The branch left the LNWR's Crewe to Warrington Line at Winsford Junction, a short distance north of Winsford railway station.[2] The line curved sharply westwards then followed a cutting before curving into the terminus, a distance of 1 mile and 22 yards.[2]
Operation
The branch was originally double track but then was worked as a single track line after the First World War. The original up line was not lifted but used as a long siding. This siding was later used for the storage of locomotives bound for the scrap yard. There were no intermediate stations and the only signal box on the line was closed in 1957 when the line was worked under one engine in steam.
Passenger services
Although the LNWR provided passenger facilities at the terminus at Over and Wharton, the main raison d'ĂȘtre of the line was freight: mainly salt and coal. There was a limited passenger service until 16 June 1947 (1947-06-16) when Over and Wharton station closed.[5] Services ran to a variety of local destinations such as Runcorn, Wigan, Warrington and Acton Bridge but offered poor connections in the main.[5]
The line remained busy with rock salt trains until 1992 when the line was closed and the track lifted.
The line today
Only a small portion of brickwork from Over and Wharton station remains, the remainder of the branch and station is now the site of a housing development and the A5018 road.
Hitches, Mike (1994), Cheshire Railways in Old Photographs, Alan Sutton Publishing, ISBN0-7509-0756-8
Simmons, Jack (1997). "The concept of nationalization". In Simmons, Jack; Biddle, Gordon (eds.). The Oxford Companion to British Railway History From 1603 to the 1990s (1st ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 339. ISBN0-19-211697-5.
Wilkinson, Alan (2001), Railways Across Mid-Cheshire, Scenes from the Past: 41 (part One), Foxline, ISBN1-870119-66-5, OCLC656108518