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Railway

6 Comments

Bickershaw Junction
Bickershaw Junction
Photo: Thomas Sutch
Views: 4,471
Item #: 10759
Taken from iron foot bridge at Bickershaw Junction looking towards Platt Bridge in 1965, always a cheerful wave from the women pegging out their washing out in the background !

Comment by: Eric Turner on 21st May 2009 at 19:15

Thomas,Bickershaw Junction, Leyland Park, GC,Grammar Lodge, All these places were my playground before the War. What memories! My Grandad was a Railway man and he took me into the signal box at the iron bridge he taught me all about the signals, engines etc; and I never could pull the signal levers. Are you related to Ronnie Sutch?

Comment by: John on 21st May 2009 at 19:31

Another great pic Tom.

Comment by: winder on 21st May 2009 at 19:32

As always, Tom, another little gem from the past
That will be the Low Hall and Hindley South lines going off to the left?

Comment by: Tom on 21st May 2009 at 22:44

Yes Winder, the extreme left hand line went down to Low Hall, the next one went to Hindley South on the GC. Trains from Hindley arrived at the right hand signal behind the train.
Eric, Envy your childhood watching trains in those days around the junction ect.,got many memories of steam in the 50's a 60',s to keep me happy (or sad), till I get my time machine repaired. No relation to Ronnie S., by the way.

Comment by: John Theobald on 19th December 2013 at 09:15

Thanks for posting this, as a child in the mid-60's I lived in Park Rd. The footbridge was part of my playground which included Leyland Park, the slag heaps in the northwest corner of the park (anyone remember the "Smokey Hills")and the slag heaps and ponds to the east of Park Rd. We were so regular at Bickershaw Junction we got to know some of the signalmen and were allowed into the box. I only ever saw a train head towards Hindley South once, that's how rarely that branch was used, I remember we were quite excited at this deviation from the normal routine of the steam trains. Just before I left Hindley in 1967 I remember quite clearly seeing a yellow fronted diesel locomotive for the first time. We saw it in the distance hauling coal from the colliery and watched with quiet fascination as it made its way towards us and under the footbridge we were standing on. The smell of the junction was of coal smoke, sulphur and tar, to the south we could see the new borstal and the marshy reed beds although we rarely ventured that way, we knew our limits. The houses in the picture we knew as "behind the park" notorious for us as kids for the tough kids who lived there although they never seemed to bother us when we hung around the junction! Happy days in a very different world.

Comment by: Enid Bradburn on 28th December 2021 at 09:40

Make us sound like hillbilly’s

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