Rugby–Birmingham–Stafford Line

Rugby–Birmingham–Stafford Line
Overview
Locale

West Midlands (region)
West Midlands
Wolverhampton

Staffordshire
Operation
Opened 1837
Owner Network Rail
Technical
Track gauge Standard gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Rugby-Birmingham-Stafford Line
Legend
West Coast Main Line
Stafford and Uttoxeter Railway
Stafford to Wellington Line
Stafford
West Coast Main Line (Trent Valley Line)
Penkridge
Littleton Colliery
Gailey
Four Ashes
Bushbury Junction
Wolverhampton to Shrewsbury Line
Walsall to Wolverhampton Line
Victoria Basin
Wolverhampton (High Level)
Wolverhampton Low Level
Walsall to Wolverhampton Line
Walsall to Wolverhampton Line
Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway
Wolverhampton Steel Terminal
Chillington Wharf
Midland Metro
Monmore Green
Ettingshall Road
Coseley
Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton Railway
Princes End Branch Line
Tipton
South Staffordshire Line
Dudley Port
Albion
Sandwell and Dudley
Spon Lane
Smethwick Galton Bridge
Birmingham to Worcester via Kidderminster Line
Smethwick Rolfe Street
Soho
Chase Line
Soho EMU Depot
Winson Green
Harborne Branch Line
Monument Lane
Cross Country Route / Cross-City Line
Birmingham New Street
Chiltern Main Line
Curzon Street
Cross-City Line / Chase Line
Camp Hill Line
Cross Country Route / Birmingham to Peterborough Line
Stechford and Aston Line
Stechford
Lea Hall
Marston Green
Birmingham International
Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway
Hampton-in-Arden
Berkswell
Coventry to Leamington Line
Tile Hill
Canley
Coventry to Nuneaton Line
Coventry
Coventry to Leamington Line
Coventry to Nuneaton Line
Brandon and Wolston
West Coast Main Line (Trent Valley Line)
Leamington to Rugby Line
Midland Counties Railway
Rugby
Rugby and Stamford Railway
Great Central Main Line
West Coast Main Line

The Rugby–Birmingham–Stafford Line (also known as the Birmingham loop[1]) is a railway line in central England. It is a loop off the West Coast Main Line (WCML) between Rugby and Stafford via the West Midlands cities of Coventry, Birmingham and Wolverhampton.

Contents

Places served

The cities, towns and villages served by the line are listed below.

History

The line from Rugby to Birmingham Curzon Street opened as part of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1838. A year earlier, the Grand Junction Railway had opened from Curzon Street to Wolverhampton, Stafford and north to the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. However, this ran via Aston to Wolverhampton (see map). These two companies merged in 1846 to form the London and North Western Railway (LNWR). On 1 July 1852, the line from Birmingham to Wolverhampton via Smethwick opened by the Birmingham, Wolverhampton and Stour Valley Railway, which was later absorbed by the LNWR.[2]

The LNWR itself became part of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) in 1923, and part of British Railways at Nationalisation in 1948.

The line was electrified along with the rest of the WCML during the late 1960s in the wake of the BR 1955 Modernisation Plan.

In 1987 twelve different horse sculptures by Kevin Atherton, titled Iron Horse, were erected between New Street station and Wolverhampton.[3]

Services

Main-line services are operated by Virgin Trains and London Midland, and stop at the principal stations only. These are joined by occasional services over the northern section of the route by Arriva Trains Wales. Local services are operated by London Midland, generally to the following daytime patterns:

Trains from London to the north of England and Scotland are diverted via this route at some weekends, due to engineering work on the Trent Valley Line - the direct route from Rugby to Stafford.

References

  1. ^ Network Rail Route 17 PDF
  2. ^ [www.tiptoncivicsociety.co.uk/brief-history-of-tipton.php]
  3. ^ Public Sculpture of Birmingham including Sutton Coldfield, George T. Noszlopy, edited Jeremy Beach, 1998, ISBN 0-85323-692-5

External links