place

Bromley Cross railway station

DfT Category E stationsFormer Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway stationsNorthern franchise railway stationsRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 1848Railway stations in the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton
Use British English from January 2017
Bromley Cross railway station, Bolton (geograph 4089726)
Bromley Cross railway station, Bolton (geograph 4089726)

Bromley Cross railway station, on Chapeltown Road in Bromley Cross, a suburb to the north of Bolton, England, is served by the Northern 'Ribble Valley' line 2+3⁄4 miles (4.4 km) north of Bolton. The station is just south of the point where the double line merges into one.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bromley Cross railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bromley Cross railway station
Chapeltown Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Bromley Cross railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.61411 ° E -2.41081 °
placeShow on map

Address

Chapeltown Road

Chapeltown Road
BL7 9LY , Bromley Cross
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Bromley Cross railway station, Bolton (geograph 4089726)
Bromley Cross railway station, Bolton (geograph 4089726)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Eagley Mills

Eagley Mills is a complex of former cotton mills in Eagley, Bolton, England. The complex is adjacent to a model village originally built for the millworkers. The surviving mill buildings have since been converted to residential use.Textile mills had existed on the site since the late 18th century, taking advantage of the Eagley Brook which flows through the site to power the machinery. The Chadwick brothers, James and Robert, began to redevelop the site in the 1820s. When James died in 1829 his brother amalgamated the business of Chadwick and Brother with that of J.N. Philips of Manchester, after which the model village was founded with houses, a school, a bowling green, a cricket pitch and a library. A park with a bandstand was created in 1850 where the Eagley Mills Band would play. The mills were converted from water power to steam in 1840. In 1871 the first of the large modern mill buildings was built on the north side of the river. This was to be known as No 3 Twist Mill (and now called Brook Mill). No 2 Twist Mill (now called Valley Mill) was built nearby in 1881 and the third and largest mill, No 1 Spinning Mill, was built in 1894. By then the company operated some 50,000 spindles and employed some 2000 workers.The mills were managed at one point by Arthur Greg, grandson of Samuel Greg, the founder of Quarry Bank Mill in Styal. In 1896 Chadwicks merged into the textile conglomerate of J & P Coats, who finally ceased production at Eagley in 1972, making 600 workers redundant. For the next few decades the buildings were used for a variety of industrial and commercial activities.