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Newcastle-under-Lyme railway station was a railway station that served the town of Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, England. It was opened by the North Staffordshire Railway in 1852. [1] The station was located on King Street opposite the Borough Arms Hotel. A small goods yard was located on Water Street. [2] It was closed on 2 March 1964.
A train passing the site of the station in 1962. General information; Location: Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire ... Madeley railway station is a disused railway ...
The North Staffordshire Railway (NSR) had a number of halts and non-public timetable stations. Halts were small, unstaffed stations with few, if any, facilities. Non-public timetable stations were stations that did not feature in the publicly advertised railway timetable and were, for example, for internal railway use only or only served by excursion trains rather than regular services.
In 2017, the Shropshire Star released an article detailing calls by Owen Meredith who was a candidate for the constituency of Newcastle-Under-Lyme. He called for a feasibility study into reopening the entire line from Market Drayton to as far as Newcastle-Under-Lyme.
Liverpool Road Halt railway station was a railway station located in the north of Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, England.It was opened in 1905 by the North Staffordshire Railway in connection with the introduction of railmotor services.
The station building has been rebuilt at the Apedale Heritage Centre. [2] On 21 August 2009, work on Silverdale station platforms was observed with brickwork being repaired or repointed and they have now been restored as part of a railway footpath to Newcastle-under-Lyme. Brickwork under repair on the platform in August 2009
The remaining lines under the original acts were opened in stages but all were completed and open by the end of 1852 when the Stoke to Newcastle and Newcastle to Knutton sections opened. [24] A few months after the opening of the first line, the imposing permanent station in Winton Square, Stoke was opened on 9 October 1848.
Longport station has its own bus stop which is served by routes 94, 98 and 99; these serve the nearby town of Newcastle-under-Lyme, for which Longport is the closest station. This station is also the closest to Port Vale F.C. [2] Longport has cycle parking facilities, with a waiting shelter and real-time information displays on each platform.