Queensbury lines

Queensbury lines
Keighley
Keighley Goods (GN)
Ingrow (East)
Lees Moor Tunnel
Cullingworth
Hewenden Viaduct
Wilsden
Denholme
Thornton
Thornton Viaduct
Queensbury
Queensbury Tunnel
Clayton Tunnel (Yorks)
Holmfield
Clayton
Wheatley Tunnel
Great Horton
Wheatley Viaduct
Lee Bank Tunnel
Pellon
Old Lane Tunnel
Halifax (St Paul's)
Horton Park
Ovenden
City Road
North Bridge
Manchester Road
St Dunstans

The Queensbury lines was the name given to a number of railway lines in West Yorkshire, England, that linked Bradford, Halifax and Keighley via Queensbury. All the lines were either solely owned by the Great Northern Railway (GNR) or jointly by the GNR and the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (L&YR). The terrain was extremely challenging for railway construction, and the lines were very expensive to build. The lines were

  • the Halifax and Ovenden Junction Railway,[note 1] opened from 1874;
  • the Bradford and Thornton Railway, opened in stages from 1876;
  • the Halifax, Thornton and Keighley Railway from Holmfield to Queensbury and from Thornton to Keighley, opened in stages from 1878;
  • the Halifax High Level Railway, opened from 1890, but closed to passengers in 1917.

For some time the network was busy, both for passengers and goods, but carryings declined steeply, and passenger services were discontinued in 1955. Goods traffic ceased in 1974.

The lines were marked with a number of major civil engineering works including several viaducts and tunnels. A feature of the line was the unusual station at Queensbury, which was on a triangular track layout, with two platforms on each of the three chords.
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