Buxton line
The Buxton line is a railway line in Northern England, connecting Manchester with Buxton in Derbyshire. Passenger services on the line are currently operated by Northern Trains.
History
It has its origins with the Stockport, Disley and Whaley Bridge Railway, which the LNWR built to connect with the Cromford and High Peak Railway at. In 1863, it built an extension from Whaley Bridge, via to Buxton. This forestalled the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway's plans for the area, and also the Midland Railway's attempts to reach Manchester.The latter two railways were forced to combine forces in a line following the LNWR, but north of it, through New Mills, branching at Millers Dale. As a result, Buxton, one of the largest towns in the Peak District, never achieved mainline status.
The LNWR had offered the use of the line but, with its climb through Dove Holes, the Midland did not consider it useful for express trains, saying that it went up a steep hill merely for the sake of going down. The LNWR may have saved costs in construction but it proved difficult to operate, even with the powerful locomotives they had been forced to introduce for their lines north of Manchester. In later days, a stretch was operated using banking engines, the longest such section on the British railway system. In 1957 there was a serious accident at in which driver John Axon, who died at his post attempting to control a runaway goods train, received the George Cross medal. From 8 October 1956, services on the Buxton branch were in the hands of Class 104 diesel units based at Buxton depot, though some remained steam worked for longer.
The Beeching cuts threatened closure but the line was reprieved at a hearing in 1964. In its 1964 accounts, British Rail counted the cost of the reprieve at £133,000 in a full year, plus £44,000 which could have been saved if freight was also withdrawn.
The line was electrified, at 25 kV AC overhead, between Manchester and Hazel Grove in 1981. Colour light signalling, controlled from LNWR-built boxes at Edgeley Junction and, cover the line as far as Norbury crossing, which itself has a small hut controlling two semaphore signals in the Middlewood area. Further south, signalling is mostly semaphore and is controlled from signal-boxes at, Chapel-en-le-Frith and Buxton.
In June 2016, a landslip at Middlewood station following heavy rain meant that all services were suspended between Hazel Grove and Buxton until 25 June. A rail replacement bus service was in operation during the closure.
On 31 July 2019, the line was closed between Hazel Grove and Buxton amid fears that the earthwork dam at Toddbrook Reservoir would collapse following heavy rain, which would flood the village of Whaley Bridge. The Hope Valley line between and has was also closed because of this. The line was re-opened on 8 August. Bus replacements were on operation between Buxton and Macclesfield during the closure.
Present-day services
Over the section between Manchester and Hazel Grove there are three trains per hour in each direction, with extra services at peak hours. The Manchester to Buxton service runs half-hourly, combining with an hourly Manchester Piccadilly to Hazel Grove service to give Davenport, Woodsmoor and Hazel Grove stations thrice-hourly off peak service to and from Manchester. Through running beyond Manchester ended with the May 2018 timetable change.South of Hazel Grove, the off-peak pattern is half-hourly. The hourly Liverpool to Norwich East Midlands Railway and Manchester Airport to Cleethorpes TransPennine Express services run over the Edgeley to Hazel Grove section but only one East Midlands Railway service calls at Hazel Grove on weekday mornings and Sundays, all others being non-stop between Stockport and Sheffield.
Due to steep gradients on this line, Class 142 and Class 153 DMUs are banned from the section of line between Hazel Grove and Buxton. Therefore, services to Buxton are worked by Class 150 and Class 156 DMUs. Also Class 158 DMUs were once blocked from operating on the line to Buxton due to the possibility of the large roof-mounted air vents striking low bridges on the route. Piccadilly to Hazel Grove services used Class 323 electric multiple units up until 2008 and again since December 2017. Class 319 units are also now diagrammed on local trips to and from Manchester.
Passenger information systems have been installed at most stations on the line since 2011, including the terminus at Buxton, Hazel Grove, New Mills Newtown and Whaley Bridge.
Route
At Edgeley Junction the branch leaves the West Coast Main Line south of Stockport and curves sharply east. At the end of the curve a spur linked it to Cheadle station and the Stockport, Timperley and Altrincham Junction Railway until the 1960s.Just beyond Hazel Grove, from Edgeley Junction, a 1986 junction links the line with the Hope Valley Line through Disley Tunnel. The line then climbs at 1 in 60 for to Disley. At Middlewood there was a junction to allow trains to run between Buxton and Macclesfield via the Macclesfield, Bollington and Marple Railway. East of that junction the line passes in a short tunnel under the Macclesfield Canal. east it runs in a cutting across the edge of Lyme Park, home of Thomas Legh, first Chairman of the Stockport, Disley and Whaley Bridge Railway.
Just east of Disley station the line runs through another short tunnel into the Goyt valley, which it gently drops down to Furness Vale, running close to and parallel to the Hope Valley Line, Peak Forest Canal and A6. At Whaley Bridge the line joined the Cromford and High Peak Railway, the link to Shallcross Yard remaining until January 1965.
Here the line leaves the Goyt valley to climb at 1 in 60 or 1 in 58 to Dove Holes. The line runs near Combs Reservoir, through the Barmoor Clough Tunnel, beside the former Peak Forest Tramway, descends , passes the site of and the junctions to the Ashbourne and Midland lines.