Eskadale Halt Explained

Line:Manx Electric Railway
Eskadale
Native Name Lang:gv
Native Name:Eskadale
Type:Manx Electric Railway
Address:Lonan, Isle Of Man
Coordinates:Pole No. 147-148
Structure:None
Platform:Ground Level
Tracks:Two Running Lines
Parking:Roadside
Owned:Isle Of Man Railways
Former:Manx Electric Railway Co.

Eskadale Halt (Manx: Stadd Eskadale) (sometimes mistakenly Eskdale) is an intermediate request stop on the east coast route of the Manx Electric Railway on the Isle of Man.

Location

The halt is located at the northern extremity of Groudle Glen; it takes its name from the house that it stands next to, and is bisected by a small road crossing called Bibaloe Beg which serves the farm of the same name. Directly across from the station is the steep Old Lonan Church Road which eventually accesses the pack horse lane that leads to the Groudle Glen Railway and it is this road that the locomotives and larger equipment are delivered to the diminutive line on.

Namesake

The house from which the stopping place takes its name is itself dominated by topiary in the shape of a peacock and was once the dwelling of Richard Maltby Broadbent, the entrepreneur who developed the nearby glen and railway. The house is of unusual style, including mock-Tudor gables and red brick construction, with modern garages to its side.

Marketing

The stopping place was never officially marked until 1999 when a bus-type totem sign was erected on one of the traction poles to denote its presence. It is little used and not mentioned in the railway's timetable literature, although the 13/13A service of Bus Vannin serves the route on the parallel road.

Also

Manx Electric Railway Stations

References

Sources