Preston Fishergate Hill railway station explained

Preston Fishergate Hill was a railway station at the bottom of Fishergate Hill in Preston. It formed the northeastern terminus of the West Lancashire Railway which built a direct railway link between Southport and Preston. The station was also known as Preston West Lancashire Station (OS 1:2500 1st Ed map).

History

The terminus opened on 15 September 1882[1] and was designed by Charles Henry Driver. It closed to passengers on 16 July 1900[2] when the West Lancashire Railway was absorbed by its rival, the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (Biddle, 1989). From that date, the new owners directed passenger traffic to the joint L&YR and LNWR station closer to the centre of town (Cotterall, 1982).

Thereafter, the station remained open for goods traffic until 25 January 1965 but saw occasional passenger specials during the Preston Guild which is held every 20 years.

For many years after closure to passengers the premises were let by a firm of provender merchants for use as offices.[3] The station has since been demolished and housing now occupies the site.

References

Notes

Bibliography

53.7539°N -2.7146°W

Notes and References

  1. News: . Opening of the Southport and Preston Railway . Liverpool Mercury . British Newspaper Archive . 16 September 1882 . 7 August 2016 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  2. Willox. William Arthur. Why and Wherefore - Fishergate Hill. The Railway Magazine. March 1933. 41. 480. 215. 0033-8923.
  3. A photograph can be found in Greville and Holt (1960), p. 199