Rose Hill Platform Railway Station
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Rose Hill Platform served workmen in the Rose Hill area of
Harrington Harrington (or Harington) may refer to: People as a surname * Harrington (surname) People as a forename * Arthur Raikes (Arthur Edward Harington Raikes, 1867–1915), British army officer *Charles Harrington Elster, American writer *Edward Josep ...
in the former county of
Cumberland Cumberland ( ) is a historic county in the far North West England. It covers part of the Lake District as well as the north Pennines and Solway Firth coast. Cumberland had an administrative function from the 12th century until 1974. From 19 ...
, England, which is now part of Cumbria. The halt was on the Harrington and Lowca Light Railway where it connected with the Cleator & Workington Junction Railway (CWJR) a short distance north of Copperas Hill and south of Harrington Village. Workmen's services to and from Lowca variously ran from , (during the First World War), and . Public passenger trains ran to these last two only. There is no evidence that any advertised public service ever called at the halt. The public passenger service through its site, plying between and Workington Central called at which was some 250 yards to the north. A workmen's service ran north from Lowca from April 1912. It appears to have called at Rose Hill Platform, but there is considerable doubt if there was even a physical platform in place. Details of the workmen's service are sketchy. A letter from Workington Iron and Steel Company's parliamentary agent to the Board of Trade on 2 December 1912 stated "..the line is being used ..for the purpose of conveying workmen between Harrington and the works of the Promoters..." A photograph taken of the first public train on 2 June 1913 shows it at the workmen's platform at Lowca, the public platform yet not being ready. Standard works, notably Quick and Butt, make no mention of services at Lowca before 2 June 1913, nor at or . They also give as opening on 2 June 1913. This suggests that the workmen's service called at Moss Bay Cart Siding/Workington Central, Rose Hill Platform and Lowca Workmen's Platform. The mention of "...conveying workmen between Harrington and the works..." and entries in Croughton and Quick give tentative support to the Rose Hill Platform (a.k.a. Junction) call. Ex-employees writing later state "Miners' trains went up the private railway from Rosehill Box, where Pat McGuire, the "singing signalman" operated." Some later authors appear to conflate Rosehill Platform (a.k.a. Rose Hill Platform) and Archer St Halt. A public passenger service passed the halt between 2 June 1913 and May 1926. This was in essence an "upgraded" workmen's train, composed of the ancient workmen's coaches with a "public" coach tacked on. No source records this stopping between Archer Street and Copperas Hill. It is possible that when the public service ended in May 1926, the unadvertised workmen's trains which carried on until 1929 could have resorted to calling at Rose Hill Platform instead of or as well as Archer Street. Further research is needed.


Freight services

The railway through the halt was first and foremost a mineral railway, with the short-lived workmen's and passenger services an afterthought. A waggonway had climbed Rose Hill itself in the first half of the nineteenth century, connecting Harrington harbour with John Pit and Hodgson Pit. Later developments eventually ran northwards towards Workington and northeastwards to meet the
Gilgarran Branch The Gilgarran Branch (occasionally referred to as the Gilgarron Branch) was a single track railway line connecting four separate railway companies in the former county of Cumberland, now part of Cumbria, England. Origins The original Gilgarra ...
at Bain's Siding. The driving forces were coal at Lowca, fireclay and bricks at Micklam (primarily aimed at lining furnaces at Workington's steelworks), coke and coking bi-products. Centrepiece for over fifty years was Harrington No. 10 Colliery which, confusingly, was not in Harrington, but in Lowca. Between them these industrial concerns sustained the railway through the site of the halt until final closure to all traffic in May 1973.


A British record

The halt was ephemeral and short-lived, but the track immediately to its south has its place in the railway record books. Its southbound uphill gradient of 1 in 17 was the steepest adhesion-worked British incline carrying a regular, timetabled passenger service.


Afterlife

The track through the station site was lifted by the end of 1973. The trackbed now forms part of the Cumbrian Way.


See also

*
Gilgarran Branch The Gilgarran Branch (occasionally referred to as the Gilgarron Branch) was a single track railway line connecting four separate railway companies in the former county of Cumberland, now part of Cumbria, England. Origins The original Gilgarra ...
* Cleator and Workington Junction Railway


References


Sources

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Further reading

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External links


The closed station on an inter-war OS map, via ''National Library of Scotland''

Latterday steam at Lowca, via ''flickr''

Latterday steam at Lowca, via ''flickr''

Industrial relics at Lowca, via ''flickr''

The line, via ''railwaycodes''

The Harrington collieries, via ''Haig Pit Mining Museum''
{{Closed stations Cumbria Disused railway stations in Cumbria Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1913 Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1926 1913 establishments in England