Linacre Road | |
Status: | Disused |
Borough: | Litherland, Sefton |
Country: | England |
Coordinates: | 53.4656°N -2.9985°W |
Grid Name: | Grid reference |
Platforms: | 2 |
Line: | North Mersey Branch |
Original: | Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway |
Pregroup: | Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway |
Postgroup: | London, Midland and Scottish Railway |
Events: | Opened |
Events1: | Closed |
Linacre Road railway station was a station located on the North Mersey Branch in Litherland, Lancashire.
The North Mersey Branch line through the station site was opened by the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (L&YR) for freight on 27 August 1866, the branch connecting the North Mersey goods station to the main line between and .
The station opened for service on 1 June 1906 when the Seaforth connecting line was opened and the line between and using the connecting line was electrified.
The station was located just east of the junction between the branch and the connecting line where the line crossed Linacre Road on an over bridge.
The station was to the east of road alongside Litherland tram sheds, there was a sloping pathway leading up to a wooden booking office from which there were steps up to the east-bound platform and a subway then steps up to the west-bound. The platforms were of all wooden construction with simple waiting shelters.[1]
The was an early short-lived service through, and probably using, the station when a connection was made with the Liverpool Overhead Railway (LOR) near their station and through services were run from through the station onto the LOR to, this route needed needed lighter and smaller trains to operate along the LOR and twelve were built for this service, it was not a successful venture and stopped in September 1908, the trains being redeployed.
In 1910 there were 17 services in each direction on a week day, with about half of the services continuing on to (electric trains started running to here on 1 October 1909). In the other direction the services ran over the Seaforth connecting line through to .
In 1914 a section of line from where the connecting line joined the branch toward the docks was electrified and station opened. A new service began from to, there were seven trains each day in each direction with an extra service on Saturdays. The service ceased on 7 July 1924 when Gladstone Dock station closed.
On race days at Aintree racecourse passenger trains, including those of the Liverpool Overhead Railway would pass through the station site on special services to and from station (on these occasions the L&YR stations at Aintree were differentiated by adding Sefton Arms or Racecourse).[2]
The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway amalgamated with the London and North Western Railway on 1 January 1922 and in turn was Grouped into the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1923. Nationalisation followed in 1948.
In 1939 the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) was operating about 22 services each way that stopped at the station. By 1944 this had reduced to around twelve each way.
The station closed on 2 April 1951 but the line continued to be used by freight trains. The LOR service for the Grand National ceased when the LOR closed at the end of 1956.
The singled track is still in place, although no longer electrified and in a state of dereliction.
Since the 1970s there have been plans to re-electrify the North Mersey Branch and reintroduce a passenger service. As part of those plans Linacre Road station would reopen.[3]