Hale railway station
Hale railway station undergoing maintenance in April 2023 | |||||
| General information | |||||
| Location | Hale, Trafford, England | ||||
| Grid reference | SJ769869 | ||||
| Managed by | Northern Trains | ||||
| Transit authority | Greater Manchester | ||||
| Platforms | 2 | ||||
| Other information | |||||
| Station code | HAL | ||||
| Classification | DfT category E | ||||
| History | |||||
| Opened | 1862 | ||||
| Passengers | |||||
| 2020/21 | 29,880 | ||||
| 2021/22 | 85,142 | ||||
| 2022/23 | 95,054 | ||||
| 2023/24 | 0.114 million | ||||
| 2024/25 | 0.131 million | ||||
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| |||||
Hale railway station serves the area of Hale, south of Altrincham, in Greater Manchester, England; it is also used by people living in the surrounding areas of Bowdon and Hale Barns. It is a stop on the Mid-Cheshire line between Chester, Stockport and Manchester Piccadilly. The station is located on Ashley Road.
History
The station was opened as Peel Causeway by the Cheshire Midland Railway (CMR) on 12 May 1862, when the railway opened from Altrincham to Knutsford. The CMR was amalgamated into the Cheshire Lines Committee (CLC) on 15 August 1867. The station became Peel Causeway for Hale on 1 January 1899 and it was renamed Hale on 1 January 1902.[1]
The station was served by passenger trains from Manchester Central to Northwich and Chester Northgate. The CLC remained an independent entity, as a joint London, Midland and Scottish Railway and London and North Eastern Railway operation after the Grouping of 1923, until the creation of British Railways (BR). The station then passed on to the London Midland Region of British Railways on nationalisation on 1 January 1948. When sectorisation was introduced in the 1980s, the station was managed by Regional Railways, under arrangement with the Greater Manchester PTE, until the privatisation of British Rail.
Facilities
The station has a ticket office on platform 1, which is open on weekday mornings. A ticket vending machine is in place for purchase of tickets outside of these hours and for the collection of pre-paid tickets. Digital station information boards are in operation on both platforms, along with station announcements. Car parking is available on either side of the level crossing.[2]
A veterinary surgery now occupies most of the station building on platform 1,[3] while a physiotherapist practice uses the platform 2 building.[4] The west platform building and signal box are Grade II listed; the latter is no longer in use.[5]
Services
Northern Trains operates a generally hourly service in each direction between Chester and Manchester Piccadilly on the Mid-Cheshire line, with two peak extras to/from Stockport. On Sundays, services are two-hourly in each direction.[6]
| Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Northern Trains |
References
Citations
- ^ "Hale railway station". Mid-Cheshire Rail Users Association. Retrieved 2 March 2026.
- ^ "Hale (Manchester) (HAL)". National Rail. Retrieved 2 March 2026.
- ^ "Welcome to Station House Veterinary Centre". Halevets.com. Retrieved 2 March 2026.
- ^ "Physiotherapy in Hale". Carter & George. Retrieved 2 March 2026.
- ^ "Hale Station, West Platform Building, Canopy and Signal Box". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2 March 2026.
- ^ "Train Timetables". Northern Trains. 15 December 2025. Retrieved 2 March 2026.
Sources
- Griffiths, R. Prys (1978). The Cheshire Lines Railway. The Oakwood Press.
Further reading
- Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (2013). Chester Northgate to Manchester. Middleton Press. figs. 69–73. ISBN 9781908174512. OCLC 892704846.
External links
- Train times and station information for Hale railway station from National Rail