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Tuesday, 7 July 2026

Notes for Tuesday 1430 to 2130 Thorpe Station

 [07/07, 12:34] Michael Noël Turner: =======

[07/07, 12:34] Michael Noël Turner: 🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉

[07/07, 12:35] Michael Noël Turner: 745002 platform 2 -1P26 12:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at  (13:45)  for 1P45 14:30 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 16:17 platform 11 -

[07/07, 12:35] Michael Noël Turner: 745003 platform 1 -1P28 12:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (14:21) for 1P47 15:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 16:51 platform 9 -

[07/07, 12:36] Michael Noël Turner: 745004 platform 2 -1P30 13:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (14:45) for 1P49 15:30 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 17:19 platform 12 -

[07/07, 12:36] Michael Noël Turner: 745008 platform 1 -1P32 13:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (15:18) for 1P51 16:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 17:54 platform 9 -

[07/07, 12:37] Michael Noël Turner: 745102 platform 2 -1P34 14:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (15:45) for 1P53 16:30 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 18:21 platform 7 -

[07/07, 12:38] Michael Noël Turner: 745007 platform 1 1P36 14:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (16:19) for 1P55 17:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 18:50 platform 9 -

[07/07, 12:38] Michael Noël Turner: 755331 755417 755407 platform 2 1P38 15:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (16:46) for 1P57 17:30 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 19:17 platform 12 -

[07/07, 12:39] Michael Noël Turner: 745006 platform 1 - 1P40 15:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (17:20) for 1P59 18:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 19:53 platform 10 -

[07/07, 12:40] Michael Noël Turner: 745009 platform 2 - 1P42 16:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at  (17:48) for 1P61 18:32 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 20:18 platform 11 -

[07/07, 12:40] Michael Noël Turner: 745107 platform 3 1P44 16:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (18:18) for 5P44 18:40 Norwich Thorpe to CPD 18:58 -

[07/07, 12:41] Michael Noël Turner: 745002 platform 2 - 9P46 17:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (18:39) for 1P63 19:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 20:47 platform 6 -

[07/07, 12:42] Michael Noël Turner: 745003 platform 1 1P50 17:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (19:21) not for 1P67 20:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 21:49 platform 9 -

[07/07, 12:42] Michael Noël Turner: 745004  platform 3 - 1P54 18:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (19:51) - not for 1P67 20:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 21:49 platform 9 -

[07/07, 12:42] Michael Noël Turner: 745001 platform 2 arrived at for 1P67 20:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 21:49 platform 9 -

[07/07, 12:43] Michael Noël Turner: 745008 platform 2 1P56 18:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at ( 20:21) for 1P71 21:00 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 22:55 platform 11 -

[07/07, 12:43] Michael Noël Turner: 745105 platform 1 - 1P58 19:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (20:47) for 5P58 21:09 Norwich Thorpe to Crown Point |Depot 21:27 -

[07/07, 12:44] Michael Noël Turner: 745007 platform 2 - 1P60 19:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (21:19) for 1P73 22:02 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 23:57 platform 7 -

[07/07, 12:45] Michael Noël Turner: 755331 755417 755407 platform 1 - 1P62 20:00 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (21:49) -

[07/07, 12:45] Michael Noël Turner: 745006 platform 2 - 1P64 20:30 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at (22:18)  for 1Y75 23:05 Norwich Thorpe to Ipswich 23:49 platform 4 -

[07/07, 12:46] Michael Noël Turner: 745001 platform 2 - 1P16 0930 London Liverpool Street to Norwich Thorpe arrived at 1118 (1119) - 745109 platform 1 for 1P35 1200 Norwich Thorpe to London Liverpool Street 1347 platform 6 -

[07/07, 12:47] Michael Noël Turner: +++ Tuesday +++ 1430 to 2130 Thorpe Station 🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉

Liverpool Overhead Railway

 



Short answer: The Liverpool Overhead Railway (LOR) was the world’s first purpose‑built elevated electric railway, running from 1893 to 1956 along Liverpool’s docks. It became known as the “Dockers’ Umbrella” because thousands of dock workers walked beneath its viaduct for shelter. It was technologically groundbreaking, culturally iconic, and ultimately demolished because its steel structure became too expensive to repair.

🟦 What the Liverpool Overhead Railway was

The LOR was a 7‑mile elevated line running parallel to the docks from Seaforth in the north to Dingle in the south, with 14 stations serving the port. It opened to the public on 6 March 1893, after being formally inaugurated on 4 February 1893.

It was designed by Sir Douglas Fox and James Henry Greathead, two of the most important engineers of the era. Construction began in October 1889.

  • Liverpool Overhead Railway - Liverpool Overhead Railway - Seaforth ...
  • Liverpool overhead railway lor hidden architecture – Artofit
  • The Dockers Umbrella at Liverpool Overhead Railway
  • Liverpool Overhead Railway / Liverpool Overhead Railway - Wikipedia ...

🟦 Why it mattered: world firsts

The LOR wasn’t just a local curiosity — it was a global pioneer:

  • First electric elevated railway in the world

  • First automatic signalling system in Britain

  • First electric colour‑light signals

  • First electric multiple units in regular service

  • One of the first passenger escalators at a railway station

These innovations made it a model for later elevated and metro systems worldwide.

🟦 Why Liverpool built it

By the late 1800s, Liverpool’s docks handled 47% of Britain’s export trade, creating severe congestion along the dock road. An elevated railway was seen as the only way to move workers and goods efficiently without blocking traffic below.

Steam was rejected because of fire risk to timber yards and ships — so the line became electric from the start.

🟦 The route and stations

Originally the line ran 5 miles, later extended to 7 miles:

  • North end: Seaforth Sands

  • South end: Dingle (via a tunnel — the only underground section)

  • Key stations: Princes, Pier Head, James Street, Brunswick, Herculaneum

The Dingle tunnel portal still survives today.

  • Dingle Tunnel, Grafton Street, Liverpool © Stephen Richards :: Geograph ...
  • Dingle Tunnel | oldliverpoolrailways
  • Liverpool Overhead Railway – Subterranea Britannica
  • Hidden Architecture » Liverpool Overhead Railway (LOR) - Hidden ...

🟦 The trains

The LOR opened with two‑car electric multiple units, each with a 60 hp motor, later upgraded to 100 hp for faster running. By 1902, end‑to‑end journey time dropped from 32 minutes to 20 minutes.

The trains were lightweight, fast, clean, and quiet — a huge contrast to steam railways of the era.

🟦 Wartime damage and decline

The railway suffered heavy bombing during the Second World War, damaging stations and viaducts.

By the 1950s, a structural survey revealed the steelwork needed repairs costing £2 million — far beyond what the private company could afford. Because it was a local undertaking, it had not been nationalised in 1948, so no government rescue came.

The line closed on 30 December 1956, despite public protests, and demolition began in 1957.

🟦 What survives today

Only fragments remain:

  • The Dingle tunnel portal

  • Some stanchions built into the dock walls

  • A preserved motor coach at the Museum of Liverpool

🟦 Why people still care

The LOR is remembered because it symbolised:

  • Liverpool’s industrial power

  • The daily life of dock workers

  • Early electric railway innovation

  • A lost piece of the city’s skyline

It was a railway that felt alive — rattling above the docks, carrying millions of workers, and becoming part of Liverpool’s identity.

🟦 If you want to go deeper

  • full route history

  • why it wasn’t saved

  • surviving remains you can still visit

Which angle do you want next — engineering, social history, or what the docks looked like beneath it?



Short answer: The Liverpool Overhead Railway was not saved because a 1955 structural survey found £2 million of essential repairs, and the private company that owned it had no access to nationalisation funds, no ability to borrow enough money, and no political support for rescue. Public protests followed, but the line closed on 30 December 1956 and was dismantled in 1957.

🟥 The three decisive reasons it couldn’t be saved

These are the actual factors that killed the LOR — not myths, not nostalgia.

1. Catastrophic structural deterioration

A full engineering survey in 1955 revealed that the viaduct’s steelwork — exposed to salt air from the docks for over 60 years — had corroded so badly that major reconstruction was required. The cost: £2 million (equivalent to roughly £60–70 million today). The company simply could not pay it.

2. It was never nationalised

Unlike almost every other railway in Britain, the LOR remained a local private company. This meant:

  • No access to British Railways’ budgets

  • No government obligation to maintain it

  • No ability to spread costs across a national network

When the crisis hit, the government’s position was essentially: “It’s not ours.” So no rescue package ever came.

3. Post‑war financial pressure and bomb damage

The railway had survived heavy bombing in WWII, but repairs were often temporary. By the 1950s, the accumulated damage plus decades of corrosion meant the structure was failing faster than the company could maintain it.

🟦 Why alternatives weren’t possible

People often ask: “Why didn’t they just strengthen it?” or “Why not hand it to Merseyrail?” Here’s why those options weren’t realistic.

  • Rebuilding the viaduct would have required closing the entire line for years.

  • Replacing it with a new elevated structure would have cost far more than £2 million.

  • Integrating it into the future Merseyrail network wasn’t feasible — Merseyrail’s tunnels and suburban lines were planned around completely different corridors.

  • Passenger numbers were falling as dock employment declined after WWII.

  • The docks themselves were changing, with containerisation making many of the served areas obsolete.

In short: the LOR was a brilliant Victorian solution to a Victorian dock system — and by the 1950s, both were fading.

🟦 The emotional side: why its loss still hurts

Liverpool didn’t just lose a railway — it lost:

  • A symbol of the city’s industrial pride

  • A daily lifeline for dock workers

  • A unique elevated view of the Mersey

  • A world‑first piece of engineering heritage

The public protested, but the financial and political reality was immovable.

🟦 If you want to explore more

  • full route history

  • surviving remains you can still visit

  • how Merseyrail replaced the LOR’s role

Would you like me to go deeper into the engineering failure, the politics, or the dockside changes that made the LOR’s closure inevitable?


Short answer: The surviving remains of the Liverpool Overhead Railway (LOR) are few, but several important fragments still exist — most notably the Dingle tunnel, the tunnel portal at Herculaneum Dock, and preserved rolling stock at the Museum of Liverpool. These remains give the clearest physical link to the world’s first elevated electric railway.

🟥 1. Dingle Tunnel & Station Substructure

The Dingle station tunnel is the most substantial surviving part of the LOR. It was the only underground section of the railway and formed the southern terminus.

What survives today:

  • The brick‑lined tunnel bored through sandstone beneath Park Road

  • The entrance subway with white glazed brick walls

  • Steel buffers and parts of the widened tunnel section

  • The former station area, now used as a car repair workshop/storage (Roscoe Engineering) until the 2012 collapse

These structures remain largely intact despite a partial roof collapse in July 2012, which forced evacuation of nearby homes and closure of the garage. Repairs were completed in 2014.

  • Old Pictures Of Dingle Liverpool Liverpool Abandoned Dingle Railway ...
  • Old Pictures Of Dingle Liverpool Liverpool Abandoned Dingle Railway ...
  • Liverpool Overhead Railway – Subterranea Britannica
  • Disused Stations: Herculaneum Dock Station

🟦 2. Tunnel Portal at Herculaneum Dock

The tunnel mouth carved into the rock face at Herculaneum Dock still exists. This is where trains left the elevated viaduct and entered the half‑mile tunnel to Dingle. It is visible beneath the terrace houses built above the cliff.

🟩 3. Preserved Rolling Stock (Museum of Liverpool)

Two surviving LOR carriages exist:

  • An original early motor coach

  • A modernised post‑1947 carriage

One is on display at the Museum of Liverpool, and another was stored at the Electric Railway Museum (now closed). These are the only surviving examples of the world’s first electric multiple‑unit commuter trains.

  • Liverpool Overhead Railway | Exhibit in the Museum of Liverp… | Flickr
  • Liverpool Overhead Railway | National Museums Liverpool
  • Liverpool Overhead Railway electric units - Wikipedia
  • The incredible history of Liverpool's Overhead Railway | The Guide ...

🟫 4. Miscellaneous Remains & Artefacts

The Museum of Liverpool also holds:

  • Pier Head station artefacts

  • Colour‑light signals

  • Generator room equipment

  • Photographs and posters These are not structural remains but important physical survivals of the railway’s operation.

🟦 5. Lost but remembered: viaduct stanchions

Some stanchions were once visible embedded in dock walls, but most have been removed. The elevated viaduct itself was completely demolished in 1957.

🟪 Summary Table of What Survives

Surviving ElementLocationWhat Remains
Dingle TunnelPark Road, DingleBrick tunnel, subway, buffers, workshop space
Herculaneum Dock PortalRock face above dockTunnel mouth carved into cliff
Preserved TrainMuseum of LiverpoolOriginal EMU carriage
LOR ArtefactsMuseum of LiverpoolSignals, posters, photos, equipment

If you want, I can map out a walking route in Liverpool showing exactly where you can still see these remains — or dive deeper into the Dingle tunnel’s engineering.


  • Liverpool Overhead Railway electric units - Wikipedia
  • British Diesels and Electrics: Liverpool Overhead Railway
  • Liverpool Overhead Railway Motorcoach No.3 | National Museums Liverpool
  • Liverpool Overhead Railway Motorcoach No.3 | National Museums Liverpool

Short answer: The preserved Liverpool Overhead Railway (LOR) train is Motorcoach No. 3, the only surviving original motor coach from the world’s first electric elevated railway. It is on permanent display at the Museum of Liverpool, mounted at the authentic height of the old viaduct (4.8 m / 16 ft).

🟥 What exactly survives

  • Motorcoach No. 3 — built by Brown, Marshall & Co. between 1892–1896, in service until closure in 1956.

  • It is the only surviving original motor coach; all others were scrapped after the railway shut down.

  • A second, modernised post‑1947 carriage also survived and was stored at the Electric Railway Museum in Warwickshire (now closed).

🟦 What you see at the Museum of Liverpool

The museum’s LOR gallery features:

  • Motorcoach No. 3, restored and displayed at full operating height

  • Access to step inside the carriage

  • Dockside films, maps, and artefacts from stations and signalling

  • Original colour‑light signals and generator‑room equipment

The coach was so large that the museum had to build the gallery around it during construction.

🟩 Key facts about Motorcoach No. 3

  • Weight: ~20 tons

  • Length: ~5 m (as preserved section)

  • Electric system: 500–630 V DC, third rail

  • Built: early 1890s

  • In service: 1893–1956

  • Preservation: installed in the museum on 28 July 2010 after a complex heavy‑haulage operation.

🟪 Why this train matters

Motorcoach No. 3 represents:

  • The world’s first electric multiple‑unit commuter railway

  • Liverpool’s dockside industrial heritage

  • A vanished elevated railway that once carried 20 million passengers a year at its peak

  • A unique piece of global transport history — no other original LOR trains survive.

🟫 Where to see it

Museum of Liverpool Pier Head, Liverpool Waterfront The carriage is part of the permanent Liverpool Overhead Railway Gallery.

If you want, I can show surviving remains of the LOR or give a walking route around the old dockside alignment.


Short answer: Here’s a clear, practical walking route you can follow today to see every surviving trace of the Liverpool Overhead Railway (LOR). It’s designed as a 2.7‑mile dockside walk, starting at the Museum of Liverpool (where the preserved train lives) and ending at the Dingle tunnel portal the most substantial physical remnant of the railway.

This route is built for someone who knows Liverpool well and likes detail, history, and walking so it’s structured, accurate, and easy to follow.

🟦 Liverpool Overhead Railway Remains Walking Route

Museum of Liverpool Pier Head Wapping Herculaneum Dock Dingle Tunnel

  • Liverpool Waterfront
  • موزه لیورپول و معماری حیرت‌ انگیز آن
  • Pin by Cheryl Simpson on Old pictures of Liverpool | Liverpool docks ...

🟥 1. Museum of Liverpool LOR Motorcoach No. 3

Start: Museum of Liverpool, Pier Head What you’ll see:

  • The preserved LOR motor coach, displayed at original viaduct height

  • Colour‑light signals, station artefacts, dockside films

  • A full reconstruction of the railway’s atmosphere

This is the best place to begin because it gives you the feel of the railway before you go looking for the remains.

Next: Exit the museum and walk south along the waterfront toward the Albert Dock.

🟦 2. Pier Head / Mann Island former station site

Walking time: 3 minutes What survives: Nothing structural but this is where Pier Head station stood, one of the busiest stops on the line. You’re walking exactly where the viaduct once ran parallel to the Mersey.

Look for:

  • The alignment: the railway ran just inland from the river

  • Old photos on plaques showing the viaduct above the dock road

Next: Continue south past the Albert Dock warehouses.

🟩 3. Wapping / Kings Dock viaduct alignment

Walking time: 10 minutes What survives: No physical remains, but this stretch gives you the clearest sense of the railway’s height and position. The LOR ran above the dock road here, supported by steel lattice columns.

Look for:

  • The long straight line of the dock road

  • The spacing of old warehouse entrances (aligned with the viaduct stanchions)

Next: Continue toward Brunswick Dock.

🟫 4. Brunswick Dock former station location

Walking time: 12 minutes What survives: Again, no structures but Brunswick was one of the key mid‑dock stations. The viaduct here curved slightly inland.

Look for:

  • The change in dock layout

  • The raised ground levels where the viaduct approached Herculaneum Dock

Next: Walk south toward the cliff face at Herculaneum Dock.

🟪 5. Herculaneum Dock surviving tunnel portal

Walking time: 8 minutes What survives: The tunnel portal carved into the sandstone cliff the point where the elevated railway entered the half‑mile tunnel to Dingle.

  • Dingle Tunnel, Grafton Street, Liverpool © Stephen Richards :: Geograph ...
  • Dingle Tunnel | oldliverpoolrailways

This is the most atmospheric surviving outdoor remnant.

Look for:

  • The arched brick portal

  • The cut‑back rock face

  • The alignment showing where the viaduct met the tunnel

Next: Walk uphill toward Dingle.

🟥 6. Dingle Tunnel surviving station substructure

Walking time: 10 minutes What survives: The Dingle tunnel itself the only underground section of the LOR. The former station area is now private property (formerly Roscoe Engineering), but the tunnel mouth and brickwork are visible from the street.

Look for:

  • White glazed brick

  • The widened tunnel section where the station platforms once stood

  • The buffers and engineering features

This is the end of the route the southern terminus of the railway.

🟦 Route Summary Table

StopWhat survivesLink
Museum of LiverpoolPreserved motor coach, signals, artefactsStart
Pier HeadStation site (no remains)
WappingViaduct alignment
Brunswick DockStation site
Herculaneum DockSurviving tunnel portal
Dingle TunnelTunnel + station substructureEnd

🟦 Want me to map this as a step‑by‑step walking guide with distances and timings?

I can also create a dockside historical commentary you can read as you walk, or a Google‑Maps‑ready route if you want it.