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               Notes: Chester Liverpool    Road station was on the Manchester,  Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railways (MSLR) Chester Northgate to Hawarden Bridge line which opened on 31st  March 1890 and provided a connection to the Wrexham Mold & Connah’s Quay  Railway. The WMCQR line ran from Wrexham to Shotton. The MSLR had to cross the  River Dee at what became Hawarden   Bridge to make a  connection with the WMCQR line. With the opening of the MSLR line a route  between Chester  and Wrexham had been created which could compete with the 1846 Great Western  Railway (GWR) route between the two towns. 
              
                
                  An avoiding line was also  built from a point just to the east of Chester Liverpool Road station which  allowed trains to pass from west to east through the city of Chester  and onto the Cheshire Lines Committees (CLC) Chester  and Manchester  line without having to reverse at Chester Northgate station. Use of the  avoiding line was generally confined to goods and   | 
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              excursion services.
              Chester Liverpool Road was opened at  the same time as the line. It was west of Liverpool Road at a point where the line  was quadruple-track as the route from Northgate Station converged with the  avoiding line. The junction itself (Chester West Junction) was immediately west  of the station. There were four platform faces, two of which formed an island  platform. South of the line was platform 1 for westbound trains towards  Wrexham. Next came platform 2 which was on the island and was used by trains  travelling to Chester Northgate. Platform 3, on the other side of the island,  served through trains travelling towards Wrexham, of which there were very few.  Platform 4 was served by trains heading towards the CLC line and onward towards  Manchester. 
              
                
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              Chester Liverpool Road station had a booking office  at street level; steps led down to the platforms. On the platforms timber  waiting facilities were provided. At the west end of the station, south of the line,  was the signal box which controlled Chester West Junction. To the north of the  passenger station there two sidings and goods facilities including a 5-ton  crane. The north face of Platform 4 acted as a loading dock for one of the  sidings. The goods yard didn't handle livestock.  
              At the time of opening Chester Liverpool Road  was served by four trains in each direction  between Chester Northgate and  Wrexham Central. There were also less frequent workings between Wrexham Central  and Manchester Central that probably used the through lines. 
                 
              On 16th of March  1896 the MSLR and WMCQR opened a line from Hawarden Bridge  to a junction with the Wirral Railway (WR) at Bidston. Agreement had been  reached with the WR that MSLR/WMCQR trains could operate on their system. A  passenger service was introduced on 18th May 1896 between Chester  Northgate and Bidston. On 1st May 1898 the service was extended to  Seacombe & Egremont on the west bank of the River Mersey where the ferry  terminal offered a service to Liverpool. The  new service provided Chester    Liverpool Road passengers with a link to Liverpool.  
              On 1st  August 1897 the MSLR changed its name to the Great Central Railway (GCR). The  GCR absorbed the WMCQR on 1st January 1905 giving it complete  control of the entire route to Wrexham and to Birkenhead.  In 1906 five trains per day ran to Seacombe & Egremont on weekdays. More  services ran to Wrexham Central; all eastbound trains went to Chester  Northgate. 
              From 1st  January 1923 Chester Liverpool  Road became part of the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER) but this  brought no changes to the station’s train services. 
              
              On  1st  of January 1948, along with all of the LNER system in the Wirral and NE Wales, Chester    Liverpool Road became part of the nationalised  British Railways’ Eastern Region. However these lines were transferred to the  London Midland Region a few months later. Being very close to Chester Northgate,  and in an area well served by buses, the station was not well used and British  Railways closed it on 3rd December 1951. The station’s buildings  were demolished after closure. The goods yard remained in use until 5th  April 1965.  
              
                
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                  Passenger services  continued to pass through Chester    Liverpool Road station running between Chester  Northgate and New Brighton  and between Chester Northgate and Wrexham until they were withdrawn on 9th  September 1968. A year later Chester Northgate station closed completely and  the lines through platforms 1 and 2 at Chester Liverpool Road were  | 
                 
               
              lifted. Only  the through lines survived as part of a goods route that linked Mickle Trafford  to Hawarden Bridge Junction (later renamed Dee Marsh Junction). 
               
              The Mickle Trafford to Dee  Marsh Junction line closed on 20th April 1984. The station platforms  had been demolished by this time. On 31st August 1986 the line  reopened for goods services with only a single track, but it closed again in  June 1992. The track was mothballed for a while but it was lifted before the  end of the decade.  In 2000  a footpath and cycleway was opened along the course of the line. It now forms part of the 8-mile Chester - Connah's Quay railway path part of National Cycle Network Route 5.
              Tickets from Michael Stewart, route map drawn by Alan Young, timetable from Chris Totty  
                Other web sites: See the Penmorfa web site for more on the Wrexham - Bidston line.  
   
    Sources: 
              
              To see other stations on the Chester Northgate to Wrexham Central Line click 
                  Chester Northgate, Blacon, Saughall, Sealand, Chester Junction Golf Club Platform, Chester Golf Club Halt, Hope High Level, Rhosddu, Wrexham Exchange, Wrexham Central 
                   
See also stations between Chester Junction and Bidston 
Birkenhead Junction Golf Club Platform, Sealand Rifle Range Halt, Burton Point, Storeton 
              See also 
                    Liscard & Poulton & Seacombe 
              See also related items 
                     
                    Hawarden Loop 
                    Hawarden Bridge 
                    Railways at Bidston   |