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Southside railway station

Coordinates: 55°50′49″N 4°15′22″W / 55.8469°N 4.2560°W / 55.8469; -4.2560
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by BrownHairedGirl (talk | contribs) at 10:19, 18 May 2020 (populating subcats of Category:Railway stations in Great Britain by year of opening/closing, replaced: Category:Railway stations opened in 1848Category:Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1848, [[Category:Railway stations cl). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Glasgow Central & St Enoch approaches
Glasgow Central
St Enoch Glasgow Subway
parts of former station
reused as carriage sidings
Glasgow Bridge Street
Main Street
Gorbals
Cumberland
Street
Southside
Eglinton Street
Pollokshields East
Pollokshields West
Strathbungo

Southside railway station, Glasgow, Scotland, was an early passenger terminal situated in the Gorbals area of the city. The station opened on 29 September 1848, for trains operated by the Glasgow, Barrhead and Neilston Direct Railway, which a short time later was absorbed by the Caledonian Railway.

From 1849, until the opening of Glasgow Central station in 1879, the station was used as a terminal for the Caledonian Railway's Lanarkshire services on its route to Carlisle which is now part of the West Coast Main Line.

From September 1877 Southside station was replaced by Gorbals station for trains on the Barrhead branch line to the new St Enoch station, which had opened nearly a year earlier. A viaduct was constructed to carry the extended Barrhead line towards a new bridge at Cathcart Road, north-east of Southside station.

Architecture

Contemporary plans show that trains arrived at the two-storey station at platforms accessed from stairways at street level. The station had five tracks entering it, with four passenger platforms. The additional track between the platforms was used for the storage of rolling stock. This pattern was also used for the tracks entering Glasgow's other principal railway terminal south of the Clyde, at Bridge Street, which also had five tracks and four platforms.

55°50′49″N 4°15′22″W / 55.8469°N 4.2560°W / 55.8469; -4.2560