It’s the one you miss. Salford Central Station is on New
Bailey Street and is set back between two railway viaducts.
So travelling out of Manchester into Salford even on foot it
was not the most visible of places.
Moreover the actual entrance seemed to retreat away from the road and so
apart from the station’s name on the wooden canopy there was really only the sign above the entrance
announcing the way “To the ticket office” and the railway timetables which gave
a clue as to what was behind the maroon door.
But all that has changed.
The viaducts have been painted and the detail highlighted, as have the
pillars and the entrance is now behind a glass wall which draws you into the
station itself.
It is one of our oldest stations having been opened in 1838
as the terminus of the Manchester and Bolton Railway and in 1843 the viaduct
across New Bailey Street were built to connect with Victoria Station. Only the Liverpool Road Station is older, but
that closed for passengers in 1844 when Manchester Victoria was built.
Of course the purist will point to the fact that I am mixing
up Manchester and Salford and treating them as one but I rather think that is
being a wee bit pedantic.
The station has had many names. For the first twenty years it was just plain
Salford, was then renamed Salford (New Bailey) until 1865 when it reverted to
its original name and in 1988 it was changed to Salford Central.
I suppose the fact that for a long time it was only open at
peak times and is closed on Sundays does continue to make it a bit of a
forgotten station. So to bring it back I
thought I would include the 1894 painting of the station by H. E. Tidmarsh from
Manchester Old and New.
Pictures; from the collection of Andrew Simpson and
Manchester Old and New, William Arthur Shaw
I travelled daily past here from Pendleton to Rusholme for all of my secondary school and six form years. I like the modern treatment and restoration of the station.
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