Brighton Main Line
Brighton Main Line | |
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A Southern class 377 Electrostar at Hassocks. | |
Overview | |
Type | Commuter rail, Suburban rail |
System | National Rail |
Status | Operational |
Locale |
Greater London South East England |
Termini |
London Bridge London Victoria Brighton |
Operation | |
Opened | 1841 (fully) |
Owner | Network Rail |
Operator(s) |
Govia Thameslink Railway Great Western Railway |
Depot(s) |
Selhurst Brighton Lovers Walk |
Rolling stock |
Class 165 "Turbo" Class 166 "Turbo Express" Class 171 "Turbostar" Class 319 Class 377 "Electrostar" Class 387 "Electrostar" Class 442 "Wessex Electric" Class 455 |
Technical | |
No. of tracks | 2-4 |
Track gauge | Standard Gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) |
Electrification | 750 V DC third rail |
Operating speed | 100 mph (160 km/h) maximum |
The Brighton Main Line is a British railway line divided in the north into two sections running from London Victoria and London Bridge to Brighton. It is about 51 miles (81 km) long, and is electrified throughout. Nearly all passenger trains are provided by Govia Thameslink Railway which operates the Southern, Gatwick Express and Thameslink brands. A small section has Great Western Railway services, currently sole operator of the line from Gatwick Airport to Reading, Berkshire known as the North Downs Line. The many Sussex services to Central London use the line and generally its branches as do south London, East Surrey and Tonbridge, Kent services.
History and geography of the line
Original proposals
There were 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 after a prolonged and expensive battle, with the most direct route, from the London and Croydon Railway (L&CR) at Norwood Junction to Brighton, using the L&CR from Norwood to London Bridge. A condition required by Parliament was that the railway should share its line between Croydon and Redhill with the South Eastern Railway main line to Dover. This clause gave rise to 60 years of disputes between the two companies.
Brighton line
Land use between London and Brighton was largely rural. The line was planned to traverse the North Downs, the Wealden ridge and the South Downs while avoiding steep gradients.
Due to the difficult terrain and relatively sparse population between Croydon and Brighton, the line by-passed several towns and villages on the London-Brighton road, such as Reigate and Crawley. Even so, it required substantial earthworks, notably through the North Downs at Merstham, with one of the largest cuttings in Britain; seven tunnels (Merstham, Quarry, Redhill, Balcombe, Haywards Heath, Clayton and Patcham); and several embankments. To avoid steep gradients or detours, the 1,475-foot-long (450 m), maximum 96-foot-high (29 m) Ouse Valley Viaduct was built near Balcombe.
The line opened in two stages:
- 12 July 1841: Norwood Junction to Haywards Heath.
- 21 September 1841: to Brighton.
Branch lines
The branch line from Brighton to Shoreham-by-Sea was finished on 12 May 1840, before the main line, as it did not involve significant civil engineering works (all the materials arrived by sea from mainland Europe). The Newhaven section did not materialise until 1846, when the Brighton - Hastings line was opened by the Brighton Lewes and Hastings Railway. A few weeks later the L&CR, the L&BR and other railways in Sussex amalgamated to form the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LB&SCR).
Lines to Victoria
A branch line from Norwood to Crystal Palace was built in 1851, extending to Sydenham in 1854, Balham and Wandsworth in 1856, Battersea in 1858, and London Victoria in 1860. A cut-off line reducing the distance between East Croydon and Balham opened in 1862.
Quarry line
There were frequent disputes resulting from the companies' sharing of the busy section between East Croydon and Redhill. The LB&SCR owned the section between East Croydon and Coulsdon North, and the SER (later the South Eastern and Chatham Railway) from Coulsdon South to Redhill. Eventually the LB&SCR built the "Quarry Line", a by-pass for express trains between Coulsdon North and Earlswood, avoiding Redhill. It opened on 8 November 1899 (1 April 1900 for passengers trains).
Electrification
The line was the first UK main line to be electrified throughout. The LB&SCR electrified its South London Line on 1 December 1909 using an overhead high-tension single-phase system; within three years the line from Victoria to Selhurst railway station was also converted, and in 1920, from London Bridge to South Croydon. In 1921 plans were drawn up to extend overhead electrification to Brighton.[1] However, the 1923 grouping intervened and it only reached Coulsdon North since the Southern Railway decided to standardise on the third-rail system of the former London and South Western Railway. In 1928/29 the lines were converted to third-rail operation.
The decision to electrify the entire line was taken in 1929, and Coulsdon North – Three Bridges opened in July 1932, to Brighton and West Worthing on 1 January 1933.[2]
The third rail is electrified at 750 V DC, and in recent years has had its power supply upgraded ready for the introduction of Electrostar stock by Southern. Traction current supply is supervised by Lewisham, Selhurst and Brighton electrical control rooms, these will be superseded in forthcoming years by the Three Bridges ROC.[3]
Accidents and incidents
- On 8 March 1965, a freight train was derailed at Streatham Common. All four lines were blocked and the line was closed between Balham and Selhurst.[4]
- On 16 December 1972, two electric multiple unit passenger trains were in collision at Copyhold Junction, West Sussex after the driver of one of them misread signals. Fifteen people were injured.[5]
- On 4 March 1989 an electric multiple unit passed a signal at danger and collided with another just north of Purley station, causing part of it to fall down the embankment. Five people were killed and 88 were injured.
Services
The line is four-track to Balcombe Tunnel junction, where it becomes double track as far as Preston Park. Except for a pair of platform loops at Haywards Heath, there are no passing loops.
The fastest trains from Brighton to Victoria stop only at East Croydon and Clapham Junction; some trains also stop at Haywards Heath. Thameslink services from Brighton via London Bridge continue via Thameslink to Blackfriars, City Thameslink, Farringdon, St Pancras, and stations in North London and Hertfordshire, to Luton and Bedford.
Non-stop Gatwick Express trains run between London Victoria and Gatwick Airport. A train departs in both directions every 15 minutes, with a journey time of 30 minutes. Six weekday peak-hour trains are extended to or from Brighton, calling at up to five other stations south of Gatwick.
Great Western Railway run trains between Gatwick Airport and Reading via Redhill and the North Downs Line.
A 24-hour service runs between Three Bridges and London Victoria and Three Bridges and Bedford via Blackfriars with a frequency of 1 train an hour on each route in the early hours of the morning.
Contingency plans
From Balcombe Tunnel junction to Preston Park the tracks reduce from quadruple to double track.[6] A train that fails in this section causes most disruption, so two provisions are in place to keep the service running.
Bi-directional signalling
The line is divided into three sections of bi-directional signalling, which allows trains to cross over to the opposite line and run in the "wrong direction". These are:
- Balcombe Tunnel junction to Copyhold Junction (just north of Haywards Heath).
- Haywards Heath to Keymer Junction (just south of Wivelsfield).
- Keymer Junction to Preston Park.
Diversionary route
The section from Wivelsfield to Preston Park can be bypassed by turning eastwards onto the Lewes line at Keymer Junction. At Lewes trains can reverse to head westwards to Brighton via the East Branch line, rejoining the main line at Montpelier Junction. However this diversion does not allow trains to call at Burgess Hill, Hassocks, and Preston Park.
Branching routes
Branches from the line to Victoria
- between London Victoria and Battersea Park, the Chatham Main Line to North Kent
- at Battersea Park, the South London Line to London Bridge
- at Balham, the Crystal Palace Line via Crystal Palace[n 1]
- at Selhurst, to West Croydon
Branches from the line to London Bridge
- between London Bridge and New Cross Gate, the South Eastern Main Line and South London Line
- at New Cross Gate, the East London Line to Highbury & Islington
- at Sydenham, the Crystal Palace Line to Streatham Hill and via Balham to London Victoria
- at Norwood Junction, via Crystal Palace to London Victoria, London Bridge and Blackfriars, and to West Croydon
Branches south of East Croydon
- at South Croydon, the Oxted branch line[n 2]
- at Purley, the Caterham and Tattenham Corner Lines[n 3]
- at Redhill, the North Downs Line to the west[n 4], and the Tonbridge branch[n 5]
- at Three Bridges, the Arun Valley Line[n 6] to Portsmouth via Horsham[n 7][n 8]
- at Wivelsfield[n 9] the East Coastway Line to Eastbourne and Hastings via Lewes direct, avoiding Brighton[n 10]
- at Preston Park, a branch of the West Coastway Line to Littlehampton, avoiding Brighton[n 11]
- at Brighton, the West Coastway Line; and the East Coastway Line to Eastbourne, Hastings and Seaford
Notes
- ↑ Direct stopping-service branch lines
- ↑ A semi-fast/fast through branch line
- ↑ Semi-fast/fast branch lines
- ↑ A direct service to Reigate on this line has long been provided, fast/semi-fast.
- ↑ A fast/semi-fast through branch line
- ↑ A fast/semi-fast through branch line
- ↑ eastward, a line to East Grinstead closed in 1967
- ↑ At Haywards Heath, the line via Ardingly and Horsted Keynes, closed in 1963: Currently Network Rail largely disused sidings to Ardingly; Horsted Keynes railway station section is now part of the Bluebell Railway between East Grinstead and Sheffield Park
- ↑ Keymer Junction
- ↑ A fast/semi-fast through branch line
- ↑ A fast/semi-fast through branch line
References
- ↑ Dawson (1921).
- ↑ Bonavia (1987) 87-89.
- ↑ Network Rail: Sectional Appetndix module KSW2/LOR SO500 Sequence 010
- ↑ Moody (1979) p163
- ↑ Moody (1979) p219
- ↑ "Quail Route Map 5".
Sources
- Bonavia, Michael R. (1987). The history of the Southern Railway London:Unwin Hyman. ISBN 0-04-385107-X.
- Dawson, Philip, (1921) Report by Sir Philip Dawson on proposed substitution of electric for steam operation for suburban, local and mainline passenger and freight services, London Brighton and South Coast Railway.
- Moody, G. T. (1979) [1957]. Southern Electric 1909-1979 (Fifth ed.). Shepperton: Ian Allan Ltd. ISBN 0 7110 0924 4.
External links
- London to Brighton in two minutes - time-lapse video.
- Brighton Main Line 2 website
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