Liverpool to Manchester Lines

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Liverpool to Manchester Line
(Northern route)
Stations (from west to east)
              Liverpool Lime Street
  Edge Hill
  Wavertree Technology Park
  Broad Green
  Roby
  Huyton
  Whiston
  Rainhill
  Lea Green
  St Helens Junction
  Earlestown
  Newton-le-Willows
  Patricroft
  Eccles
Manchester Oxford Road       Manchester Victoria
Manchester Piccadilly    
Liverpool to Manchester Line
(Southern route)
Stations (from west to east)
           Liverpool Lime Street
  Edge Hill
  Mossley Hill
  West Allerton
  Liverpool South Parkway
  Hunts Cross
  Halewood
  Hough Green
  Widnes
  Sankey for Penketh
  Warrington Central
  Padgate
  Birchwood
  Glazebrook
  Irlam
  Flixton
  Chassen Road
  Urmston
  Humphrey Park
  Trafford Park
  Deansgate
  Manchester Oxford Road
  Manchester Piccadilly

There are two Liverpool to Manchester Lines between the cities of Liverpool and Manchester in the north-west of England.

Contents

The more northerly of the two lines follows George Stephenson's original 32 mile (51.5-km) Liverpool and Manchester Railway, which was the world's first passenger railway, having opened in 1830. It runs from Liverpool Lime Street station, via Earlestown and Newton-le-Willows, and continues to either Manchester Victoria or Manchester Piccadilly.

The more southerly, and currently busier, route runs from Liverpool Lime Street via Warrington Central to Manchester Piccadilly. It follows the London and North Western Railway's route as far as Allerton Junction just south of Liverpool South Parkway, where a spur connects it to the line built by the Cheshire Lines Committee in 1873. Originally, this ran between Liverpool Central and Manchester Central. However the line uses Oxford Road and Piccadilly stations in Manchester since Central station closed in the 1960s, while the line between Liverpool Central and Hunts Cross is now used by the Northern Line of the Merseyrail network. Liverpool South Parkway is itself a replacement for Allerton, which closed in 2006.

An hourly fast service is operated by Northern Rail, from Liverpool to Manchester Piccadilly, usually calling at Wavertree Technology Park, Earlestown, Newton-le-Willows and Manchester Oxford Road, and continuing to Manchester Airport. Northern Rail also operates an hourly service calling at all stations from Liverpool Lime Street to Manchester Victoria. This is supplemented by an additional all-stations service between Liverpool and Earlestown, which continues to Warrington Bank Quay.

Between Earlestown and Manchester Piccadilly, there are additional services (at least one per hour) operated by Arriva Trains Wales, which originate from Chester and the North Wales Coast Line.

A half-hourly fast service operates between Liverpool Lime Street and Manchester Piccadilly, calling at Warrington Central and Manchester Oxford Road. Of the two trains per hour, one is operated by East Midlands Trains and the other by TransPennine Express. East Midlands Trains' services usually also stop at Widnes and continue to Norwich via Sheffield and Nottingham, while the TransPennine services call additionally at Birchwood and usually continue to Scarborough via Leeds and York.

There is also a half-hourly local service operated by Northern Rail. Many intermediate stations are served by both of these trains, although some just by one per hour, while Glazebrook, Humphrey Park and Trafford Park are served only occasionally outside peak periods.

Other routes:

The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway had its own route to the north of the present two. This ran from Liverpool Exchange station via the Liverpool and Bury Railway to Wigan Wallgate, then via the Manchester and Southport Railway to Manchester Victoria; at 37 miles (59.5 km) this route was the longest of the three. It is still possible to travel from Liverpool to Manchester via this route, by changing at Kirkby.

A further southerly route, using what was St Helens and Runcorn Gap Railway, connected Liverpool Lime Street with Manchester Oxford Road via Ditton Junction, Warrington Bank Quay (low level platforms) and Timperley. Part of this route is still used for coal and limestone traffic to Fiddlers Ferry Power Station, but east of Warrington it has been abandoned and forms part of the Trans Pennine Trail.

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