In 1846, the
Fleetwood, Preston and West Riding Junction Railway (FP&WRR) was set up. It had an ambitious plan to link
Fleetwood on the Lancashire coast to
Leeds and
Bradford in the
West Riding of Yorkshire. It would link the existing
Preston and Wyre Joint Railway to the Longridge line in Preston, and build a new line from via
Ribchester,
Hurst Green and
Clitheroe to
Skipton, where it would join the proposed
Leeds and Bradford Extension Railway. The line would give Lancashire passengers access to the spa towns of
Harrogate and
Knaresborough, and beauty spots such as
Bolton Abbey. Reciprocally, it would give Yorkshire passengers access to the seaside resorts of
Fleetwood and
Blackpool. Freight trains would carry cattle from
Craven Valley, and stone from quarries near Clitheroe as well as from Longridge.
Stonyhurst College would be within a mile of the line and would be able to use it to bring in supplies as well as pupils. The was duly leased to the . The line was adapted for steam and the first steam-hauled train ran on
Whit Monday 1848. In 1850, a double-track extension was built connecting to the existing line a few hundred yards east of the terminus. The line passed via the
Miley Tunnel under the north part of Preston and connected to the
Preston and Wyre Joint Railway very close to that line's original terminus at . The extension was initially used for goods only. The first work on the Grimsargh to Skipton line was the excavation of a short cutting (which still exists) south of Hurst Green (at ), but then the project was abandoned. In 1852, the Fleetwood, Preston and West Riding Junction Railway Company collapsed. The Preston and Longridge Railway acquired the engines and rolling stock of the collapsed company in lieu of owed rental fees. However, in 1856 a reformed Fleetwood, Preston and West Riding Junction Railway Company purchased the line. The line through Miley Tunnel was opened to passengers, with new stations at each end, at on Deepdale Road and at . The original terminus was closed to passengers but continued to be used for goods. By 1866, the plan to extend the line to Yorkshire had been revived. Fearing that the rival
Midland Railway would buy the line to gain access to Preston, the
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (L&YR) bought the line instead. From the following year, the line was owned jointly by the and the
London and North Western Railway (LNWR) under the
Lancashire and Yorkshire and London and North Western Railways Act 1896 (
59 & 60 Vict. c. cxxxiv). In 1885, Maudland Bridge Station was closed and passenger trains ran on to the adjacent main line to
Preston Station, allowing connections to other railway lines for the first time. ==Whittingham Hospital branch==