[1][2] The station consisted of "a platform and open shed on the down side, and a bare narrow platform on the up, all of wooden construction, as were the steps by which they were approached.
Nearby were half-a-dozen small cottages owned by the company, one of which, the residence of the clerk-in-charge, was used as a booking office and waiting room.
[6] The station building was two-storeys high, with steps from the forecourt up to the first floor at platform level.
[7] By 1893, the station platforms had been extended over the canal so they were now twice the length of the originals.
This article on a railway station in Greater Manchester is a stub.