Henry Howard, 13th Duke of Norfolk built the
spur line from
Dinting Viaduct to Howard Town over his own land at his own expense. He then sold it to the
Sheffield, Ashton-under-Lyne and Manchester Railway for £15,244 10
s 10
d (). The station was opened on 9 June 1845 to goods traffic; the formal opening was on 30 June 1845 – it was attended by some of the SA&MR Directors, and passenger traffic began immediately afterward. The station buildings were constructed to the designs of
John Grey Weightman and opened in 1847. There was a previous station called Glossop on the main line but that was renamed Dinting with the opening of the Glossop station on the branch. The new station was originally named Glossop, and was renamed Glossop Central on 10 July 1922, reverting to
Glossop on 6 May 1974. Originally built with two platforms, the station was reduced to one operational platform in the 1970s when the branch was singled. When the voltage changed from
1500 V DC to
25 kV AC on 7 December 1984, the AC trains continued to use the old platform before the single line was transferred from one side of the island to the other. Trains arriving from Manchester Piccadilly reverse to proceed to
Hadfield, and vice versa. The other platform face and redundant station buildings were incorporated into an extension for the next door
Co-op supermarket and car park, now owned by
The Co-operative Group. The station is now a Grade II
Listed building and a
blue plaque was unveiled in 2006. ==Services==