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Burnley Central railway station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Burnley Central
National Rail
General information
LocationBurnley, Burnley
England
Grid referenceSD839330
Managed byNorthern
Platforms1
Other information
Station codeBNC
ClassificationDfT category E
Key dates
1 December 1848Station opened
November 1871renamed Burnley Bank Top
2 October 1944renamed Burnley Central [1]
1964Station rebuilt
Passengers
2018/19Decrease 91,204
2019/20Increase 0.102 million
2020/21Decrease 28,804
2021/22Increase 99,658
2022/23Increase 0.100 million
Notes
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Burnley Central railway station is a station in the town of Burnley, Lancashire and is on the East Lancashire Line. It is managed by Northern, which also provides its passenger service.

Following the singling of the track in December 1986, Burnley Central has one platform in use, together with a small ticket office, waiting area and public address facility. There are information boards at the entrance of the station and in the booking hall, along with passenger information screens on the platform. The booking office is staffed on weekday mornings and early afternoons only - at other times, tickets can be purchased from a ticket vending machine on the concourse. It is fully accessible to disabled travellers, with a ramp from the entrance to the waiting room/ticket office & platform.[2]

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Transcription

History

The station in 1988

It was opened by the East Lancashire Railway in 1848 as part of its route from Bury and Blackburn to Colne, where an end-on junction was made with the Leeds and Bradford Extension Railway line from Skipton that had been completed several months earlier. The service from Colne through the station to Manchester Victoria via Accrington and Bury was well used from the outset by the owners of the local cotton mills, who travelled from their homes in the area to make their purchases of raw cotton at the Royal Exchange several times each week.[3] It was also possible to travel from the station by direct train to Blackpool, Liverpool and Skipton and even through to London Euston via Blackburn, Manchester Victoria and Stockport.[4]

However the cutbacks of the 1960s affected the station badly, with through trains to Manchester via Bury ending in 1964 (two years before the withdrawal of the Accrington to Bury service) and those to Liverpool in 1969 whilst the line to Skipton was closed to all traffic in 1970.[5] This left the station on a 6+12 miles (10.5 km)-long dead-end branch line from Rose Grove to Colne, although the line remained double as far as Nelson until December 1986. The eastbound line and platform (used by trains towards Colne) was taken out of use thereafter and the station signal box closed - the track was subsequently lifted and the box and platform demolished a few years later. Only part of the remaining (former westbound) platform is now used by passenger trains - the rest is fenced off and overgrown. Immediately to the west, the line passes above the centre of the town on Bank Top viaduct as it heads towards Gannow Junction.

Despite the cutbacks, the station was rebuilt in 1965, with the ground floor at street level and the first floor at platform level, providing a booking hall, toilets, waiting rooms, stationmaster's office, parcels office and left luggage office.[6]

The station in 1962

Services

On weekdays, there is an hourly service from Burnley Central to Colne (eastbound) and Preston (westbound).[7]

Northern formerly ran an hourly Sunday service each way, after taking over operations in April 2016.[8] In the current winter 2022 timetable however, this has dropped to two-hourly.

References

  1. ^ Butt, R.V.J., (1995) The Directory of Railway Stations, Yeovil: Patrick Stephens
  2. ^ Burnley Central station facilities National Rail Enquiries; Retrieved 25 November 2016
  3. ^ Marshall; p.40
  4. ^ Frater, p.31
  5. ^ Suggitt, p.75
  6. ^ "New station for Burnley". Modern Railways: 347. June 1965.
  7. ^ GB eNRT May 2023 Edition, Table 105
  8. ^ Northern Franchise Improvements - DfT Archived 5 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 27 January 2016

Sources

  • Frater, A. (1983) Stopping Train Britain - A Railway Odyssey, Hodder & Staughton Ltd, London. ISBN 0-340-32451-1
  • Marshall, J. (1981) Forgotten Railways North-West England, David & Charles (Publishers) Ltd, Newton Abbott. ISBN 0-7153-8003-6
  • Suggitt, G. (2004 reprint), Lost Railways of Lancashire, Countryside Books, Newbury, ISBN 1-85306-801-2

External links

Preceding station
National Rail
National Rail
Following station
Burnley Barracks   Northern
East Lancashire line
  Brierfield
  Historical railways  
Burnley Barracks
Line and station open
  Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway
East Lancashire Railway
  New Hall Bridge Halt
Line open, station closed

53°47′38″N 2°14′42″W / 53.794°N 2.245°W / 53.794; -2.245

This page was last edited on 14 December 2023, at 21:02
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