it does make sence such a historial building has no photos or remains at all!! just a few cartoon drawings look at manchester they kept their station from 1830!
it does make sence such a historial building has no photos or remains at all!! just a few cartoon drawings look at manchester they kept their station from 1830!
I do not know.
I did try to look for an image of it, only to be led right back to Yo!
I did find this...
http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/147297
So is Crown Street station one and the same as Edge Hill station? Crown Street itself is a bit further towards the city centre than Tunnel Road where Edge Hill station is situated. Edge Hill has recently been refurbished as an Arts project by a group called Metal. Have you contacted them to see if they've got old photos?
No, Crown Street Station was different from Edge-Hill Station.
Crown st station was abandoned in 1836 and turned into a rail goods yard. Before mass usuable portable photography came about.
The world's first photo - the roof of farm buildings, 1826.
http://photography.nationalgeographi...pce1826-lw.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi..._du_Temple.jpg
First photo with a human in it, in Paris in 1838. It took 10 minutes to expose. The man on the bend having his shoes polished at 8 am.
The original Edge Hill Station was in the cutting just before the Wapping Tunnel. Abandoned in 1836 along with Crown St and move to where it is now. Two years before London had it first station.
It says:
Edge Hill Station, Liverpool
The original Edge Hill station on Stephenson's 1826-30 Liverpool to Manchester line, had a magnificent Moorish arch and was set deep in a sandstone cutting. The Crown Street terminus was too far from the city and a new terminus at Lime Street and this new Edge Hill station both opened in 1836. Trains were able to descend to Lime Street by gravity and were rope-hauled by a winding engine up to Edge Hill.
The station consists of two island platforms, each with an original building of 1836, making this possibly the oldest station in continuous use and in its original form in the world.
The oldest station in the world in continuous use in Broad Green, 1830.