1
Cenotaph Earlestown
Memorial originally to the fallen of WW1 which now commemorates the dead of WW2.
Image: © Dennis Turner
Taken: 26 Jul 2003
0.15 miles
2
Sankey Viaduct
Image: © Richard Cooke
Taken: 14 Sep 2019
0.18 miles
3
Sankey Viaduct
A Northern Rail commuter train crosses Sankey Viaduct.
Constructed between 1828 and 1830 by George Stephenson for the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Company, the viaduct carried the World's first passenger railway which ran between Liverpool and Manchester. It has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building and is the earliest major railway viaduct in the world.
http://transportheritage.com/find-heritage-locations.html?sobi2Task=sobi2Details&sobi2Id=710 Transport Heritage Locations
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 2 Feb 2013
0.18 miles
4
The Sankey Viaduct & the Sankey Canal
The snow enables us to see the line of England's first modern canal (1757 - so 250 years old this year) as it approaches the viaduct Stephenson had to build to take the world's first passenger railway across it. The high masts of the Mersey flats using the canal meant a clearance of 70 feet had to be allowed for beneath the railway.
Image: © David Long
Taken: 8 Feb 2007
0.19 miles
5
Crossing the Nine Arches
A Northern Rail commuter train crosses Sankey Viaduct, heading towards Earlestown and Manchester.
The Sankey Viaduct, which is known locally as "the Nine Arches", was the first major railway viaduct to be built anywhere. Constructed between 1828 and 1830 by George Stephenson for the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Company, it was built to carry the World’s first passenger railway (which ran between Liverpool and Manchester) across the Sankey Valley.
Constructed from yellow sandstone and red brick, the viaduct consists of nine round-headed arches (hence the name) carried on piers that incline sharply from the base towards the top. 183 metres (600 feet) in length, its arches each have a span of 15 metres (50 ft), and are 21 metres (70 ft) high. The height was needed to enable the railway to cross the line of the Sankey Canal with sufficient clearance for the Mersey flats, the sailing vessels for which the canal was constructed.
The site has added national historical importance as it is where the World’s first passenger railway crossed England’s first industrial canal. The canal passed under the third arch from the right (the path in the picture follows the line of the towpath with the canal, now filled in, to the right of the path).
The viaduct has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building.
http://transportheritage.com/find-heritage-locations.html?sobi2Task=sobi2Details&sobi2Id=710 Transport Heritage Locations
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 2 Feb 2013
0.19 miles
6
Sankey Viaduct
The Sankey Viaduct looks pretty impressive from a distance (
Image]) but from close-to, the massive scale of the construction can be better appreciated. One can only speculate on the impression it would have made when it was built in 1830; the first major railway viaduct anywhere in the World.
Constructed from yellow sandstone and red brick, the viaduct consists of nine round-headed arches carried on piers that incline sharply from the base towards the top. 183 metres (600 feet) in length, its arches each have a span of 15 metres (50 ft), and are 21 metres (70 ft) high. The height was needed to enable the railway to cross the line of the Sankey Canal with sufficient clearance for the Mersey flats, the sailing vessels for which the canal was constructed.
The site has added national historical importance as it is where the World’s first passenger railway crossed England’s first industrial canal. The photograph is taken from the path which has replaced the line of the canal (now filled in).
The viaduct has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building and is the earliest major railway viaduct in the world.
http://transportheritage.com/find-heritage-locations.html?sobi2Task=sobi2Details&sobi2Id=710 Transport Heritage Locations
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 2 Feb 2013
0.20 miles
7
Nine Arches Viaduct
The Sankey Viaduct, which is known locally as "the Nine Arches", was the first major railway viaduct to be built anywhere. Constructed between 1828 and 1830 by George Stephenson for the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Company, it was built to carry the World’s first passenger railway (which ran between Liverpool and Manchester) across the Sankey Valley.
Constructed from yellow sandstone and red brick, the viaduct consists of nine round-headed arches (hence the name) carried on piers that incline sharply from the base towards the top. 183 metres (600 feet) in length, its arches each have a span of 15 metres (50 ft), and are 21 metres (70 ft) high. The height was needed to enable the railway to cross the line of the Sankey Canal with sufficient clearance for the Mersey flats, the sailing vessels for which the canal was constructed.
The site has added national historical importance as it is where the World’s first passenger railway crossed England’s first industrial canal. The canal passed under the third arch from the right (the path in the picture follows the line of the towpath with the canal, now filled in, to the right of the path).
The viaduct has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building.
http://transportheritage.com/find-heritage-locations.html?sobi2Task=sobi2Details&sobi2Id=710 Transport Heritage Locations
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 2 Feb 2013
0.20 miles
8
Sankey Viaduct, Newton-le-Willows
Image: © John Lord
Taken: 28 Dec 2011
0.20 miles
9
Underneath the arches
Sankey Viaduct from the path in Sankey Valley Park
Image: © Raymond Knapman
Taken: 23 Jul 2010
0.20 miles
10
Underneath Sankey Viaduct
Detail of Stephenson's masterpiece viewed eastwards
Image: © Raymond Knapman
Taken: 23 Jul 2010
0.20 miles