Location Image

Mossley Hill railway station

Mossley Hill railway station is in the suburbs of Liverpool in the north west of England. The station is operated by Northern Trains.

1. History

It and Allerton were the only stations opened on 15 February 1864 when the St Helens Railway's (taken over by the London & North Western Railway from 29 July 1864) extension from Speke to Edge Hill opened. The station was replaced from 13 July 1891, when the Edge Hill to Speke line was quadrupled. The station was renamed from Mossley Hill for Aigburth to Mossley Hill on 6 May 1974. North of the station, on the route towards Edge Hill are the sites – still identifiable where the line crosses roads – of the former Sefton Park and Wavertree stations.

1. Facilities

The ticket office is on a road bridge and (as is standard practice for Merseytravel-sponsored stations) is staffed throughout the hours of service all week, with additional ticket machines on the platforms. Ramps lead down to the two island platforms, which have basic shelters and seats. Passenger information screens, automated announcements and customer help points are also provided to offer train running information. Like West Allerton (preceding south) there are 4 platforms, 2 of which, platforms 1 and 2, are located on the fast lines and are where most trains stop. 3 & 4 are on the slow lines and are used less frequently, where faster services operated by Avanti West Coast, TransPennine Express and London Northwestern Railway, are booked to overtake stopping services on this stretch of line (this is most common in the Liverpool-bound direction, where it happens hourly on platform 4).

1. Services

The station is currently served by local stopping trains between Liverpool Lime Street and Warrington Central operated by Northern Trains. These call every half-hour in each direction on Mondays to Saturdays during the day, with alternate services continuing through to Manchester Oxford Road. These are limited stop to Warrington, whilst the one that terminates there calls at most local stations en-route. The frequency drops to hourly in the evening and on Sundays. As of the December 2024 timetable change, hourly London Northwestern Railway services to Crewe and Birmingham New Street, as well as their counterparts to Liverpool Lime Street, were reintroduced, removing the need to change at Liverpool South Parkway.

The station is also served by several local bus routes.

1. References


1. External links

Train times and station information for Mossley Hill railway station from National Rail

Nearby Places View Menu
Location Image
199 m

Mossley Hill

Mossley Hill is a suburb of Liverpool and ward of Liverpool City Council. Located 3.5 miles southeast of the city centre, it is bordered by the suburbs of Aigburth, Allerton, Childwall, and Wavertree. At the 2001 Census, the population was 12,650, increasing to 13,816 at the 2011 Census.
Location Image
398 m

Mossley Hill (Liverpool ward)

Mossley Hill is an electoral division of Liverpool City Council in the Liverpool Wavertree Parliamentary constituency.
Location Image
478 m

Church of St Matthew and St James, Mossley Hill

The Church of St Matthew and St James stands on the top of a hill in Rose Lane, Mossley Hill, Liverpool, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Liverpool South Childwall, the archdeaconry of Liverpool and the diocese of Liverpool. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building. The authors of the Buildings of England series describe it as "one of the best Victorian churches in Liverpool".
Location Image
543 m

Carnatic Hall

Carnatic Hall was an 18th-century mansion that was located in Mossley Hill, Liverpool, England. The house was built in 1779 for slave trader Peter Baker, who served as Mayor of Liverpool in 1795. Originally on the site of Mossley Hall (home of the Ogden family) it was renamed Carnatic Hall by Baker after the French East Indiaman Carnatic, which the privateer Mentor, which Baker owned, had captured in October 1778. Carnatic was said to be the richest prize ever taken and brought safe into port by a Liverpool adventurer, being of the value of £135,000. In 1891 the house burned down and the then owner, Walter Holland, had a hall built in the same style. In 1947, The University of Liverpool purchased Carnatic Hall as a home for the University of Liverpool Museum. In 1964 the mansion was demolished and replaced with student accommodation, the Carnatic Halls of Residence. This consisted of six residences: McNair Hall, Salisbury Hall, Rankin Hall, Morton House, Lady Mountford Hall, and Dale Hall. In 2018, it was announced that the Carnatic Student Village would be closing.