The station, opened in 1840, was originally located to the west of Station Road and named
Kirkham. In 1890, it was rebuilt on the east side of the road and later renamed
Kirkham and Wesham. Historically the Wrangway Brook, beside which the railway was laid, has always been the boundary between Kirkham and Wesham; the station buildings are all situated in Kirkham. Two tracks were built on the northern side of the line for a platform that was planned, but never built due to the outbreak of
World War II. Kirkham station signalbox, which was located in between the
up and down fast lines, was demolished during resignalling operations in 1977. To the west of the station, Kirkham North Junction is where the suburban branch line to follows the
Fylde coast through , , ; the main line to proceeds via . Between 1903 and 1965, there was a third express line, the
Marton Line, which went straight to Blackpool South and beyond to . This junction involved a flyover to allow Preston-bound trains to access the up fast line from the Marton line; it closed in 1965, but the disused flyover bridge was not removed until the 1980s. There were originally two platforms, but work in 2017 and 2018 added a third. There are signs of the former size of the station in the form of disused sidings areas and blocked-off arches. Originally a cast iron and glass roof covered the platforms, similar to that at Poulton-le-Fylde; this was removed in the 1960s. In 2018, lifts were also installed. Fast lines used to run from Kirkham North Junction (located a half a mile to the west of the station) to what was known as Kirkham South Junction - just east of the station, allowing through trains to pass without running beside the platforms. These were the last vestige of the four track which originally started at
Preston and were removed during remodelling work in 2017, to allow for a third platform and a faster alignment of the remaining and new lines As part of the works, all of the disused sidings were removed. The
signalbox at Kirkham North Junction was opened in 1903; it had over 70 levers, worked by two signalmen and a train recorder. A framed summary in the box detailed the total number of train movements there in a 24-hour period in July 1936 as 656; the vast majority of these would have been connected with the Blackpool holiday trade. In March 2011, the station was given a makeover with modernisation and refurbishment of the staircase. In 2017-2018, the station was given a major refurbishment as part of the electrification programme.
Electrification and rebuild As part the Great North Rail Project and
Northern Powerhouse Rail, the line from Manchester to Blackpool North was approved by the government for electrification. The opportunity was taken to completely renew the signalling of the line, as well as rebuilding and improving stations along the line. The plans have seen the track layout remodelled, the non-platform lines removed, a third platform added, the footbridge rebuilt, new signalling installed and the route from Preston-Blackpool North electrified. The work at the station started in mid-2017, with a total blockade from Preston to Blackpool North and South starting in November 2017 and completed in April 2018. The station reopened with service to Blackpool South on 29 January 2018, but reopening of the line to Blackpool North was pushed back to 16 April 2018, as a result of bad weather and maintenance issues with one of the infrastructure trains being used in the upgrade works. ==Facilities==