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Lowca railway station

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Disused railway station in Cumbria, England

Lowca
Lowca's 1st station in the colliery yard, probably on 2 June 1913
General information
LocationLowca, Cumbria
England
Coordinates54°34′54″N 3°34′51″W / 54.5817°N 3.5808°W / 54.5817; -3.5808
Grid referenceNX979218
Platforms1
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companyBain's Mineral Railway
Pre-groupingHarrington and Lowca Light Railway
Post-groupingHarrington and Lowca Light Railway
Key dates
15 April 1912Workmen's service commenced
2 June 1913Public passenger service
31 May 1926Public passenger service ended
1 April 1929Workmen's service ended
Lowca Light Railway and Gilgarran Branch
Legend
Key open line
Gilgarran Branch
Lowca Light Railway
other closed lines

Cumbrian Coast line
to Maryport
Maryport & Carlisle Rly
to Dearham
Flimby Linefoot
Siddick Junction Linefoot Junction
Cleator and Workington
Junction Railway
Great Broughton
St Helens Colliery
Maryport & Carlisle Rly
to Brigham
Dock Junction Seaton
Dock Calva Junction
Derwent Junction
Cloffocks Junction
to Marron Junction
enlarge… Workington Main Workington Central enlarge…
Solway Colliery
Derwent Ironworks
 
Moss Bay
 
(north)
Moss Bay Cart Siding
Ironworks
 
(south)
 
Harrington Junction
Harrington
(Church Road Halt)
High Harrington
Harrington
Rosehill
(Archer Street Halt)
Harrington Harbour Rose Hill Platform
Rose Hill Junction
Copperas Hill
Whitehaven, Cleator
& Egremont Rly
to
Rowrah
Micklam Ullock
Lowca
Distington Junction
to Marron Junction
Distington Wythemoor Colliery
Bain's Siding Distington Ironworks
United Steel Companies
Workmen's Halt
Parton Halt Oatlands
Cleator & Workington Jn Rly
to Rowrah
Parton
Cumbrian Coast line
to Whitehaven
Cleator & Workington Jn Rly
to Cleator Moor West

1972
Key open line
Gilgarran Branch
Lowca Light Railway
other closed lines
closed & lifted lines

Cumbrian Coast line
to Maryport
Flimby
formerly
to Dearham
Siddick Junction Linefoot Junction
RNAD Broughton Moor
St Helens Colliery
formerly
to Brigham
Dock Junction Seaton
Dock Calva Junction
Derwent Junction
Cloffocks Junction
formerly
to Marron Junction
enlarge… Workington Main Workington Central enlarge…
Solway Colliery
Derwent Ironworks
 
Moss Bay
 
(north)
Moss Bay Cart Siding
Ironworks
 
(south)
 
Harrington Junction
Harrington
(Church Road Halt)
High Harrington
Harrington
Rosehill
(Archer Street Halt)
Harrington Harbour Rose Hill Platform
Rose Hill Junction
Copperas Hill
formerly
to Rowrah
Micklam Ullock
Lowca
Distington Junction
formerly to Marron Junction
Distington Wythemoor Colliery
Bain's Siding Distington Ironworks
United Steel Companies
Workmen's Halt
Parton Halt Oatlands
formerly
to Rowrah
Parton
Cumbrian Coast line
to Whitehaven
formerly
to Cleator Moor West

Lowca had two railway stations that served the village of Lowca in the former county of Cumberland, England, which is now part of Cumbria.

The line was originally a waggonway that conveyed coal from a drift mine at Lowca to Harrington Harbour and later to Harrington Iron Works. As the demand for greater quantities of coal to feed the ironworks was most important new mines with vertical shafts were sunk. These were named after the parent ironworks and took the name of Harrington with a shaft number to identify them, such as Harrington No.4 and Harrington No.9.

A public passenger service ran from the 1st station between 2 June 1913 and when the 2nd Lowca Station was completed in August 1913 public services ran until they ceased in May 1926. Unadvertised workmen's trains had started in April 1912 and ran between Moss Bay Cart Siding and the colliery station in the pit yard. After the Light Railway order ended the private workmen's service continued until April 1929, after which the workmen's trains ceased.

By 1922 the service had settled down to three trains each way between Lowca and Workington Central, with an extra on Saturdays. There never was a public Sunday service.

The first station at Lowca was built by Bain & Co. who owned the colliery and Harrington Ironworks. It was situated in the colliery yard and was closed to public passenger use when the second station at Lowca was opened in August 1913.

The second station was on the Harrington and Lowca Light Railway which connected with the Cleator & Workington Junction Railway (CWJR) at Rosehill Junction south of Harrington Village. At different times workmen's services to Lowca ran from four places: Maryport (during the First World War), Moss Bay Cart Siding, Workington Central and Seaton (Cumbria). Public passenger trains ran from these last two only.

For many years there has been confusion regarding the stations at Lowca, with the two stations in the village being treated as one. The first official passenger service terminated in the colliery yard as shown in the photo. The 1st station continued in use until 1929 for workmen's trains but for passenger use the 2nd Lowca Station was the terminus.

Freight services

The railway through Lowca was first and foremost a mineral railway, with the short-lived workmen's and passenger services an afterthought. Lines first reached Lowca at the end of the Nineteenth Century, eventually running northwards towards Workington and southeastwards to meet the Gilgarran Branch at Bain's Siding. The driving forces were coal, fireclay at nearby Micklam, coke and coking bi-products. Centrepiece for over fifty years was Harrington No. 10 Colliery which, confusingly, was not in Harrington, but in Lowca.

Between them these industrial concerns sustained the railway through Lowca until final closure to all traffic in May 1973.


Preceding station   Disused railways   Following station
Micklam
Line and station closed
  Lowca Light Railway   Lowca's 1st Station

See also

References

  1. Lowca railway station, via Cumbrian Railwas Association
  2. Oakden 2003, p. 381.
  3. First public train, via Harrington History
  4. Andrews 2001, pp. 20–23.
  5. Lowca's second station, clearly different from the first Cumbrian Railways
  6. Both Lowca stations in a 1933 aerial photo Britain from Above (free login needed to zoom)
  7. Bradshaw 1985, p. 595.

Sources

Further reading

External links

Closed railway stations in Cumbria
Waverley Route
Caledonian main line
Solway Junction Railway
Port Carlisle Dock and Railway
Carlisle and Silloth Bay Railway
Maryport and Carlisle Railway
Newcastle & Carlisle Railway
Lancaster and Carlisle Railway
Ingleton branch line
Eden Valley Railway
South Durham and Lancashire Union Railway
Settle–Carlisle line
Cleator and Workington Junction Railway
Harrington and Lowca Light Railway
Gilgarran Branch
Whitehaven, Cleator and Egremont Railway
Whitehaven Junction Railway
Whitehaven and Furness Junction Railway
Furness Railway
Cockermouth and Workington Railway
Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith Railway
Coniston Railway
Other
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