Clegg Street
Westwood
Oldham Werneth

Tameside Lines
to Ashton

Chadderton

Freehold
Middleton Junction and
Oldham Branch Railway

South Chadderton
Rochdale Lines
to Middleton and Rochdale
Hollinwood
Middleton Junction
Failsworth
Manchester Lines North
to Manchester
Manchester Lines North
to Manchester

The Royton Branch was a mile-long Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway built double track branch railway line in Greater Manchester, England, that ran from Royton Junction (renamed Royton in 1978) on the Oldham Loop Line to Royton.[1]

History

Opening

Royton Station opened on 21 March 1864 by the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway to link the mill town of Royton to their rail network.

Ownership changes

Passing in 1923 to the London Midland & Scottish Railway it was considered for electrification in 1924 but those plans were shelved. In 1948 the line was nationalised becoming part of British Railways London Midland Region who ran the line until it fell foul of the Beeching cuts.

Closure

The line closed to freight on 2 November 1964, and passengers on 16 April 1966, officially closing on 18 April.

Accidents

Although a short line, it was well-used but poorly maintained. This led to a number of accidents, the most serious being a collision on 31 October 1908 that killed a fireman,[2] and on 8 February 1961 when a train derailed at Royton hitting local houses but fortunately causing only minor injuries.[3]

References

External links

Coordinates: 53°33′40″N 2°06′37″W / 53.5611°N 2.1102°W / 53.5611; -2.1102

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 30, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.