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Maxwell House railway station

Short-lived terminus in Preston, Lancashire
Maxwell House
General information
LocationPreston, Lancashire
England
Coordinates53°45′29′′N 2°42′28′′W / 53.7580°N 2.7077°W / 53.7580; -2.7077
Platforms1
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companyLancaster and Preston Junction Railway
Key dates
1 January 1842 (1842年1月1日)Opened
11 February 1844 (1844年2月11日)Closed
Location
Former location in Preston city centre
Show map of Preston city centre
Maxwell House is located in Lancashire
Maxwell House
Maxwell House
Location in present-day Lancashire
Show map of Lancashire

Maxwell House railway station served Preston, Lancashire, England, from 1842 to 1844 on the Lancaster and Preston Junction Railway.

History

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The station owed its existence to rivalry between the first railway companies in Preston. The Bolton and Preston Railway (B&PR) intended to convert the Lancaster Canal Tramroad for its use, and in 1837 reserved a site at the north end of the tramroad for a station. This site, which was behind the Victoria Hotel in Fishergate and was then occupied by Maxwell House, was near the planned southern end of the Lancaster and Preston Junction Railway (L&PJR).[1]

When the latter railway was completed, it initially had permission to use the North Union Railway's station (the present-day Preston railway station), but the two companies fell into disagreement and permission was revoked, to take effect from 1 January 1842. The L&PJR then approached the B&PR who agreed to complete construction of their station (as a small station with single platform) in time for the L&PJR to use it from 1 January.[1]

The North Union Railway (NUR) responded by allowing L&PJR trains to use their station, but charged a toll of 6d per passenger (equivalent to 30ドル in 2023[a] ) through the tunnel under Fishergate that connected their station with the station at Maxwell House. Most passengers avoided the toll by walking the 200 yards (200 m) between the two stations.[1]

On 1 January 1844, the NUR bought the B&PR, thus gaining possession of the station at Maxwell House which the L&PJR was then banned from using. For several weeks L&PJR passengers alighted on the trackside at nearby Dock Street (off Pitt Street). The NUR and L&PJR came to agreement on 12 February 1844, and regular passenger trains used the NUR station from then onwards. The station at Maxwell House was used only for occasional excursion trains for several months afterwards.[1]

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017), "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)", MeasuringWorth , retrieved 7 May 2024
  1. ^ a b c d Greville, M.D. and Holt, G.O. (1960) "Railway Development in Preston", Railway Magazine, vol. 106, "part 1" (PDF). (2.68 MB), Feb no. 706, pp. 94–112.
Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Barton and Broughton
Line open, station closed
  Lancaster and Preston Junction Railway   Preston
Line and station open
Closed railway stations in Lancashire
Ribble Valley line
Lancashire Union Railway
Blackpool branch lines
Copy Pit line
East Lancashire line
Rawtenstall to Bacup Line
Rochdale–Bacup line
Furness & Midland Railway
Glasson Dock branch
Lancaster & Preston Railway
Garstang & Knot-End Railway
Preston & Longridge Railway
"Little" North Western Railway
Lancaster & Carlisle Railway
Leeds & Bradford Ext Railway
West Lancashire Railway
North Union Railway
Ormskirk branch line
SCLER
L'pool, S'port & Preston Railway
Bolton and Preston Railway
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