Rail (UK)

Widened Lines

With Thameslink services now running north-south through London, courtesy of the Widened Lines, PHILIP HAIGH looks at the history of rail services through King’s Cross, Farringdon and Moorgate

-

RAIL studies the history of the Widened Lines, now being used to carry north-south Thameslink services through London.

It rarely takes long in any debate about overcrowde­d commuter trains before cattle trucks get a mention. There would be a cheap gag here had cattle trucks run to Smithfield Meat Market using London’s City Widened Lines, because today Thameslink uses these very tracks.

Sadly, for comedians, London’s livestock market moved from Smithfield to Copenhagen Fields in 1855, before today’s market opened in 1868, so only slaughtere­d meat arrived by rail.

The Widened Lines themselves ran between King’s Cross and Moorgate. They acquired their name in 1868, when the Metropolit­an Railway’s 1863 line was doubled from two to four tracks. The Met’s 1863 line was partly financed by the Great Western Railway, and ran from Paddington to Farringdon and then to Moorgate in 1865. Paddington provided a link with the GWR, and it was this company that ran a large depot under a part of Smithfield Meat Market, which sat between Farringdon Street and Aldersgate (now Barbican) stations.

Smithfield Market Tenants’ Associatio­n notes: “The arrival of the railways had already brought about an amazing revolution in the movement of animals. Before then fresh meat could only be transporte­d on the hoof, which took time and was wasteful, as it was reckoned that each cow lost about 20 pounds in weight on a 100-mile walk.”

Rail was the backbone of the 19th century’s distributi­on system, so incorporat­ing rail into Smithfield’s new market was essential. The GWR’s depot featured six long roads and 29 wagon turntables that gave access to different roads. There was a profusion of cranes and two hydraulic lifts to take meat to the traders above. The first train arrived on May 1 1869 and the last left on July 28 1962.

The Great Western’s involvemen­t led to broad-gauge tracks being laid to Moorgate (actually dual-gauge). The final broad-gauge train ran on March 15 1869, with GW standard gauge trains starting from June 1 1869 after the company assembled sufficient stock for services.

Smithfield wasn’t the only goods depot in the area. The Great Northern’s was by Farringdon Road, on the west side of the station, while the Midland Railway’s was at Whitecross Street, between Aldersgate (Barbican) and Moorgate stations, a short distance to the east. The Metropolit­an Railway had a depot at Vine Street, just north of Farringdon.

Great Northern freight trains reached its depot (and passengers trains Moorgate) via two single-line chords at King’s Cross. These

sat either side of the station - the western one was labelled Hotel Curve (it passed under the Great Northern Hotel) and dealt with trains leaving the widened lines (northbound), and the eastern one was York Road Curve (named after the road running alongside the station’s eastern wall) and dealt with southbound trains running to the widened lines.

Each had a passenger platform. Both chords curved sharply. It’s possible today to peer into York Road Curve through gratings in Bravington Walk, just off Pentonvill­e Road. ( Just to complicate matters, there was a third curve. It ran west from York Road Curve, crossing Hotel Curve on the flat, and allowed trains to head towards Paddington. It opened in 1863 and closed in 1865.)

These curves opened in 1863 and closed in 1977, following the withdrawal of inner suburban passenger services to Moorgate in 1976. The trains were a mix of diesel multiple units (DMUs) and locomotive­s, usually Class 31s, hauling Mk 1 suburban coaches. At 57ft, these coaches were shorter than standard 63ft 6in Mk 1 coaches. They had no gangways between coaches and were compartmen­t stock with no corridor. Some of these coaches still run today on the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway and the North Norfolk Railway.

The Metropolit­an worked with the London Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR) to link Farringdon with Blackfriar­s in 1866. This enabled the Great Northern Railway to run passenger trains and heavy coal trains through Ludgate Hill and Herne Hill. The LCDR ran to King’s Cross with trains that included through coaches from Dover and Ramsgate. All this added to the pressure on what was still a twintrack railway, and prompted the Metropolit­an Railway to expand.

The LCDR then persuaded the Metropolit­an to build a south-to-east curve that allowed the LCDR to run trains from Victoria, south of the River Thames, to serve Moorgate. These started in 1871 and reached a peak of 80 trains per day (which was also the limit imposed by the LCDR’s agreement with the Metropolit­an Railway).

However, the service was not a long-term success. By 1911, the South Eastern and Chatham Railway (a partnershi­p between

the LCDR and the South Eastern Railway) recorded just 78 passengers alighting from 52 trains arriving at Moorgate between 0703 and 1104. The SECR withdrew trains from the curve in 1916, with calls to cut coal consumptio­n in the First World War a handy excuse.

The curve was formally closed in 1927, after the Southern Railway paid the Metropolit­an £ 25,000 to release it from the agreement its LCDR predecesso­r had made in 1870. The curve’s tunnel was demolished in 1958 following a fire in the poultry market above it, that led to a new market being erected.

The SECR’s 1916 withdrawal left only freight trains using Snow Hill Tunnel between Blackfriar­s and Farringdon. By 1946, it was still busy with 70 trains per day to and from Ferme Park, north of Finsbury Park on the East Coast Main Line. But traffic declined over the following decades and the line closed in 1969, leaving the Widened Lines simply serving Moorgate. Thameslink restored Snow Hill services in 1988 ( RAIL 852).

The Midland Railway’s connection opened in 1868, with a twin-track line that curved under the company’s magnificen­t St Pancras station to surface a short way north of the station and join the Midland Main Line at Kentish Town Junction.

This link had the Widened Lines running on the north side of Metropolit­an tracks. Hefty ironwork (the Ray Street Gridiron) just north of Farringdon station allowed the two pairs of lines to cross, with the Widened Lines ducking under the others so that as the pair turned southwards, the newer lines were on the west.

The Midland Railway started BedfordMoo­rgate services in July 1868 ( before it had finished building St Pancras). It later added services from South Tottenham to Moorgate and introduced Hendon-Victoria services using the City Widened Liines.

Once the Widened Lines opened in 1868, their first user was Great Northern Railway’s goods trains (these ran to Farringdon from January 1868), with limited passenger services starting the following month.

In March, the GNR began joint services with the LCDR between Edgware and Ludgate Hill, extending to Loughborou­gh Junction that summer at the same time as GNR suburban trains switched to Moorgate. The extra capacity allowed the GNR to run services between Muswell Hill and Enfield in north London and Woolwich Arsenal.

When competitio­n from Tube and tram lines emerged at the turn of the century, passenger services over the Widened Lines suffered. The GNR and LCDR ceased services in 1907, while LCDR trains with the Midland lasted another year. The Great Western’s half-hourly Aldgate to Mansion House via Westbourne Park, Kensington (Addison Road) and Earls Court had already gone, in 1905.

This reduction in passenger traffic created space for more freight, which proved very useful when the First World War began in 1914. Over the four years of the war, the Widened Lines carried 250,000 tons of freight and 26,047 special troop and material trains. From early 1915, the line’s remaining passenger trains were restricted to run only between 0800-1000 and 1700-1900. War trains peaked in 1918, with 6,269 troop trains and 58,902 tons of freight.

When the line was doubled, the Metropolit­an Railway expanded its King’s Cross station accordingl­y, allowing passengers to reach a variety of destinatio­ns. Early in the 20th century, two Tube lines began serving King’s Cross with what is now the City Branch of the Northern Line (1907) and the Piccadilly

Over the four years of the war, the Widened Lines carried 250,000 tons of freight and 26,047 special troop and material trains.

Line (1906). This eventually prompted London Transport (it had absorbed the Metropolit­an in 1933) to consider moving its station eastwards, to better link with them.

The new station opened in 1941, closer to King’s Cross, and used some of the space created by a tunnel built in 1868 as part of an aborted plan to extend the widened section westwards to Praed Street Junction near Paddington (where the lines diverge to Hammersmit­h and High Street Kensington). London Undergroun­d’s station for the Circle and Metropolit­an Lines remains on its 1941 site, having been modernised and remodelled in recent years.

Abandoning the Widened Lines extension westward deprived Euston of its chance to connect London and North Western Railway (LNWR) services into Moorgate and the City. However, the LNWR had its own route to the City, with trains leaving the West Coast Main Line at Camden Junction to use the North London Line to Dalston before turning south on an 1865 line to run into Broad Street station. These services clung to life until 1986.

The platforms of the Met’s King’s Cross station remain today and are easily seen from passing LU trains. Those serving the Widened Lines remained in use for many more years, served by trains to and from the East Coast and Midland Main Lines until 1976 and 1979 respective­ly. For Midland passengers, the closure was temporary with the line reopening following modernisat­ion and electrific­ation in 1983. The station was renamed King’s Cross Midland City.

Five years later it became King’s Cross Thameslink, with the reopening of the short section between Farringdon and Blackfriar­s ( RAIL 852). It closed in 2007 when Thameslink’s station also moved west, to sit close to St Pancras and its new internatio­nal services. The platforms remain today, slowly succumbing to pigeon droppings and the dirt of London and passing trains. The new station’s platforms are considerab­ly wider than the old ones, and the station itself is better placed to serve passengers for St Pancras or King’s Cross services.

Having lost the link to the East Coast Main Line in 1976, trains are once more running from the Widened Lines to ECML destinatio­ns, courtesy of Canal Tunnels. The tunnels were built a decade ago as part of High Speed 1’s remodellin­g of St Pancras. They lay idle while the rest of Thameslink was upgraded, but started carrying trains earlier this year.

However, their passengers can no longer travel directly to Moorgate, because Thameslink’s upgrade severed the link between the Widened Lines and Moorgate in 2009. Inner suburban trains still run from

the East Coast Main Line ( Welwyn Garden City and Hertford North) to Moorgate, but they go via Finsbury Park and the Northern City Line, which opened in 1976 having shut in 1975 for conversion from a London Undergroun­d line.

Instead, the Widened Lines now host outersubur­ban services from Peterborou­gh and Cambridge that traditiona­lly terminated at King’s Cross, as well as trains from Bedford, as they have since 1983.

All these trains head south from Farringdon to Blackfriar­s to cross the River Thames for Brighton, Sevenoaks and several other destinatio­ns. As they head beyond London Bridge, many will pass New Cross Gate, which until 2007 was one of the southern termini of LU’s East London Line (the other was New Cross). The East London Line ran north under the River Thames to its northern terminus at Shoreditch.

LU used the same trains as on its Metropolit­an Line to shuttle back-andforward. It moved them to and from their main depot at Neasden via St Mary’s Curve towards Aldgate East, Moorgate and the Widened Lines corridor.

The ELL closed in 2007 for conversion to heavy rail operation as part of London Overground. This included building a bridge over the Great Eastern Main Line and a connection to the formation of the line into Broad Street that closed in 1986. It reopened in 2010 and later became part of a route circling London.

St Mary’s Curve is no more. It closed with the ELL but had lost its passenger service as long ago as 1939. But consider that a little over a century ago, London had a railway that took trains from the GWR, fed them through a line under central London to the City, and then had tracks (if not services) that ran further east to split near Whitechape­l to head south under the River Thames and eastwards towards Essex.

London is shortly to receive a new railway. It will take trains from the Great Western Main Line and feed them under central London to reach a junction near Whitechape­l, where they will run under the Thames or head east to Essex. It’s called Crossrail and will operate as the Elizabeth Line.

Meanwhile, the City Widened Lines once more serve a wide range of destinatio­ns (outer rather than inner-suburban), with Thameslink’s expansion. What’s missing today is freight, although with intensive passenger services on Thameslink and on London Undergroun­d sub-surface and Tube lines, there’s no room.

Had the Widened Lines expanded west to Praed Street Junction over a century ago, many of London Undergroun­d’s congestion problems between its Circle, Metropolit­an and Hammersmit­h and City Lines would be solved. It’s possible that Crossrail would not have been needed.

What’s clear from this brief look at the City Widened Lines is that the concept of Thameslink’s expansion or Crossrail is nothing new. The Victorians had grasped it, but the coming of Tube and tram services diminished rail’s market before London’s growing population and employment restored the need for both.

Had the Widened Lines expanded west to Praed Street Junction over a century ago, many of London Undergroun­d’s congestion problems between its Circle, Metropolit­an and Hammersmit­h and City Lines would be solved. It’s possible that Crossrail would not have been needed.

 ??  ??
 ?? GORDON EDGAR. ?? On February 2 1971, London Transport batteryele­ctric locomotive L22 takes a rake of 1938 Northern Line Tube stock over the link to the East Coast Main Line at King’s Cross, bound for LT’s depot at Drayton Park and the Northern Line’s isolated route to Moorgate. It is passing British Rail’s locomotive fuelling point, including ‘Deltic’ 9012 Crepello and Class 40 282.
GORDON EDGAR. On February 2 1971, London Transport batteryele­ctric locomotive L22 takes a rake of 1938 Northern Line Tube stock over the link to the East Coast Main Line at King’s Cross, bound for LT’s depot at Drayton Park and the Northern Line’s isolated route to Moorgate. It is passing British Rail’s locomotive fuelling point, including ‘Deltic’ 9012 Crepello and Class 40 282.
 ?? COLOUR RAIL. ?? York Road Curve was one of two single-line chords opened in 1863 to link the East Coast Main Line with the Metropolit­an Railway. It closed in 1977. Here British Rail DMUs, with a Cravens Class 105 on the rear, descend towards the Widened Lines. This platform was remote from King’s Cross station and had its own entrance.
COLOUR RAIL. York Road Curve was one of two single-line chords opened in 1863 to link the East Coast Main Line with the Metropolit­an Railway. It closed in 1977. Here British Rail DMUs, with a Cravens Class 105 on the rear, descend towards the Widened Lines. This platform was remote from King’s Cross station and had its own entrance.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? P MOFFAT/COLOUR RAIL. ?? Northbound suburban services from Moorgate left the Widened Lines via Hotel Curve to the steeply graded Platform 16 on the west side of King’s Cross. Hotel Curve closed in 1977, after BR diverted East Coast Main Line trains to Moorgate via the Northern City Line through Drayton Park from 1976.
P MOFFAT/COLOUR RAIL. Northbound suburban services from Moorgate left the Widened Lines via Hotel Curve to the steeply graded Platform 16 on the west side of King’s Cross. Hotel Curve closed in 1977, after BR diverted East Coast Main Line trains to Moorgate via the Northern City Line through Drayton Park from 1976.
 ?? RAIL. JOHN E HENDERSON/COLOUR ?? 319056 arrives at King’s Cross Thameslink with the 1011 Cricklewoo­d-Sevenoaks on June 27 1989. Located on the Widened Lines, the station reopened as King’s Cross Midland City in 1983 for trains between Bedford and Moorgate before being renamed King’s Cross Thameslink in 1988 when the Snow Hill tunnel was reinstated. The station closed in December 2007 when it was replaced by new Thameslink platforms under St Pancras Internatio­nal.
RAIL. JOHN E HENDERSON/COLOUR 319056 arrives at King’s Cross Thameslink with the 1011 Cricklewoo­d-Sevenoaks on June 27 1989. Located on the Widened Lines, the station reopened as King’s Cross Midland City in 1983 for trains between Bedford and Moorgate before being renamed King’s Cross Thameslink in 1988 when the Snow Hill tunnel was reinstated. The station closed in December 2007 when it was replaced by new Thameslink platforms under St Pancras Internatio­nal.
 ?? GORDON EDGAR. ?? London Transport used Pannier Tanks built by the Great Western Railway on works trains. At Barbican on June 9 1971, crowds witness the passage of such a train, headed by L94, from Moorgate to Neasden. This was to be the final steam working on London Transport until 150th anniversar­y celebratio­ns for the Metropolit­an Railway returned steam in 2013.
GORDON EDGAR. London Transport used Pannier Tanks built by the Great Western Railway on works trains. At Barbican on June 9 1971, crowds witness the passage of such a train, headed by L94, from Moorgate to Neasden. This was to be the final steam working on London Transport until 150th anniversar­y celebratio­ns for the Metropolit­an Railway returned steam in 2013.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom