East Lancashire Railway
The East Lancashire Railway is a heritage railway line in north-west England which runs between Heywood in Greater Manchester and Rawtenstall in Lancashire. There are intermediate stations at Bury Bolton Street,, Summerseat and Ramsbottom, with the line crossing the border into Rossendale serving Irwell Vale and Rawtenstall. Prior to closure the line also terminated at Bacup.
Overview
Passenger services between Bury and Rawtenstall were withdrawn by British Rail on 3 June 1972. Coal services to Rawtenstall ended in 1980 and formal closure of the line followed in 1982. The East Lancashire Railway Trust reopened the line on 25 July 1987. The initial service operated between Bury and Ramsbottom, via Summerseat. In 1991, the service was extended northwards from Ramsbottom to reach Rawtenstall, via Irwell Vale.However, two original stations on the line, closed to passengers by BR in 1972, have not reopened. They are 'Ewood Bridge & Edenfield' and the former station serving the line to Rawtenstall, 'Stubbins'.
Rawtenstall is the practical northern limit of the line, as the formation on towards Bacup has been lost immediately north of the station.
In September 2003, an eastbound extension from Bury to Heywood was re-opened. To reach Heywood, the extension had to cross over the Manchester Metrolink line to Bury, at the site of the former Bury Knowsley Street station. This necessitated the construction of a new intersection bridge, with steeply graded approaches of 1 in 36 and 1 in 41 nicknamed The Ski Jump.
On 13 October 2016, the new station was officially opened by the Mayor of Bury, where locomotive no. 4472 Flying Scotsman pulled the first train to stop at the station with a bagpipe rendition of 'Scotland the Brave' signalling its arrival.
The remainder of the extension includes a long section at 1 in 85, rising towards Heywood, as the preserved railway line climbs out of the Irwell valley.
The heritage line is now just over long and has a mainline connection with the national railway network at Castleton, just beyond Heywood. The ELR is planning to extend the running line to Castleton in the future, with a new cross platform interchange being the preferred option.
Options for providing an interchange station at Castleton between East Lancashire Railway and National Rail services are currently being explored. Plans for the new station are supported by Rochdale Borough Council, which hopes to fund it by adjacent land development. A rail connection with the Metrolink line also exists, just south of Bury, at Buckley Wells. This was formerly the connection to the Electric Car Shops, where the Class 504 EMU sets were maintained, and was created when BR services were diverted to Bury Interchange in 1980.
The railway is open every weekend of the year, holding a number of themed events and galas throughout the year, which include steam and diesel events, and also offers driver experience courses. The Day out with Thomas events made a return to the railway after a two-year absence, following fresh negotiations, having previously been unable to reach an agreement with HIT Entertainment, the owners of the Thomas brand. While Thomas was absent, the ELR operated Family Engines Big Day Out events featuring alternative engines with faces, such as Jimmy the Jinty.
The railway is run by volunteer members from the East Lancashire Railway Preservation Society. The railway is well known for its collection of diesel locomotives which reside on the railway, along with over 140 carriages, wagons and utility vehicles. Although the ELR does offer a local residents' discount card, and many residents do use the trains at weekends, it does not claim to offer a true commuter service either in levels of services or fares.
In the 1990s, the railway was featured in the 1991 film Let Him Have It and in the finale of ITV's comedy series The Grimleys, named The Grimley Curse set in 1978. In 2007, during the finale of BBC One's award-winning drama series Life on Mars, set in 1973, a class 47 was used for scenes of an armed robbery at Brooksbottom Tunnel.
The railway also featured in an episode of Coronation Street, transmitted on August Bank Holiday 2010, when Hayley and Roy Cropper travelled to their wedding aboard an ELR train of Mark 1 coaches hauled by LMS "Black 5" No. 44871, which carried 45407's Lancashire Fusilier nameplates for the occasion. The line also starred in the BBC television film Eric and Ernie, aired on New Year's Day 2011, about the early career of the British comedy act Morecambe and Wise. Bury Bolton Street station was featured, along with a train of Mark 1 coaches hauled by LMS "Black 5" No. 44871. In 2014, the railway was featured in a week of episodes of Hollyoaks which featured a crash involving BR Class 14 no. D9531 "Ernest".
In October 2014, Ramsbottom Station and the adjacent level crossing on Bridge Street was featured in the 2017 movie A Monster Calls, which was the scene for an emotional peak in the movie, starring Sigourney Weaver in a Volvo estate car waiting for a BR DMU, in Rail Blue livery, to pass through the crossing.
In 2019, the CityMetric website published a "fantasy" tram link expansion proposal to create an orbital extension to the Manchester Metrolink tram system, which would include part of the current East Lancashire Railway route between Bury and Heywood.
In January 2019, Campaign for Better Transport released a report identifying the line which was listed as Priority 2 for reopening. Priority 2 is for those lines which require further development or a change in circumstances.
Railway stations of the ELR
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Locomotives and multiple units
Steam locomotives
Operational
Visitors
Operational but away from the ELR
Locomotives out of action
Locos in store/static display
Diesel
The ELR is home to one of the largest preserved diesel fleets on a UK heritage railway. Many locomotives are owned by private individuals or an owning group, which co-operate as the ELR Diesel Group.Operational diesel locomotives
Operational DMUs
- *BR Class 104 unit 50455+50517, BR Blue. Built in 1957.
- *BR Class 105 unit 51485+56121, BR Green. Built in 1956/1959.
- *BR Class 110 unit 51813+59701+51842. BR Green. Built in 1959.
- *BR Class 117 unit 51339++51382. BR Green Built in 1959.
- *BR Class 121 unit 56289. Built in 1960.
- *BR Class 122 unit W55001. BR Blue. Built in 1958.
Operational, but away from the ELR
- *BR Class 37 No. 37418, BR Large Logo Blue. Built in 1965.
Diesel locomotives out of action
- Diesel locomotives and DMUs undergoing light work, overhaul or restoration
- *F. C. Hibberd 'Planet' 3438
- *BR Class 07 No. 07013
- *BR Class 08 No. 08944
- *BR Class 14 No. D9502 'Kerys', BR Green. Built in 1964.
- *BR Class 15 No. D8233 Class 15 Preservation Society
- *BR Class 28 No. D5705 Class 15 Preservation Society
- *BR Class 33 No. 6536
- *BR Class 37 No. 37679, Transrail
- *BR Class 45 No. 45135 '3rd Carabinier', BR Blue. Built in 1961.
- *BR Class 52 No. D1041 'Western Prince', BR Blue. Built in 1962.
- Stored diesel locomotives
- *BR Class 33 No. 33046. Unbranded South West Trains Blue. Spares/Component Recovery for 33109 & 6536
DMUs out of action
- *BR Class 207 unit 1305 60130+70549+60904
- *NIR Class 80 No. 99
Electric
- Electric multiple units
- *BR Class 504 unit 65451+77172.
Former residents on the ELR
Steam
Number & Name | Type | Photograph | Notes |
132 Sapper | WD Austerity 0-6-0ST | Built in 1944. Currently operational at the Avon Valley Railway. | |
75008 Swiftsure | WD Austerity 0-6-0ST | Built in 1943. Currently operational at the Mid-Norfolk Railway. | |
7828 Odney Manor | GWR 7800 Manor Class 4-6-0 | Built in 1950. Departed from the ELR in the 1990s for the West Somerset Railway, it is operational following boiler and firebox repairs at Riley and Sons workshop in Bury. | |
34073 249 Squadron | SR Battle of Britain Class 4-6-2 | Built in 1945. Awaiting restoration from scrapyard condition at Carnforth MPD. | |
35022 Holland America Line | SR Merchant Navy Class 4-6-2 | Built in 1948. Awaiting restoration from scrapyard condition at Crewe Diesel TMD. | |
35027 Port Line | SR Merchant Navy Class 4-6-2 | Built in 1948. Awaiting overhaul at Crewe Diesel TMD. Last ran in 2003. | |
30499 | LSWR S15 class | Built in 1920. Moved to the East Lancashire Railway in 1996 so 499's boiler could be removed and donated to sister engine 30506. Whilst at Bury, frames were overhauled and painted, and the wheels and crank pins were turned. Under restoration at the Mid Hants Railway. | |
44422 | LMS Fowler Class 4F 0-6-0 | Built in 1927. Under bottom-end overhaul at the West Somerset Railway, however a new home is being sought for the locomotive. | |
45337 | LMS Stanier Class 5 4-6-0 | Built in 1937. Undergoing Boiler Work at the Llangollen Railway. | |
45690 Leander | LMS Jubilee Class 4-6-0 | Built in 1936. Operational and Mainline Certified at Carnforth MPD. | |
6201 Princess Elizabeth | LMS Princess Royal Class 4-6-2 | Built in 1933. Operational and mainline certified at Carnforth MPD. | |
46441 | LMS Ivatt Class 2 | Built in 1950. Static Display at Lakeside and Haverthwaite Railway. | |
49395 | LNWR Class G2 0-8-0 | Built in 1921. Static display at The National Railway Museum in Shildon. | |
71000 Duke of Gloucester | BR Standard Class 8 4-6-2 | Built in 1954. Undergoing overhaul at Tyseley Locomotive Works. | |
76079 | BR Standard Class 4 2-6-0 | Built in 1957. Operational and Mainline Certified at North Yorkshire Moors Railway. | |
92134 | BR Standard Class 9F 2-10-0 | Built in 1957. Operational at the North Yorkshire Moors Railway. | |
92207 | BR Standard Class 9F 2-10-0 | Built in 1959. Undergoing Restoration from scrapyard condition at the Shillingstone Railway Project. | |
92214 | BR Standard Class 9F 2-10-0 | Built in 1959. Operational at the Great Central Railway. | |
CEGB Meaford No.1 | RSH 0-6-0T | Built in 1951. Static display at North Tyneside Steam Railway. |