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                    | Notes:    Southport    Windsor Road station was situated on the West  Lancashire Railway (WLR) Company’s Southport & Preston Railway which opened  in stages between 19 February 1878 and 6 September 1882. The WLR was  promoted by Sir Thomas George Fermor-Hesketh, Bart. Royal Assent was given for  the ‘West Lancashire Railway’ on 14 August 1871. The Act authorised  construction capital amounting to £150,000. James Brunlees and Charles Douglas  Fox were appointed as civil engineers, and the contract for construction was  let to Clarke Pruchard and Co. The first sod was cut on 18 April 1873 at a  special ceremony held at Little London, in Southport,  attended by the Mayor, Alderman Squire JP. From the start the WLR project  struggled financially and, although construction started successfully, it  stopped abruptly when the contractor faced financial difficulties. A further  WLR Act of 1875 authorised the raising of a further £187,500 and granted an  extension of time for the line’s completion. A new contractor, Barnes &  Squire, was appointed, and work resumed.
 Windsor    Road opened as the temporary Southport  terminus of the WLR on 10 June 1878. The first section of the line  had opened to public services from Hesketh  Park, north Southport,  to Hesketh Bank on 20 February 1878. Southport Windsor Road was located on the  east side of its namesake to the north of the Lancashire & Yorkshire  Railway’s (LYR) Southport and Wigan line,  behind two large houses. It is possible that the houses were purchased by the  WLR and used as station facilities; certainly, early maps show them to be incorporated  into the station. Windsor Road  itself crossed over the LYR line by means of a level crossing.
 
                        
                          |  |  Windsor    Road station had two platforms, both of timber construction.  Between them were three lines, the central one being a siding. As the station  was considered to be only temporary there were no facilities on the platforms. 
 At the time of opening the  station provided a service to Hesketh Bank via Crossens. From 1 August  1878 trains also ran a short distance further north to River Douglas, which had  been passed for passenger traffic on 13 July 1878, where a steamship  connection to Lytham St Annes could be made.
 
 In 1880 the level crossing  over the LYR was taken out and Windsor    Road was effectively cut into two. A footbridge  was installed to replace the level crossing.
 
 The WLR had tried to  negotiate with the LYR to operate its trains into their Chapel Street terminus, in the town  centre, close to the seafront. Negotiations failed, and as a result the WLR  obtained an Act to build its own terminus (Southport Central) to the west of Windsor Road. Central  station welcomed its first passenger trains on 4 September 1882. Windsor Road  station had to be closed to enable construction of the extension to the new  terminus.
 
 After the line to Southport  Central had opened a new station called Southport  Ash Street was built on the site of Windsor Road.
 |  Route map drawn by Alan Young Sources: To See other stations on the Southport - Preston (West Lancashire) line click on the station name: Southport Central, Southport Ash Street, St. Lukes, Hesketh Park, Churchtown, Crossens, Banks, Hundred End, Hesketh Bank & Tarleton, River Douglas, Hoole, Longton Bridge, New Longton & Hutton, Penwortham (Cop Lane) & Preston West Lancashire  |