As stated Lissens Goods station lay down the line towards
Ardrossan, supervised by staff at Auchenmade Station and closed at the same time as the goods facility at
Auchenmade, the passenger station here having finally closed in 1932. By 1958 the sidings had been lifted although the signal box was still marked and only a single track was still present on the main line. A feature of WWII was the use of the line for what locals called the night time 'Ghost Trains' that carried injured service personnel to the Glasgow hospitals from where they had been landed at the port of Ardrossan. The goods station at Lissens opened on 3 September 1888 and closed on 17 December 1950. Opened by the
Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway, then joining the
Caledonian Railway it became part of the
London Midland and Scottish Railway during the
Grouping of 1923.
Workings details The May 1915 'Appendix' to the
Caledonian Railway Working Timetable states of the Lylestone Siding that -
This Siding will be worked by Up Trains only. It is controlled by a Staff Key which is kept in charge of the Signalman at Lissens Siding. When a train which is to work Lylestone Siding arrives at Lissens, it must be stopped at the signal Box, when the Engine will be detached, and the Brakesman in charge will see that the Train is secured by the Van Brake being hard on, and the Front wagons held by Sprags in their wheels. The Brakesman in charge will then get the Staff Key from the signalman, and go forward to Lylestone Siding with the Engine and any Wagons there may be for the Siding, and he will work the points as required. After the work is finished, and Sidings points properly set for the Main Line, the Engine will propel the Wagons taken from Lylestone Siding on the Up Line to Lissens, where they will be run into the Siding by gravitation. The Brakesman will return with the engine to Lissens, and will hand the Staff key back to the Signalman, after which the ordinary working will resume. Tyre burning facility A WW2 'Tyre Burning Facility' was located very near to Lissens Goods that may have provided war time traffic for the goods station. Later the site of the South Lissens Pottery, local intelligence has it that a munitions depot was located here and that the large number of tyres waiting to be processed were actually to camouflage the depot. Ruins of the facility are still (2014) located in one of the South Lissens Farm fields. ==The site today==