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Holborn Viaduct–Herne Hill line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Holborn Viaduct–Herne Hill line
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerNetwork Rail
ELRHHH
LocaleGreater London
Termini
Service
ServicesThameslink
Southeastern (peak only)
Operator(s)Govia Thameslink Railway
Southeastern
History
Opened6 October 1863
Last extension1874
Technical
Number of tracks2
4 (Blackfriars–Loughborough Junction)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC third rail
Holborn Viaduct–Herne Hill North Jn
m ch
Farringdon
0 15
Smithfield Sidings
Holborn Viaduct low level
0 28
City ThameslinkHolborn Viaduct
(superimposed)
former portal of Snow Hill tunnel
tunnel extension beneath former line
0 44
0 23
change of line
Ludgate Hill
0 35
Blackfriars
Blackfriars Bridge
0 63
Blackfriars Jn
Borough Road
1 47
Elephant & Castle
Walworth Road
Camberwell
3 36
Loughborough Jn
3 48
Loughborough Junction
Herne Hill sorting sidings
4 30
Herne Hill north Jn
Herne Hill
Herne Hill south Jn

The Holborn Viaduct–Herne Hill line is a railway line between Holborn Viaduct in the City of London and Herne Hill in the London Borough of Lambeth. After the closure of Holborn Viaduct station the line ends at the south portal of Snow Hill tunnel merging into Snow Hill lines. From there the Widened Lines to St Pancras and Kentish Town are reached. Today the section north of Blackfriars is part of the Thameslink core. Originally being a branch line of the London, Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR) towards the City of London, the line is sometimes called LCDR City Branch.

History

In the late 1850s, the East Kent Railway had ambitions to run passenger trains between Kent and London, but it did not own any railway lines in inner London. It reached an agreement with the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LB&SCR) in 1858 to use the Crystal Palace line originally built by the West End of London and Crystal Palace Railway from Beckenham Junction to Clapham Junction to access Battersea and (from 1860) Victoria. This arrangement incurred costly access fees, but it was necessary until the company obtained Parliamentary authority to build in London.[1][2]

Construction

On 6 August 1860, the Metropolitan Extensions Act granted the London, Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR; the successor to the East Kent company) the powers to extend the Chatham Main Line from Beckenham Junction to Battersea and to build a branch line from the Herne Hill to the City of London.[3][4]

A 1914 Railway Clearing House map of lines around Herne Hill

After the main extension was built, the City Branch opened on 6 October 1863 from Herne Hill as far as Elephant & Castle, via Camberwell and Walworth Road. On 1 June 1864, the line had been extended to Blackfriars Bridge railway station (on the south bank of the River Thames) via Borough Road.[5] Blackfriars Railway Bridge was then built across the Thames and a terminus for trains from the south opened at Ludgate Hill on 1 June 1865[6] (closed 3 March 1929).

Extensions

A 1914 Railway Clearing House map of lines around Holborn Viaduct
Original junction between the Holborn Viaduct–Herne Hill line (continuing on the right) and Snow Hill line (left) in 1953. The new transition between the lines lies 100 m south at the new portal of Snow Hill tunnel.

Snow Hill tunnel opened on 1 January 1866, enabling trains from Ludgate Hill to reach the Widened Lines at Farringdon. LCDR and Great Northern Railways (GNR) joint services from Blackfriars Bridge began operating via Snow Hill tunnel under Smithfield market to Farringdon and northwards on to the GNR.[7]

Later that year, the LCDR completed work to widen the railway viaduct between Herne Hill and Blackfriars Bridge, which included doubling the number of lines north of Loughborough Junction from two to four.[8]

Herne Hill–Tulse Hill
Holborn Viaduct–
Herne Hill line
Herne Hill
Tulse Hill

In 1868, the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway opened a suburban line from London Bridge to Sutton via Tulse Hill. A 1 mi (1.6 km) connecting line from Tulse Hill to Herne Hill opened on 1 January 1869.[9]

The platforms at Loughborough Junction between Camberwell and Herne Hill opened in 1872.[5]

In 1874 the line was extended to Holborn Viaduct where a new terminus was built. In 1886 a second parallel bridge across River Thames opened. At the northern end of the bridge St. Paul's station (later renamed Blackfriars) was opened by the London, Chatham and Dover Railway. Blackfriars Bridge station on the south bank closed at this time.

In 1900, it was suggested in The Contemporary Review that the City Branch should be replaced with an electric deep-level railway (i.e. a 'tube' line) between Herne Hill and Farringdon in order to remove Blackfriars Railway Bridge, which the author considered to be a blight on the Thames.[10]

In 1916 passenger services through Snow Hill tunnel were discontinued, and trains from the south terminated at Holborn Viaduct.[11][12] The tunnel remained in use for freight trains.

On 12 July 1925, a 660-volt third-rail system came into operation along the entire length of line. Electric trains ran every 20 minutes during the day [13]

Trains on the City Branch were affected by World War II. Services were reduced from September 1939 to once every 30 minutes during the week and hourly at weekends;[14] and the line was cut twice during the Blitz. On the second occasion, the railway bridge over Hinton Road (immediately south of Loughborough Junction) was destroyed.[15] The route between Holborn Viaduct and Herne Hill was disrupted by 62 incidents during the war.[16]

Snow Hill tunnel closed in the end of the 1960s and tracks were lifted in 1971.

Thameslink Programme

St Paul's Thameslink station shortly after opening, with the remains of Holborn Viaduct railway station in the background

In 1988, Snow Hill tunnel re-opened and the former LCDR City Branch formed the basis of the new Thameslink route. Holborn Viaduct station was demolished and replaced by St Paul's Thameslink station (later renamed City Thameslink) in the tunnel. The line was dismantled between Lutgate Hill and Holborn Viaduct; instead a new section of Snow Hill tunnel was built.

Network Rail began a major upgrade of the route in 2009. A key objective of the Thameslink Programme was allowing more trains to travel between central London and Brighton, which was prevented by a bottleneck between London Bridge and Blackfriars on a viaduct through the historic Borough Market. Network Rail initially suggested widening the viaduct and demolishing part of the market, but the public backlash against this plan prompted Network Rail to consider permanently routing all Thameslink trains to/from Brighton via Herne Hill, avoiding London Bridge and the market.[17] This would have required the grade separation of the two lines through Herne Hill, which would have been achieved by constructing a new viaduct immediately to the east of the existing viaduct and using a fly-over to connect the southern end of the new viaduct to the line between Tulse Hill and North Dulwich (taking the tracks over the Chatham Main Line and towards Tulse Hill).[18] This proposal was rejected in 2004 because of its environmental impact on Herne Hill and the larger number of interchanges offered on the London Bridge route; the Borough Market viaduct was widened instead.[17] From December 2008 to May 2012, Thameslink trains serving Herne Hill did not run most weekends or after 22:30 every week-night because of construction work on the Thameslink route through central London as part of the Thameslink Programme.[19]

During the initial planning in the late 1980s for High Speed 1, British Rail considered building the line to serve a low-level station at King's Cross via south London.[20] An option for this route was via the City Branch, which would have required quadrupling the tracks between Loughborough Junction and Herne Hill.[21]

Services

Early services

From July 1863, LCDR trains between London and Kent ran to continental Europe via a connecting steamboat from Dover Harbour to Calais;[22] these boat trains left Victoria and Ludgate Hill simultaneously and were joined at Herne Hill.[23] to give passengers easier access to the City of London and beyond. [24] The LCDR also began operating direct services to King's Cross and Barnet (now High Barnet Underground station) when Snow Hill tunnel opened.[25]

A popular workmen's train (one penny per journey) ran between Ludgate Hill and Victoria via Herne Hill from 1865. Trains left from both termini at 04:55 and returned at 18:15.[26] The LCDR was compelled to operate this service by Parliament to compensate for the large number of working-class homes destroyed in Camberwell during the construction of the line.[27] Regular one-way fares from Herne Hill to Ludgate Hill were eightpence, sixpence and fourpence for first, second and third class respectively (or return for one shilling, ninepence and sevenpence respectively), with journey times of 15 minutes on express trains and 26 minutes when calling at all stops.[28]

Both the Great Northern Railway (GNR) and the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) helped fund the Metropolitan Extensions (£320,000 and £310,000 respectively; £31,980,000 and £30,980,000 in 2021[29]) in return for the right to use the LCDR's tracks. The LSWR began running trains between Ludgate Hill and Wimbledon via Herne Hill when the Tulse Hill extension was completed.[30] Some of these services went as far as Kingston until the mid-1890s.[31]

A late-night service from Ludgate Hill (departing 01:15) to Beckenham Junction via Herne Hill began in 1910. The intention was to satisfy journalists on Fleet Street who regularly complained in print about the poor quality of service on the line; those working on the morning papers often worked beyond midnight and missed the last train.[32]

By 1959, the pattern of commuter services had taken the shape it held into the 21st century: all-stops trains from the City of London to Wimbledon and Sutton (but, unlike the modern Sutton Loop, via West Croydon).[33]

Current

Passenger services are operated by Govia Thameslink Railway. Additional peak-services terminating at Blackfriars are run by Southeastern.

Stations

Stations on the line are

References

  1. ^ Dendy Marshall & Kidner 1968, p. 327.
  2. ^ Turner, John Howard (1978). The London Brighton and South Coast Railway 2 Establishment and Growth. London: B.T Batsford. p. 121. ISBN 978-0-7134-1198-0.
  3. ^ White 1961, p. 36.
  4. ^ Adams, W.J (1866). Bradshaw's Railway Manual, Shareholders' Guide, and Official Directory. p. 172.
  5. ^ a b White 1961, p. 37.
  6. ^ Spinks, Neil (June 1988). Slater, John (ed.). "Thameslink Services a Century Ago". Railway Magazine. Vol. 134, no. 1046. Cheam: Prospect Magazines. p. 364. ISSN 0033-8923.
  7. ^ "Fowler's Ghost" 1962, p. 304.
  8. ^ The Railway News: 233. 1 September 1866. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  9. ^ Kidner, R.W. (1952). The London, Chatham and Dover Railway. South Godstone, Surrey: Oakwood Press. p. 10. OCLC 12264028.
  10. ^ Strahan, A. (1900). The Contemporary Review. 78: 109. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  11. ^ Jackson 1969, p. 201.
  12. ^ White 1971, p. 39.
  13. ^ Moody 1957, p. 28.
  14. ^ Moody 1957, p. 107.
  15. ^ Moody 1957, p. 114.
  16. ^ Moody 1957, p. 115.
  17. ^ a b Network Rail, June 2004, p. 8.
  18. ^ Network Rail, June 2004, p. 10.
  19. ^ Question 48 Archived 18 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Thameslink Programme. Retrieved 20 April 2012
  20. ^ Timpson, Trevor (14 November 2007). "How St Pancras was chosen". BBC News Online. London. Retrieved 19 November 2007.
  21. ^ Cowton, Rodney (15 July 1988). "British Rail sets out timetable for train services to the Channel tunnel". The Times. London. (subscription required)
  22. ^ Reynolds, Siân (2007). Paris-Edinburgh: Cultural Connections in the Belle Epoque. Farnham: Ashgate Publishing. p. 14.
  23. ^ Ward and Lock's Pictorial Guide to London. Ward, Lock and Co, Ltd. 1879. p. 36.
  24. ^ White 1961, p. 39.
  25. ^ Jackson 1969, p. 194.
  26. ^ White 1971, p. 36.
  27. ^ Dendy Marshall & Kidner 1968, p. 333.
  28. ^ The ABC; or, Alphabetical railway guide: showing at a glance how and when to go from London to the different stations in Great Britain, and return, etc. London: W. Tweedie. 1870. pp. 10, 55.
  29. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  30. ^ Jackson 1969, p. 193.
  31. ^ Mitchell & Smith 1992, fig. 53.
  32. ^ Jackson 1969, p. 199.
  33. ^ Jackson 1969, p. 205.

Bibliography

External links

Blackfriars: A complicated station on YouTube

This page was last edited on 3 April 2024, at 18:50
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