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Cheadle Hulme railway station

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Cheadle Hulme National Rail
265px
Platform 2, facing towards Stockport
Location
Place Cheadle Hulme
Local authority Metropolitan Borough of Stockport
Grid reference SJ875865
Operations
Station code CHU
Managed by Northern Rail
Number of platforms 4
DfT category D
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2004/05  0.288 million
2005/06 Increase 0.357 million
2006/07 Increase 0.377 million
2007/08 Increase 0.424 million
2008/09 Increase 0.573 million
2009/10 Decrease 0.552 million
2010/11 Increase 0.616 million
2011/12 Increase 0.698 million
- Interchange 3,721
2012/13 Increase 0.717 million
- Interchange Increase 4,394
2013/14 Increase 0.762 million
- Interchange Increase 4,595
Passenger Transport Executive
PTE TfGM
National RailUK railway stations

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Cheadle Hulme from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Cheadle Hulme railway station is an open triangular station in Cheadle Hulme, Greater Manchester, England. It is on the West Coast Main Line and is operated by Northern Rail.

Cheadle Hulme's first railway station opened in 1842, when the Manchester and Birmingham Railway to Crewe was completed. With the extension of the line to Macclesfield, and later Stoke-on-Trent, a new station opened in 1845 which has served the area since. The railway transformed it from a collection of small hamlets into a suburb of over 29,000 people.

2011 saw the construction of pedestrian bridges linking all four platforms and lifts enabling disabled access.

History

Background

File:Cheadle Hulme Station Road 1900.JPG
The station front c. 1900

In 1833 Parliament approved the Grand Junction Railway, a railway line to connect Manchester and Birmingham.[1] It opened in 1837, after proposals had been made for more direct routes in 1830 and 1835. The earlier schemes attracted little interest, but two proposals were put forward in late 1835. The two companies, based in Manchester and Birmingham, had to negotiate with each other to develop the proposals, and they were altered somewhat over the next two years. In 1837 Parliament approved the final plans for lines to Crewe and Stoke. The companies merged to become the Manchester and Birmingham Railway company, and the first part of the line opened in June 1840. It originally ran from a temporary station at Travis Street in Manchester, to a station in Heaton Norris just north of Stockport.[2] A large viaduct was built over the River Mersey, and opened to trains on 10 May 1842. It allowed services to be extended to Sandbach; in the following August they reached Crewe. Also at this time, a new station opened to serve as the line's northern terminus; it later became Manchester Piccadilly. Edgeley railway station opened in February 1843 in response to complaints that the Heaton Norris station was "too inconvenient", and it soon became Stockport's busiest station.[3] Three years later in 1846 the Manchester and Birmingham Railway company merged with two other companies to become the London and North Western Railway.

Cheadle station

A train passing through Cheadle Hulme towards Handforth. The white building in the background is the original station house.

The original Cheadle Hulme railway station on the Crewe line, about 0.3 miles (0.5 km) south-west of the current structure, was known simply as "Cheadle". It was in use from May 1842, following the opening of the viaduct. The station building, opposite the Hesketh Tavern public house, is now a private residence. It included a structure from which tickets were sold, and in the window of which a candle was lit to act as a signal during the hours of darkness.[4] This structure, however, no longer exists.[5]

When plans were made for a line to Stoke-on-Trent, it was originally intended for a branch to be built from Stockport to Macclesfield. Instead, the junction was built south at Cheadle Hulme. The line was constructed over four years: it opened for goods traffic as far as Poynton in June 1845, and on 24 November it reached Macclesfield and was opened to the public.[6] In June 1846 Parliament authorised the completion of the line to Stoke-on-Trent.[7] By June 1849 the section between Congleton and Macclesfield was completed and the line was finished.[8]

New station

File:Cheadle Hulme Station aerial.JPG
An aerial view of the station, dating from 1927

After the Stoke line opened, the station was rebuilt north-east at the junction so it could serve both lines. The new station opened on 9 June 1845; at first, southbound services ran to Crewe and Poynton. By November the line had been extended to Macclesfield, and by 1849, when the original station closed, it had reached Stoke-on-Trent. The new station had four platforms, and was served by trains running between Manchester and Crewe or Stoke-on-Trent.[9] It was renamed Cheadle Hulme in 1866, to avoid confusion with Cheadle LNW railway station which opened the same year.[10]

Before the arrival of the railway, Cheadle Hulme was a rural and agricultural cluster of hamlets. The railway brought a huge influx of people to the area, and provided opportunities for residents to work in places such as Manchester. Cheadle Hulme gradually grew to become a large suburb of over 29,000 people thanks to the railway.[4]

Derailments

File:Cheadle Hulme Station 02.JPG
Platforms 3 and 4 on the line to Stoke, facing south. The sharp curve which caused the 1964 derailment is clearly visible.

A special train - known as the "Lollipop Express" - carrying 234 school children from Gnosall, Stafford to York for a day trip derailed at the station on 28 May 1964.[11] Three people, including two children, were killed and 27 were injured. The bridge, which carried the line between Macclesfield and Stoke, was in the process of being reconstructed. Passing trains were restricted to a temporary speed limit of 10 miles per hour (16.1 km/h).[12] A hearing determined that the train's excessive speed had caused the derailment because the train driver was not aware of the speed restriction.[12][13]

In July 1969, there was another derailment near Cheadle Hulme involving a freight diesel locomotive. It injured no one but blocked services to Crewe and Stoke-on-Trent for several hours.[14]

Alterations

File:Cheadle Hulme Station platform 3.jpg
Platform 3 facing towards Stockport. The waiting shelters were originally built to replace buildings which included a ticket office and waiting room.

The original station, as it remains in 2009, was sited above road level. The station office was located on the platform "island" that forms platforms 2 and 3, which were accessed by a flight of stairs where the ticket office is now. Passengers accessed the other two platforms by a footbridge, which was removed after the lines were electrified.[5] Cheadle Hulme was also used as a goods depot until 31 October 1964, when goods trains were withdrawn.[15] The goods yard is now a car park.[5]

The lines to Crewe and Stoke-on-Trent were electrified in 1960 and 1967 respectively.[10] In 1963, due to the growing amount of traffic travelling down Station Road, it was decided that the parts of the road that pass under the bridges should be widened, as they were becoming a bottleneck. The bridge carrying the line to Stoke was upgraded first. The road under it was more than doubled in width, and the bridge height was increased by 3 feet (0.9 m) allowing double-decker buses to pass underneath.[16]

Work on the second bridge commenced on 8 June 1965, increasing the height and width in accordance with Ministry of Transport requirements. Around this time, the station itself was upgraded: the platforms were demolished and replaced, and new waiting shelters were erected. A new booking office, facing Station Road and approached by a flight of stairs, was built alongside a new booking lobby, toilets and staff accommodation. New entrances to the platforms were built, and the entire station was installed with electric lighting.[17] Station Road was significantly widened and rerouted slightly in 1967 in a further attempt to accommodate increasing traffic.[18]

Following the privatisation of British Rail, the station operation was taken over by Railtrack, and later First North Western until 2004 when it was taken over by Northern Rail. In 1996 Railtrack launched a £1 billion programme to restore and renovate every station it operated. Cheadle Hulme had £1.2 million spent on repairs to its platforms, buildings and waiting shelters, and new lighting installed throughout the station. Stephen Day, the Member of Parliament (MP) for Cheadle Hulme, opened the updated station in March 1998.[19] The junction itself was revamped in 2000 and the signal box was removed, having been superseded by a central signalling point at Stockport station.[10] In 2011, major work was carried out after years of campaigns, with the construction of pedestrian bridges connecting all four platforms, and lifts enabling disabled access to the platforms.

Services

File:Cheadle Hulme railway station office.JPG
The station foyer and office

The station's four platforms are all accessed via stairs – access to platform 1 is next to Pimlott's butchers, access to platforms 2 and 3 is through the ticket office, and access to platform 4 is near the Platform 5 public house.

Northern Rail provides passenger services. Three trains per hour run northeastwards to Manchester Piccadilly. In the other direction, trains run hourly on the Stoke line. On the Crewe line, one train per hour runs to Alderley Edge serving all stations, and one train per hour serves the same stations and continues to Crewe.[20][21]

References

  1. Crouzet, p.284
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  3. Arrowsmith 1997, p. 168
  4. 4.0 4.1 Squire 1976, p. 5
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Garratt 1999, p. 27
  6. Knight, p.677
  7. Slaughter, p.25
  8. Ingham, p.364
  9. Reid & Lee 1979, p. 40
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Shannon & Hillmer 2003, p. 77
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  18. Lee 1967, p. 4
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Bibliography

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External links

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