Heysham Port
The station was opened as Heysham Harbour (hence its current station code) by the Midland Railway on 11 July 1904. It was relocated to an adjacent site on 4 May 1970, and served boat trains for Belfast until the closure of the ferry route in April 1975. The train service was withdrawn on 6 October, but reinstated and the station renamed Heysham Sea Terminal, on 11 May 1987 to provide a rail connection with the daily sailing to Douglas run by the Isle of Man Steam Packet Company. The station acquired its present name on 28 September 1992.
As constructed, the station had three platforms, two signal boxes and an extensive goods depot and associated sidings to service the port complex (which dates from 1904). It handled a wide range of freight for export including livestock, parcels and latterly fuel oil from a distribution terminal operated by Shell. None of these types of traffic have been handled here since the early 1980s – all freight through the port, mainly containers, is worked by road.
Address
Heysham Port Station
Station Road
Heysham
Lancashire
LA3 2XE
Grid Reference
SD 402600 – for a map visit www.streetmap.co.uk and enter the grid reference.
Operator
Facilities
+ Unstaffed station
+ Served by one train a day to/from Leeds via Morecambe for the Isle of Man sailing
+ Shelter on platform
+ Isle of Man Ferry – see steam-packet.com/
Other Information
+ Rail User Group – Lancaster, Morecambe and District Rail User Group
+ Friends of Station – visit communityraillancashire.co.uk/station-adoption/ for more details
+ CRP branded notice boards
+ For more information about the Isle-of-Man Steam Packet Company click here
Attractions
Heysham Nuclear Power Station – Visitor Centre with interactive exhibitions and pre-arranged guided tours (free)
St. Patrick’s Chapel – a ruined building standing on a headland above St. Peter’s Church. It has been designated as a Grade 1 listed building and is a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Latest News
Yorkshire Dales Explorer 4 April 2026
The DalesBus 80 service resumes for the 2026 season this week making it easier to get to Hawes and ENCT & disabled schemes are available. Posted 31.03.26
LancsCAN March 2026 Newsletter
The latest LancsCAN newsletter gives Accrington Eco station some coverage in an article by Dave Savage. Posted 31.03.26
Community Rail Lancashire Annual Report
Community Rail Lancashire has published its Annual Report for 2025, plenty to read about the work undertaken by CRL across the North of England. Posted 24.03.26
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