Neha Patil (Editor)

Burscough Junction railway station

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Place
  
Station code
  
BCJ

DfT category
  
F2

Number of platforms
  
1

Grid reference
  
SD444115

Managed by
  
Northern

2011/12
  
37,378

Local authority
  
Burscough Junction railway station

Address
  
Burscough, Ormskirk L40 5XF, United Kingdom

Similar
  
Burscough Bridge railway st, Ormskirk railway station, New Lane railway station, Croston railway station, Rufford railway station

Burscough Junction pronounced (Burs/co Junction) is one of two railway stations serving the small West Lancashire town of Burscough in the north-west of England. It is sited on the Ormskirk Branch Line, 2 12 miles (4.0 km) north of Ormskirk and is served by Northern. The station was the scene of the Burscough Junction Station Crash in 1880.

Contents

Service

The line sees a Monday-Saturday service of approximately every 90 minutes each way (13 departures in total in each direction) and has no Sunday service.

History

The station opened in April 1849, and enjoyed a regular service to numerous destinations, including Preston, Blackburn, Southport and Liverpool. From the autumn of 1968, stopping express services to Scotland and the Lake District were withdrawn. In October of the following year, through trains to Blackburn also ceased and the remaining Blackpool to Liverpool stopping service was cut back to Ormskirk, leaving only local services and a few non-stop expresses; the line was severed entirely at Ormskirk from 4 May 1970. Singling followed at the end of June 1970. Unlike the other stations at Croston and Rufford, Burscough Junction retained its station buildings for a few years. These were demolished at the end of 1973, and replaced with the current, extremely basic, arrangement.

Interchange

The other station in Burscough is Burscough Bridge, and is only ten minutes away by foot. The name "Junction" is an anachronism: the station no longer serves such a purpose.

Facilities

Only one platform remains in use, with basic shelters, digital information displays and a long-line P.A system. There are no ticket vending facilities of any kind available, so passengers requiring them must buy in advance or on the train. The platform is fully DDA-compliant, with step free access from the main entrance on Station Lane.

Burscough Curves

During the rail restructuring of the 1960s and 1970s, the "Burscough Curves", which formed a link between the Ormskirk-Preston and Southport-Wigan lines were removed, although the formation survives. The North Curve was taken out of use and severed in July 1969, being lifted in 1973: it was last used for a Saturdays only empty train from Blackpool to Southport. The South Curve was singled in 1970, but remained in use to serve the extensive sidings at the MOD depot located just to the north of Burscough Junction station. It saw its last train in 1982.

The passenger service from Ormskirk to Burscough Junction and on to Southport, which used the southern curve, was withdrawn in 1962 as can be seen from the British Rail London Midland Region Timetable of that year.

Pressure from local transport groups, West Lancashire Borough Council and Southport MP John Pugh has not so far persuaded Network Rail to reinstate the curves. Various schemes have been proposed, including the full electrification of the line from Southport via Burscough to Ormskirk using the same third rail system as Merseyrail. This proposal would allow users of the Ormskirk branch of Merseyrail's Northern Line to reach Southport without having to travel via Sandhills.

A new study being conducted by Merseytravel could see demand for a potential reinstatement and electrification of the curves in the near future. In June 2009, the Association of Train Operating Companies, in its Connecting Communities: Expanding Access to the Rail Network report, called for funding for the reopening of this line as part of a £500m scheme to open 33 stations on 14 lines closed in the Beeching Axe, including seven new parkway stations. The uses of the curves in a new service pattern has been identified by Network Rail, if electrified along with the through lines. Merseytravel has since included reopening of the two connections (and electrification to both Southport & Preston) in its Liverpool City Region Long Term Rail Strategy document, published in 2014. The latest refresh of Mersytravel's Long Term Strategy puts the opening of the curves in Network Rail's CP7 period.

Through-trains

There is now no physical connection between the electric Merseyrail line at Ormskirk, and the Ormskirk-Preston line; passengers travelling from Liverpool must change to a diesel train at Ormskirk to continue to Preston.

References

Burscough Junction railway station Wikipedia


Similar Topics