Great Western and Great Central Joint Railway

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Great Western & Great Central Joint
STR
To Banbury and Birmingham Snow Hill
eABZrg
To Brackley
eHST
Haddenham*
eHST
Ilmer Halt
exSTRlg STR
To Watlington or Oxford
exSTRlf ABZdg HSTR
To Aylesbury and Brackley
BHF
Princes Risborough
HST
Saunderton
eHST
West Wycombe
BHF
High Wycombe
BHF
Beaconsfield
HST
Seer Green & Jordans
BHF
Gerrards Cross
HST
Denham Golf Club
BHF
Denham
eHST
South Harefield Halt
BHF
West Ruislip
eHST
Ruislip Gardens
HST
South Ruislip
ABZlf
To London Marylebone
STR
To London Paddington


eHST
Closed station *(Haddenham replaced by Haddenham & Thame)

The Great Western and Great Central Joint Railway (GW&GCJR) was a joint venture supported by the Great Western Railway (GWR) and Great Central Railway (GCR) and run by the Great Western and Great Central Joint Committee. The original arrangement was agreed between the two companies in September 1898. The line and the working arrangement were authorised by the Great Western and Great Central Railway Companies Act of 1 August 1899 and opened in 1906. It was also known as the Alternative Route.

In 1898 the GCR's London Extension was in the final stages of construction, ready for its opening in March 1899. The London Extension had been designed to meet up with the Metropolitan Railway (MetR) tracks at Quainton Road north west of Aylesbury. Since the inception of the project relations between the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Company (the GCR's original name) had deteriorated markedly. This was one of the prime motivations on behalf of the GCR to bring the GW&GCJR into existence. When the route was completed it provided an alternative route for inter-city expresses from its wholly-owned and operated London Extension from north of its junction with the MetR to its tracks at Northolt Junction on the new GCR line to Neasden Junction authorised by the Great Central Act of 12 August 1898. By the time of its opening the new pair of MetR double-tracks, from Neasden to the approach to Marylebone station had been ceded to the GCR in 1903. Thus the GCR was no longer at the mercy of the MetR. Ironically by that time reasonable relations had been established with the MetR.

The GW&GCJR included major ugrading of the GWR line between High Wycombe and Princes Risborough, converting it from single to double track. A junction was formed from the GCR tracks at Greatmoor a little to the east of Grendon Underwood and the link to Princes Risborough completed. At the southern end, another new line was built from High Wycombe via Beaconsfield, Gerrards Cross, Denham and Ruislip to Northolt Junction where the line divided: the northern path was the GCR's link to Neasden, and southern path led on to the GWR's mainline via Greenford.

Presently, major sections of the route form the southern part of Chiltern Railways main line from Birmingham Snow Hill to London's Marylebone station via Bicester, specifically from Princes Risborough to Neasden Junction.

[edit] References

Dow, George (1965) Great Central, Vol II : Domination of Watkin, 1864-1899, London : Ian Allan, 437p

Dow, George (1965) Great Central, Vol III : Fay sets the pace, London : Ian Allan, 422p

[edit] See also