Stone to Colwich Line
The Stone to Colwich Line is a 11.7 miles (18.8 km) long railway line in Staffordshire which serves as a cut-off for West Coast Main Line services to Manchester Piccadilly. This route goes direct from Rugeley Trent Valley to Stoke-on-Trent, not going via Stafford.
Route
The line diverges from the Trent Valley Line at Colwich Junction and runs through to join the Stafford to Manchester Line at Stone Station. There used to be several stations along its length, but these were all closed by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1947 (shortly before nationalisation of the UK railway network) and there is no working station between Colwich Junction and Stone.
The route was electrified with 25KV overhead as part of the electification of the West Coast Main Line by British Rail in the 1960s. It is double track throughout its length. Nearly all of the traffic it carries is now passenger trains, although there used to be a regular flow of Class 47 powered Merry Go Round coal services from the coal mines of the Stoke-on-Trent area to the Rugeley power stations.
The line was the location of the Hixon rail crash in January 1968, which killed 11 people.
Services
The majority of trains on the route are operated by Virgin Trains which is used for their London Euston to Manchester Piccadilly via Stoke-on-Trent services in which 2 trains per hour in each direction run. Some morning and evening peak London Midland trains between London Euston and Crewe also operate via this route.