Ulverston railway station

Ulverston railway station

Infobox UK station
name = Ulverston
code = ULV


manager = First TransPennine Express
locale = Ulverston
borough = South Lakeland
usage0405 = 0.164
platforms = 1,3
start = 1857

Ulverston railway station is a railway station that serves the town of Ulverston in Cumbria, England.It is located on the Furness Line from Barrow-in-Furness to Lancaster. It is operated by First TransPennine Express.

It is primarily served by regional express services operated by TransPennine Express from Manchester Airport to Barrow-in-Furness. Additionally it is served by local services operated by Northern Rail from Lancaster to Barrow-in-Furness, with some continuing to Sellafield or Carlisle via the Cumbrian Coast Line. There is normally one train per hour in each direction (less frequent in the evening and on Sundays).

The current buildings are architecturally fine and date from 1873, when they were rebuilt as befitting one of the main stations of the Furness Railway. The clock tower and glass awnings, now extensively restored, are particularly fine.

History

The Furness Railway's line from Barrow & Dalton-in-Furness was the first railway to serve the town, being completed in 1854 [ [http://www.furnessrailwaytrust.org.uk/frco.htm History of the Furness Railway] Accessed 2008-08-29] . Three years later the Ulverston and Lancaster Railway opened the line southwards to Carnforth via Arnside and built a new through station on the current site, leaving the old FR terminus to be used as a goods depot. The Furness then took over the Ulverston & Lancaster company in 1862.

The unusual platform layout (where the northbound line has a face on both sides) is a legacy of the station's former role as the interchange for the branch line to Lakeside, which diverged from the main line at "Plumpton Junction" a few miles to the south before heading north-eastwards to it's terminus on the southern shore of Lake Windermere. The island platform allowed easy cross-platform interchange for those passengers travelling from the south changing onto the connecting service to Lakeside whilst those wishing to exit the station could do so by alighting on the opposite side platform. Today only platforms one and three are used.

The branch opened in 1869 and was well-patronised from the outset in the summer months by tourists, who could make a convenient transfer to the Windermere steamboats at Lakeside. The line was much quieter in winter though and year-round services ended in the autumn of 1938 - passenger trains thereafter running only during the summer. This continued until 6 September 1965, when the line fell victim to the Beeching Axe. It's northern end was subsequently reopened as the Lakeside and Haverthwaite Railway but the remainder was lifted in the early seventies and the trackbed used for improvements to the A590 road (over which passengers must continue their journey if heading to Lakeside today).

Notes

External links

* [http://217.23.229.206/jpclient.exe?b=Ulverston+(rail+station)&SubmitQuery Buses from the station]
* [http://217.23.229.206/jpclient.exe?e=Ulverston+(rail+station)&SubmitQuery Buses to the station]


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