Brighton Main Line

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Brighton Main Line
South Eastern Main Line
To Charing Cross, Blackfriars,
Thameslink line and Cannon Street
London Bridge
Spa Road Closed 15th March 1915
Southwark Park Closed 1915
Inner South London Line
To London Victoria
Greenwich Line
To Greenwich and North Kent Line
South Eastern Main Line
To Kent Coast
London Victoria
Victoria carridge sidings
Grosvenor Bridge over River Thames
Battersea Park
SWML
To Waterloo
Chatham Main Line
To Kent Coast
Inner South London Line
To London Bridge
SWML
To Waterloo
West London Line
To Watford
Clapham Junction
SWT suburban lines
From Shepperton, Strawberry Hill, Hounslow,
Staines, Windsor and Reading
SWML
From South West
Wandsworth Common
Balham
Outer South London Line
To Streatham Hill
To Sutton
For Sutton & Mole Valley Line
To London Bridge
Streatham Common
Norbury
Thornton Heath
Selhurst
ELL
To To Docklands and The City
New Cross gate
Nunhead to Lewisham link
Brockley
Catford Loop Line
Honor Oak Park
Forest Hill
Sydenham
Outer South London Line
From Crystal Palace
Chatham Main Line
Penge West
Anerley
? line
To Birkbeck
? line
To Crystal Palace
Norwood Junction
Selhurt Depot
Sutton & Mole Valley Line
To West Croydon
Line splits between London Victoria and London Bridge
East Croydon sidings
East Croydon
South Croydon
Oxted Line
To East Grinstead and Uckfield
Purley Oaks
Purley
Tattenham Corner Line
Caterham Line
"Quarry line"
Coulsdon South
Hooton Tunnels
M23
M25
Merstham
Redhill
North Downs Line
To Reading
Redhill to Tonbridge Line
To Tonbridge
Redhill sidings
"Quarry line"
Earlswood
Salfords
Horley
A23 to M23 link
Gatwick Airport
A2011
Three Bridges
Arun Valley Line
To Horsham
Three Bridges works
Closed line to East Grinstead
Three Bridges sidings
Three Bridges sidings
Three Bridges sidings
M23
Balcombe
River Ouse
Closed line to Horsted Keynes
Aggregates site
Haywards Heath
Wivelsfield
From East Coastway Line
To Hastings
Burgess Hill
Hassocks
A27 to A23 spur
A27
Patcham Tunnel
Preston Park
from West Coastway Line
Brighton carriage sidings
East Coastway Line
To Hastings
West Coastway Line
To Portsmouth and Southampton
Brighton


The Brighton Main Line is the British railway line from London Victoria and London Bridge to Brighton. The route is approximately 50 miles (80 km) in length. It is operated by Southern and First Capital Connect and is electrified throughout. Several other operators Gatwick Express, South Eastern Trains and Virgin Cross Country also operate on certain parts of the route.

Contents

[edit] History of the line

There were no fewer than six original proposals to build a railway between London and Brighton: the London and Brighton Railway (L&BR) emerged with an Act of Parliament of 15 July 1837. The scheme was to build a line from a junction with the London and Croydon Railway (L&CR) (with its terminus at London Bridge) to Brighton, with two branches: one to Newhaven, the other to Shoreham-by-Sea.

Opening took place as follows:

12 May 1840: Brighton to Shoreham-by-Sea (all the materials for the line having arrived by sea.)
12 July 1841: Norwood Junction, London (L&CR) to Haywards Heath.
21 September 1841: the final section from Haywards Heath to Brighton.

The Newhaven section did not materialise until 1846, when the Brighton - Hastings line opened. Also in 1846 the L&CR and L&BR amalgamated; the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LB&SCR) came into being. In 1860 the line between London Victoria and Balham opened, and the Brighton Main Line was completed in 1862.

In the early days, the LB&SCR and the South Eastern Railway (SER) had been forced by an Act of Parliament to share the route southwards from London as far as Redhill. This caused a great deal of friction, since Redhill was an SER station, and quarrels broke out between the two companies to the extent that the LB&SCR built an avoiding line between Coulsdon North and Earlswood which became known as the Quarry Line, still used by fast trains avoiding Redhill. It was opened on 8 November 1899 (1 April 1900 for passenger traffic).

[edit] Electrification

The LB&SCR began electrification of its lines on 1 December 1909 when its South London Line was equipped with high-tension single-phase system with overhead conductors; within three years many more of its suburban services were converted. After the 1923 grouping the main line as far as Coulsdon North came into use using overhead conductors, but the new Southern Railway had by now decided upon the third-rail system, as adopted by another of its constituents, the London and South Western Railway. In 1928/29 the entire network was converted to third rail operation, and subsequent conversion followed on that basis. The third rail system is electrified at 750V DC and underwent a recent power supply upgrade prior to the introduction of the new Electrostar stock operated by Southern

Dates of electrification were are follows:

[edit] Services

There are now many more trains from Victoria to Brighton than from London Bridge: a reversal of the original services. The line is four-tracked, except along the Quarry Line, the section through the Balcombe Tunnel between Three Bridges and Haywards Heath, and from Haywards Heath to Preston Park which passes through Clayton Tunnel south of Hassocks.

The fastest services from Brighton to Victoria stop only at East Croydon and Clapham Junction, though some "express" services also call at Gatwick Airport. First Capital Connect services from Brighton to London Bridge using the Thameslink route continue across London to Blackfriars, City Thameslink, Farringdon and King's Cross, and then on to Luton and Bedford. (Southern Trains services to London Bridge do not continue north of the River Thames.)

[edit] Branching routes

From Victoria, the following other services use the Line, but branch off where shown: