On 1 September 1851, the branch to Delph opened, which left the main line at Delph Junction,[4] about a mile to the north of Greenfield; Greenfield was the last station before the junction until Moorgate Halt opened in 1912. A second branch, to Oldham, opened on 5 July 1856; it left the main line just to the south of Greenfield.
Passenger services on the Delph & Oldham branches were withdrawn in May 1955,[5] with complete closure following in 1964. A defunct bay can still be seen at the Stalybridge end of the station, which was used by some trains from the Oldham direction. For many years the station had a peak-only service (see BR timetable 1974 et seq.).
The Beeching Report proposed closure of all stations between Stalybridge and Huddersfield. In 1968, half the stations were closed, including Diggle and Saddleworth, leaving only Greenfield to serve the Saddleworth area. That means that Greenfield is Saddleworth's only remaining railway station.
Facilities
Planning permission for the refurbishment of Greenfield railway station was granted in early 2008. This was to provide a new ticket office, refurbished waiting areas, toilets, and possibly a small shop, and was due to be completed in the Winter of 2008. After some problems with planning regulations and the original building contractor going into administration,[6] the new facilities were finally completed in Spring 2009. The ticket office is staffed on a part-time basis (Mondays to Saturdays, morning to early afternoon only) and there is also a ticket vending machine available. Step-free access is limited to the Manchester-bound platform only, as the Huddersfield-bound one can only be reached by footbridge.[7]
Manchester mayor Andy Burnham has been campaigning for Greenfield Station to have access to disability friendly facilities, as it remains one of the only stations in Greater Manchester lacking them.
Services
Following the Beeching Cuts in 1968, the station's services were drastically reduced to just a handful of journeys to Manchester and Huddersfield during peak times only, in line with the other local stations on the Huddersfield Line at the time.
From 1991 however a new improved hourly service in each direction was introduced, with hourly trains to Manchester Victoria calling at all stations as well as to Huddersfield.
Despite managing the station, Northern Trains do not provide any service to or from this station.
Since the May 2018 timetable change, TransPennine Express provide the regular stopping service here (hourly each way to Huddersfield and to Manchester Piccadilly).[8] There are no direct trains to Manchester Victoria, so passengers wishing to travel there must change at Stalybridge. Other TPE services pass through without stopping.
As of December 2023, some peak hour services continue eastbound beyond Huddersfield to either Hull or York via Wakefield Kirkgate on weekdays and Saturdays.
Some other late night services terminate at Wakefield Kirkgate, as well as some other peak services terminating at Manchester Victoria.
The Transpennine route through the station is being modernised and upgraded over the course of three Control Periods extending beyond 2029 . It is planned as part of the upgrade that electrification of the line through the station will occur.[9]
^ abJames, Leslie (November 1983). A Chronology of the Construction of Britain's Railways 1778-1855. Shepperton: Ian Allan. p. 57. ISBN0-7110-1277-6. BE/1183.
^Butt, R.V.J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations. Yeovil: Patrick Stephens Ltd. p. 109. ISBN1-85260-508-1. R508.