Theme Explorer

Page 6 of 19 341 Records Found

Ford Green Road, Stoke-on-Trent

Looking north east along Ford Green Road from near the junction with Chetwynd Street (on the right). Ford Green station, on the Biddulph Vallley branch, is just to the left of the level crossing gates ...

Four Ashes Railway Station, near Brewood

Four Ashes station stood on the Grand Junction line which was opened on 4 July 1837.

Fowlea Brook, Longbridge Hayes, Stoke-on-Trent

The view south from the bridge over the Fowlea Brook just north of Longport Station. At this point the Stoke on Trent City boundary runs along the brook: to the right is Newcastle under Lyme. On the ...

Gailey Railway Station

Gailey Station stood on the Grand Junction line, opened on 4 July 1837.

Gailey Station

Gailey Station stood on the Grand Junction Line and was opened on 4 July 1837.

Glebe Street and Station Road, Stoke-on-Trent

A railway wagon is hand pushed across Station Road to a small wagon yard. The site of this yard is now a car park for rail travellers. There were no parking problems for the driver of this early motor ...

Gnosall Railway Station

Gnosall Railway Station was on the Wellington to Stafford Line which opened in 1849. The line closed on 7 September 1964. The station's wooden booking office was moved to the Foxfield Railway at Caverswall ...

Gnosall Railway Station,

Gnosall Railway Station was on the Wellington to Stafford Line. The line closed on 7 September 1964. The station's wooden booking office was moved to the Foxfield Railway at Caverswall Road Station, ...

Goods Yard, Cresswell

Navvies working on the Cheadle Railway construction. The small signal box in the background was used to shunt the goods yard.

Great Haywood Railway Station

Great Haywood railway station was opned by the North Staffordshire Railway Company in 1884.

Grindley Railway Station,

Grindley Station was owned by the Stafford-Uttoxeter Railway Company. When this photograph was taken the station no longer served passenger trains. The Stafford-Uttoxeter line opened in December 1867, ...

Grindley Station,

Grindley Station was owned by the Stafford-Uttoxeter Railway Company. When this photograph was taken the station no longer served passenger trains. The Stafford-Uttoxeter line opened in December 1867, ...

Group, Railway Station, Stafford

Photograph from the Bertam Sinkinson collection. This photograph shows a group of people, some of whom are railway staff. Several people are holding Union Jack flags. This glass plate was probably ...

Handshake at Rushton station

On a wet day at Rushton, station staff and footplate crew exchange a friendly handshake. This could have been a retirement handshake, or a goodbye handshake due to closure of the station. Who knows? A ...

Hanley Station

The booking and parcels office of Hanley railway station stood on what became the car park of the Grand Hotel on Trinity Street. The platforms were in a deep, sharply curved cutting below Trinity Street, ...

Hanley Station

The main entrance and booking hall of Hanley Station on the Potteries Loop Line. This photograph was taken from just outside the Grand Hotel in Trinity Street. The line is in a deep cutting below the ...

Hanley Station

Hanley Station was just north of Trinity Street, alongside the old Grand Hotel. This the second Hanley Station, built when the loop line was extended to Burslem in 1873. The first was just south of Trinity ...

Hanley Station

Hanley station was on a sharp curve in a deep cutting just below Trinity Street, opposite the Grand Hotel. This is the view looking westwards along the line to Etruria. This was the second station ...