Longstone Lane Stone Bridge Over Monsal Trail - Little Longstone, UK
Posted by: dtrebilc
N 53° 14.197 W 001° 42.284
30U E 586447 N 5899374
This stone single arch bridge carries Longstone Lane over the former Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and Midland Junction Railway which is now the 'rails-to-trails' Monsall Trail route.
Waymark Code: WMRHCQ
Location: East Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/22/2016
Views: 1
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The Manchester, Buxton, Matlock and Midland Junction Railway ran from a junction with the Midland Railway at Ambergate to Rowsley north of Matlock and thence to Buxton.
In time it would become part of the Midland Railway's main line between London and Manchester, but it was initially planned as a route from Manchester to the East of England, via the proposed Ambergate, Nottingham, Boston and Eastern Junction Railway which would meet it a little further north along the North Midland line at Ambergate. The Act for a line from just south of Stockport to Ambergate was passed in 1846."
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Monsal Trail
"The Monsal Trail is a traffic free route for walkers, cyclists, horse riders and wheelchair users through some of the Peak District's most spectacular limestone dales.
The trail runs along the former Midland Railway line for 8.5 miles between Blackwell Mill, in Chee Dale and Coombs Road, at Bakewell.
Most of the route was opened to the public in 1981 but four former railway tunnels had to remain closed due to safety reasons, with public footpaths taking people around them. From 25 May 2011 the four railway tunnels - Headstone Tunnel, Cressbrook Tunnel, Litton Tunnel, Chee Tor Tunnel – were opened for trail users. Each tunnel is about 400 metres long and is lit during normal daylight hours."
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The Bridge
The bridge has a wide single arch and crossed the railway line at the end of the platforms of former Great Longstone railway station .
The station, known originally as Longstone Station, was intended to serve the communities of Longstone and Ashford in the Water, and also provided a convenient station for the owner of nearby Thornbridge Hall, who at the time was George Marples, a director of the Midland Railway Company.