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Manchester Exchange railway station

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Place
  
Grid reference
  
SJ837988

Platforms in use
  
5

Area
  
Salford

30 June 1884
  
Opened

Manchester Exchange railway station wwwnrmorgukimgnrmworksphotosCrewe19967316

Post-grouping
  
London, Midland and Scottish RailwayLondon Midland Region of British Railways

Similar
  
Park railway station, High Street tram stop, Clayton Bridge railway st, Miles Platting railway st, Mosley Street tram stop

Manchester Exchange Station was a railway station located in Salford, immediately to the north of Manchester city centre. It served the city between 1884 and 1969. The main approach road ran from the end of Deansgate near Manchester Cathedral, passing over the River Irwell and Chapel Street; a second approach road led up from Blackfriars Road. Despite its name, the station was located in Salford, and only the 1929 extension to Platform 3 was east of the Irwell in Manchester.

Contents

Manchester Exchange railway station Manchester Exchange Railway Station Lost Britain

Construction and opening

Manchester Exchange railway station Manchester Exchange station about 1910 Photos Our collection

The station was built by the London and North Western Railway (LNWR) and opened on 30 June 1884. The station had five platforms with Nos. 1 and 2 being bays and Nos. 3, 4 and 5 being through. Platforms Nos. 4 and 5 were reached by a footbridge from near the station entrance. The opening of Exchange allowed the LNWR to vacate Manchester Victoria station to the east, which it (and its predecessors, including the Liverpool and Manchester Railway) had shared with the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (and its predecessors) since 4 May 1844. From 16 April 1929, Exchange had a platform link with the adjacent Victoria, when an eastward extension of platform No. 3 over the Irwell bridge was opened, meeting Victoria's platform No. 11, thus creating Europe's longest platform at 2,238 feet (682 m); it could accommodate three trains at once.

Services

Manchester Exchange railway station Disused Stations Station

Exchange station served Liverpool Lime Street; Huddersfield; Leeds; Hull Paragon and Newcastle Central; also Warrington Bank Quay, Chester and North Wales. Local LNWR passenger trains operated via Walkden to Bolton Great Moor Street and via Tyldesley to Wigan North Western.

Manchester Exchange railway station Manchester Exchange railway station Wikipedia

The station originally provided alternative services from Manchester to London Euston. Between 1884 and 1943, the Great Western Railway operated a competing passenger train service from Chester General station via Frodsham, Warrington Bank Quay and Eccles to Manchester Exchange.

Second World War damage

Manchester Exchange railway station Manchester Exchange Railway Station

The station suffered hits by several German incendiary bombs during the Christmas 1940 Manchester Blitz. On 22 December, the station roof was severely damaged, portions of which were never replaced. Fires took extensive hold on the building which could not be re-opened for passengers until 13 January 1941.

Closure

The station was closed on 5 May 1969 and all remaining services were redirected to Manchester Victoria.

Despite closure, the station remained operational for newspaper trains until the 1980s. Manchester produced several 'northern editions' until the newspaper revolution. The nighttime operation was very busy with several trains being loaded and readied for departure to various trans-Pennine destinations (Halifax / Huddersfield / Leeds / York etc.).

After many years of remaining relatively intact (with trains still running beneath the train shed until the track layout was redesigned), it continued to operate as a car park for some years.

References

Manchester Exchange railway station Wikipedia