Eastern Counties and Thames Junction Railway

Eastern Counties and Thames Junction Railway
Dates of operation 18461862
Successor Great Eastern Railway

Eastern Counties and Thames Junction Railway

Legend
to North London Line
 
River Lea
to Lea Valley Lines

DLR to Stratford International

Stratford:

 (HL) London Overground to Richmond

 (HL) Great Eastern Main Line

 (HL) Central line

 (HL) DLR to Lewisham

 (LL) DLR to Beckton or Woolwich Arsenal

 (LL) Jubilee line to Stanmore

links to GEML lifted
Former EC&TJR route to North Woolwich
taken over by DLR (and Crossrail from 2018)
Stratford High Street
Abbey Road

District and Hammersmith & City lines

London, Tilbury and Southend Line

West Ham

link lifted
Star Lane
DLR to Bank or Tower Gateway
Canning Town
Jubilee line to Stanmore
(from Tidal Basin to past Pontoon Dock, route to

 Woolwich Arsenal elevated on Silvertown Tramway line)

Tidal Basin
Royal Victoria
Crossrail (under construction)
Custom House

DLR to Beckton
West Silvertown  to Gallions
Pontoon Dock
Connaught tunnel (27 chains (540 m) long)
DLR to Woolwich Arsenal
Silvertown Tramway (left) was first EC&TJR route

Silvertown
North Woolwich (for Woolwich Free Ferry)
Crossrail to Abbey Wood (under construction)

The Eastern Counties and Thames Junction Railway in east London connected the Royal Docks with the Eastern Counties Railway (ECR). Authorised in 1844, it opened in 1846, and was absorbed by the ECR in 1847. The ECR amalgamated with other railways to form the Great Eastern Railway in 1862.[1][2]

History

The EC&TJR was incorporated on 4 July 1844. It opened on 19 April 1846 from Stratford to Canning Town to transport coal from a pier at the mouth of Bow Creek. A year later it was extended to North Woolwich via West Silvertown, allowing connections with the Woolwich Ferry; the same year it was taken over by the North London Railway.[3]

When the Royal Victoria Dock opened in 1855 the line between Canning Town and North Woolwich had to have a swingbridge over the entrance to the dock, which increased journey times. In response, the line was rerouted north of the dock through two new stations, at Custom House and Tidal Basin. The southern line remained in service for local factories and was renamed the Silvertown Tramway.

After the construction of the Albert Dock, with the same problem envisaged on the route to Silvertown, in 1878 the railway built the 600 m (2,000 ft) cut and cover Connaught Tunnel (also known as the Silvertown Tunnel or Albert Dock Tunnel), at the new dock's entrance; it emerges on the eastern side just short of the old Tate & Lyle factory. In 1935, after it was discovered that larger ships entering the docks were scraping the roof of the tunnel, an iron casing was placed along the section under the dock.[4]

In 1872 the Gas Light and Coke Company opened a branch running north-east to Beckton (not the site of Beckton DLR station) to serve its gasworks;[5] in 1880, as the Royal Albert Dock opened, a branch line to Gallions was opened by the London & St Katherine Dock Company, which ran due east along the north edge of the dock to the River Thames on the far side of the dock. Both of these branches left the main line at Custom House. At the same time, the line was connected to the Palace Gates Line to Palace Gates in North London, and regular services between North Woolwich and Palace Gates operated. The line was quadrupled between Stratford Market and Tidal Basin in stages by 1892, though the western pair of tracks became less used over the years.

Demise

The lines to Beckton and Gallions closed after bomb damage during the Blitz, as did Tidal Basin station. The line to Beckton reopened for goods (by-products from the gasworks), closing in 1972.[5] The Palace Gates-North Woolwich line continued until 1963, when services were rerouted to Tottenham Hale, later terminating at Stratford.

In 1979 the diesel service to Broad Street was diverted via the old North London Railway via Dalston Kingsland to Camden Road. Until then Broad Street was the eastern terminus of the CrossTown LinkLine, today the North London Line.

The start of the renaissance of the line came in 1985, when third rail electrification was extended from Dalston Junction via Stratford to North Woolwich, and electric trains started to run through from Richmond. The service was never as popular south of Stratford as on the rest of this route, and as services were enhanced from the original frequency the extra trains were terminated at Stratford. Part of the reason for this was that only one track beyond Custom House through the Connaught Tunnel was electrified, which restricted the service that could be provided on the easternmost section.

Redevelopment

London Underground Jubilee line

The Jubilee Line Extension of the London Underground was built along the alignment of the former western tracks from Canning Town to Stratford, and opened in 1999. This took much of the remaining traffic from the line south of Stratford.

Docklands Light Railway

Part of the line between Custom House and Gallions was redeveloped as the Beckton branch of the Docklands Light Railway, as was a short section of the Beckton line between Woolwich Manor Way and the new Royal Docks Road.

With opening of the King George V branch of the DLR, the North London Line between Stratford and North Woolwich closed in December 2006. The stretch between Canning Town and Stratford was converted to become the Stratford International branch of the DLR, which opened in September 2011.

Crossrail

The Custom House to North Woolwich section, including a £50M investment to renovate and reuse the Connaught tunnel,[6] is being undertaken for Crossrail.[4]

Stations

Main line (opened 1846):

Branch from Custom House to Beckton (opened 1872, closed 1972):

Branch from Custom House to Gallions (opened 1874, closed 1940):

References

  1. Awdry, Christopher (1990). Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies. London: Guild Publishing. p. 126. CN 8983.
  2. "News from North Woolwich" (PDF).
  3. McCarthy, Colin; McCarthy, David (2009). Railways of Britain – London North of the Thames. Hersham, Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing. pp. 15–16. ISBN 978-0-7110-3346-7.
  4. 1 2 Eleftheriou, Krista (2 February 2012). "Crossrail outlines new approach to refurbishing the Connaught Tunnel". Crossrail.co.uk. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
  5. 1 2 Jackson A.A, London's Local Railways, David & Charles, 1978, ISBN 0-7153-7479-6
  6. Tom Edwards (27 April 2011). "Crossrail brings old tunnel back to life". BBC London. Retrieved 30 August 2011.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.