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Post by Deleted on Jan 3, 2015 11:05:20 GMT
Having lived in North London all my life (though, of course, moving around), I noticed the convenience of having more than one line in the area.
Whetstone - the Northern, Piccadilly and GN local lines. Edgware - the Jubilee and Northern lines.
But how did this come about? Was it simply a coincidence that the lines run parallel to each other or was it intended?
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Post by Deleted on Jan 3, 2015 14:36:29 GMT
Well, it's certainly not the result of some long established master plan: the rail network we have today is the result of some 180 years of development, growing like Topsy, with lines having been proposed and built (not always to the original ideas or intended extent) by many different (and frequently competing) companies and authorities, and then modified, rearranged, transferred and (sometimes) closed over the years. But the main driver of railway development in the suburbs (in many cases started when it was still country with scattered towns and villages) has remained unchanged - connections to 'central' London (which itself has changed as a concept) - even if if some of the drivers have. And while there have been bouts of planning, they have (necessarily) been based on what was already there as a starting point, and ahave tended to progress slowly and to a lesser extent than intended before being superceded by the next bout of planning, driven by changed circumstances.
And the other thing to remember is that in the past, the area served by a line and its stations (onward connections on foot or horse and cart!) was probably conceptually much smaller than we might think today.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 4, 2015 10:46:18 GMT
Well, it's certainly not the result of some long established master plan: the rail network we have today is the result of some 180 years of development, growing like Topsy, with lines having been proposed and built (not always to the original ideas or intended extent) by many different (and frequently competing) companies and authorities, and then modified, rearranged, transferred and (sometimes) closed over the years. But the main driver of railway development in the suburbs (in many cases started when it was still country with scattered towns and villages) has remained unchanged - connections to 'central' London (which itself has changed as a concept) - even if if some of the drivers have. And while there have been bouts of planning, they have (necessarily) been based on what was already there as a starting point, and ahave tended to progress slowly and to a lesser extent than intended before being superceded by the next bout of planning, driven by changed circumstances. And the other thing to remember is that in the past, the area served by a line and its stations (onward connections on foot or horse and cart!) was probably conceptually much smaller than we might think today. So, it was partly to do with competition? Makes sense if I think about it. Kinda wish Moscow was as interconnected as London is. Their suburbs only have one line - can only imagine what would happen if the line is not working.
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Post by grahamhewett on Jan 4, 2015 16:22:36 GMT
@envy123 - etr220 is right; it's also relevant that many of the original radial lines (nearly all, in fact) were not built with suburban traffic in mind - eg the GW, GC, LNW etc.
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Post by norbitonflyer on Jan 4, 2015 17:45:04 GMT
@envy123 - etr220 is right; it's also relevant that many of the original radial lines (nearly all, in fact) were not built with suburban traffic in mind - eg the GW, GC, LNW etc. The GC is actually the exception - as a Johnny-come-lately (opened in 1899) it had to penetrate suburbia using the tracks of an existing railway. For obvious reasons none of its direct long-distance competitors would co-operate: it actually used the tracks of the Metropolitan. One cold cite the London & Greenwich (from Londin Bridge), the London & Blackwall (from Fenchurch Street) , and the North London Railway (from Broad Street) as initially suburban railways, but they soon got absorbed into longer distance routes ( respectively to Brighton, Dover and beyond, to Tilbury and Southend (not then "suburban" in any real sense), and to Birmingham via the LNWR). Indeed even the extensive suburban networks of the SER, LBSCR, LSWR and GER came subsequent to the main lines to Dover, Brighton, Portsmouth, Southampton, Cambridge and Norwich. The "land grab" of competing lines serving the same area was most obvious in SE London and Kent, where most population centres have two stations on different lines (Maidstone, Canterbury, Penge, Bromley, Beckenham, Catford, Dulwich, Epsom Downs/Tattenham Corner) and many more used to (Greenwich, Lewisham, Brockley, Crystal Palace, Chatham). See also Enfield, Hertford, Stanmore, Romford, Windsor, Brentford, Hounslow (particularly tactless of the District to show iuts hand in wanting to extend beyond Houn;sow Town into LSWR territory, given that it relied on LSWR tracks to get beyond Hammersmith!) The parallel branch lines between Watford, Croxley, and Rickmansworth are another example, only now being joined together. The land grab still continued into the 1920s, with the St Helier line opened by the Southern in 1930 - built largely to keep the Combine out of Sutton (which had plans to extend both the Northern Line and the District Line into the area)
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Post by revupminster on Jan 4, 2015 17:59:34 GMT
I would add that the London and Greenwich and the London and Blackwall were originally built to steal river traffic between the city and docks further down the river that had ocean going ships with their ultimate goal being the pleasure grounds at Gravesend. Early railway lines were also built to take goods traffic from the canals which only had a heyday of about 60 years just as motorways were built to take goods traffic from the railways which they have largely done.
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Post by grahamhewett on Jan 4, 2015 21:19:29 GMT
norbitonflyer - a propos the GC, well, to start with, but later also over its own lines and no interest in suburban traffic at any time (even now,the non-Aylesbury services have no suburban traffic worth mentioning. ) revupminster- The L&B'smain original purpose (as I understood it) was to enable City clerks to get to their shipping offices quickly. Again,no commuter traffic as we now know it.
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Post by theblackferret on Jan 4, 2015 21:55:23 GMT
norbitonflyer - a propos the GC, well, to start with, but later also over its own lines and no interest in suburban traffic at any time (even now,the non-Aylesbury services have no suburban traffic worth mentioning. ) revupminster- The L&B'smain original purpose (as I understood it) was to enable City clerks to get to their shipping offices quickly. Again,no commuter traffic as we now know it. You're both right re the L & B's original purpose for passenger traffic. I believe the pleasure steamers were the first consideration when the line was first planned, but it was quickly realised during the construction stage that the clerk traffic was also worth catering for, which is why the line had such an intensive passenger service as soon as it opened. On the commuter front, most lines were originally built within what in those days was considered walking distance to work. Yes, even six or seven miles each way was not considered too much for our Victorian forebears, and it was only once the L & G became the SER, and the L & C merged with the L & B that SE London started to morph, albeit slowly, into commuter territory. I used to walk to work from Victoria to Savile Row & back at least twice a week in the 1980's, which was a couple of miles plus, but even the younger me would have found the distance from Camberwell (which was considered a walking suburb into the 1880's)too much, 18- or 19-80's!
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Post by metrailway on Jan 4, 2015 23:30:22 GMT
Most of the GC passenger traffic on the GW&GC Joint was local as there was little room for GC expresses after accounting for the heavy GC freight and GW expresses.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 5, 2015 10:42:00 GMT
I think that West Hampstead serves to demonstrate the lack of jokned up thinking in the past with 3 lines each very each other and not linked up.Having to go to street level and walk between. 2 stations of the same name to change between the Overground and Jubliee lines is madness!
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Post by norbitonflyer on Jan 5, 2015 14:17:19 GMT
I think that West Hampstead serves to demonstrate the lack of jokned up thinking in the past with 3 lines each very each other and not linked up.Having to go to street level and walk between. 2 stations of the same name to change between the Overground and Jubliee lines is madness! There are actually three, built respectively by the Midland, Metropolitan and North London Railways, in that chronological order. Although the NLR line was older than the other two, there was no station there until some years after the other two opened. Until 1975 it was known as West End Lane, despite being sandwiched by two stations both called West Hampstead.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 5, 2015 19:22:26 GMT
I think that West Hampstead serves to demonstrate the lack of jokned up thinking in the past with 3 lines each very each other and not linked up.Having to go to street level and walk between. 2 stations of the same name to change between the Overground and Jubliee lines is madness! If there was joined up thinking, I'm pretty sure that the GN locals and the Picc/Northern lines would have better interchanges with one another. It would've been great to have a combined Arnos Grove & New Southgate station in all honesty.
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Post by grahamhewett on Jan 5, 2015 20:25:23 GMT
Most of the GC passenger traffic on the GW&GC Joint was local as there was little room for GC expresses after accounting for the heavy GC freight and GW expresses. Although that's true as far as it goes, there was precious little GC local traffic,either - my 1922 Bradshaw shows an approximately hourly (with big gaps) service, no arrival in Marylebone before 08.34 and only one departure after about 1800 - not really a suburban service at all. Very much a case of the line being built for the long distance traffic you describe, with anything local being incidental -which was my point,in fact.
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Post by Tomcakes on Jan 5, 2015 22:13:18 GMT
An obvious advantage to the passenger is that, during times of disruption, alternative routes are plentiful. A passenger at High Barnet, for instance, can quite easily hop on a 34/307/384 service bus which will take him to a selection of Picc line stations. I seem to recall that the Picc extension to Cockfosters was plotted as approximately halfway between two LNER branches, there being little else in the area to guide its route - though I can't find a source for this. I think that West Hampstead serves to demonstrate the lack of jokned up thinking in the past with 3 lines each very each other and not linked up.Having to go to street level and walk between. 2 stations of the same name to change between the Overground and Jubliee lines is madness! If there was joined up thinking, I'm pretty sure that the GN locals and the Picc/Northern lines would have better interchanges with one another. It would've been great to have a combined Arnos Grove & New Southgate station in all honesty. Would it? I'm not sure how much of a benefit it would provide - intending passengers for the local BR services would change at Finsbury Park, and those joining at intermediate stations FPK-AGR would most probably go to the nearby BR station (Hornsey, Alexandra Palace etc) instead??
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Post by John Tuthill on Jan 5, 2015 22:19:00 GMT
Most of the GC passenger traffic on the GW&GC Joint was local as there was little room for GC expresses after accounting for the heavy GC freight and GW expresses. Although that's true as far as it goes, there was precious little GC local traffic,either - my 1922 Bradshaw shows an approximately hourly (with big gaps) service, no arrival in Marylebone before 08.34 and only one departure after about 1800 - not really a suburban service at all. Very much a case of the line being built for the long distance traffic you describe, with anything local being incidental -which was my point,in fact. Or as John Betjeman says in 'Metroland' "From Manchester to Paris, stopping at London on the way."
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Post by theblackferret on Jan 5, 2015 22:32:30 GMT
Although that's true as far as it goes, there was precious little GC local traffic,either - my 1922 Bradshaw shows an approximately hourly (with big gaps) service, no arrival in Marylebone before 08.34 and only one departure after about 1800 - not really a suburban service at all. Very much a case of the line being built for the long distance traffic you describe, with anything local being incidental -which was my point,in fact. Or as John Betjeman says in 'Metroland' "From Manchester to Paris, stopping at London on the way." And as he also said re the GC "And quite where Rugby Central is, Does only Rugby know." A pity that one of the most superbly-engineered of all the main lines really did consist of joining places together that already had other routes on offer to them.
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Post by norbitonflyer on Jan 5, 2015 22:38:04 GMT
If there was joined up thinking, I'm pretty sure that the GN locals and the Picc/Northern lines would have better interchanges with one another. It would've been great to have a combined Arnos Grove & New Southgate station in all honesty. Remember that the High Barnet branch was part of the Great Northern Railway. As for the Piccadilly extensiuon, with joined up thinking, it is most unlikely that it would have been built at all, since its raisons d'etre were to pinch traffic off rhe LNER, and to relieve the congestion at Finsbury Park caused by the scuppering of the original plans for the GN&City and the GN&Strand to connect properly to the GNR
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Post by grahamhewett on Jan 6, 2015 9:38:35 GMT
John Tuthill - Betjeman and his wistful nostalgia for the lost rural elysium of late C19 Middlesex is actually a very good answer to the original question - "Greenford, parish of great hayfields",and so on - at the time when the main line railways were being built, local traffic from Middlesex was not very attractive commercially and certainly not worth building new lines for. Much of the outer suburbs didn't disappear beneath housing until the '20s. I suppose a slightly nuanced answer would be that that applied much more north of the Thames, where the railways were focussed on long distance traffic,whereas south of the river, because London is so close to the coast, suburban traffic was most of what was on offer and so developed quite early.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 6, 2015 9:45:24 GMT
An obvious advantage to the passenger is that, during times of disruption, alternative routes are plentiful. A passenger at High Barnet, for instance, can quite easily hop on a 34/307/384 service bus which will take him to a selection of Picc line stations. I seem to recall that the Picc extension to Cockfosters was plotted as approximately halfway between two LNER branches, there being little else in the area to guide its route - though I can't find a source for this. If there was joined up thinking, I'm pretty sure that the GN locals and the Picc/Northern lines would have better interchanges with one another. It would've been great to have a combined Arnos Grove & New Southgate station in all honesty. Would it? I'm not sure how much of a benefit it would provide - intending passengers for the local BR services would change at Finsbury Park, and those joining at intermediate stations FPK-AGR would most probably go to the nearby BR station (Hornsey, Alexandra Palace etc) instead?? And New Barnet as well. The benefit would be that passengers could just take the first train and change where necessary. So if GN and Picc line trains ran from the same suburban station (other than Finsbury Park), it would eliminate the problem of determining whether I should go via Arnos Grove or New Southgate if I want to go to Moorgate.
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Post by norbitonflyer on Jan 6, 2015 10:43:30 GMT
The benefit would be that passengers could just take the first train and change where necessary. So if GN and Picc line trains ran from the same suburban station (other than Finsbury Park), it would eliminate the problem of determining whether I should go via Arnos Grove or New Southgate if I want to go to Moorgate. The Piccadilly was the last arrival in the area, and was built largely to take traffic away from the LNER, not to co-operate with it (competition, not co-operation being the priority) and to serve new areas (and in particular getting to population centres missed by the early lines which were primarily concerned with finding the easiest way out of Londoin rather than serving its immediate hinterland, still relatively sparsely populated in the 1840s. The GNR branch through Highgate was primarily concerned with tapping into Edgware: its High Barnet branch, which does to some extent take traffic off the GN main line, being more of an afterthought. Indeed, most early lines avoided settlements such as Kingston, Barnet and Harrow as it was cheaper to build on agricultural land and they were more interested in longer distance trafffic to the more lucrative ports and coalfields - thus arose new coimmunities around places like Surbiton, New Barnet and Wealdstone, with the older centres later served by secondary lines, often as part of a land grab. (For example the LBSCR's original circuitous route to Sutton via Croydon led not only to the later Mitcham Junction route being built to keep the LSWR out, but later on in Southern Railway days the St Helier line was built to keep the District and Northern away). Another example, further out, is the Portsmouth Direct line, built as a speculative venture, in the expectation that one of the major players would want to acquire it.. Neither the LBSCR nor the LSWR really wanted it - it would compete with their respective existing routes to Portsmouth via Brighton and via Eastleigh - but the LSWR wanted the Brighton to have it even less than they wanted not to have it themselves, so it was they who blinked first.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 6, 2015 12:22:16 GMT
The benefit would be that passengers could just take the first train and change where necessary. So if GN and Picc line trains ran from the same suburban station (other than Finsbury Park), it would eliminate the problem of determining whether I should go via Arnos Grove or New Southgate if I want to go to Moorgate. The Piccadilly was the last arrival in the area, and was built largely to take traffic away from the LNER, not to co-operate with it (competition, not co-operation being the priority) and to serve new areas (and in particular getting to population centres missed by the early lines which were primarily concerned with finding the easiest way out of Londoin rather than serving its immediate hinterland, still relatively sparsely populated in the 1840s. The GNR branch through Highgate was primarily concerned with tapping into Edgware: its High Barnet branch, which does to some extent take traffic off the GN main line, being more of an afterthought. So it seems that competition has created the convenience for us passengers Mostly, because the GN local stations beyond New Barnet start to diverge away from the tube lines (looking at it on a map). And people in areas like Brookman's Park and Welham Green are stuck with only one line, sadly.
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Post by norbitonflyer on Jan 6, 2015 13:26:43 GMT
So it seems that competition has created the convenience for us passengers Doubtless the network would have been sparser, but with better connections, if there had been no competition. Mostly, because the GN local stations beyond New Barnet start to diverge away from the tube lines (looking at it on a map). And people in areas like Brookman's Park and Welham Green are stuck with only one line, sadly. The radial lines inevitably diverge as you get further from the centre - that's simple geometry. But the tube lines don't go beyond the Barnet area anyway. South of the Thames there was less competition in each area, as the main line companies developed suburban networks much more quickly (there being less long-distance traffic except the rather exclusive connections with cross-channel and Transatlantic sailings, and precious little coal). This meant that by the time the Tube came along the southern companies had each already created a dense suburban network. In the south and south west there was no situation like the multiple parallel competing routes through the West/South Hampstead area., or the multiple routes to Birmingham, Manchester, Sheffield etc. The SER and LCDR fought long and hard over Kent and SE London, again leaving a legacy of many lines, (albeit each with a relatively sparse service by Tube standards) , and little scope for the Tube to exploit the area..
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Post by grahamhewett on Jan 6, 2015 13:44:19 GMT
@envy123 - there have been very few cases of genuinely competing lines in the UK (of course, there's always been somelimited competition at the margin - eg Exeter, or Aberdeen - but that's usually been an accident of geography rather than a deliberate attempt to build a rival line). The GC was the most obvious but hardly a model of success, and the S Wales valleys each managed to support at least a couple of profitable routes to the docks for the coal trade but the small numberof these emphasis the sheer capital cost of building competing infrastructure. If it couldn't be done between London and Manchester*, small settlements like Brookmans Park didn't stand a chance.
*The Midland hardly set out with the plan of building a new line between the two and its services struggled to compete with the LNW.
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Post by norbitonflyer on Jan 6, 2015 15:44:54 GMT
there have been very few cases of genuinely competing lines in the UK (of course, there's always been somelimited competition at the margin - eg Exeter, or Aberdeen - but that's usually been an accident of geography rather than a deliberate attempt to build a rival line). . There was certainly competition for Anglo-Scottish traffic, not only the East Coast and West Coast Main lines, but the Settle & Carlisle was an attempt to get a slice of the action. At the other end of the country the LCDR and SER competed for the channel steamer traffic, as well as most principal population centres in SE London and Kent, from Catford to Canterbury. The plethora of lines between Edinburgh and Glasgow, or Liverpool and Manchester, or across the Pennines, or up the Erewash valley in Nottinghamshire, also speak of competition. And in the West, not just Exeter but large parts of Devon and Cornwall - certainly competing for the holiday traffic although not necessarily the same resorts (shall we go to Padstow by the Southern, or Paignton by the Great Western?) - and particularly Plymouth (for the transatlantic traffic: witness both the background to the Salisbury disaster of 1908 and the "ton-up" of City of Truro) But hamlets like Brookmans Park would only get a station if a railway company happened to pass through and thought there was potential to pick up trade (without impairing the more lucrative long distance services). Indeed, although the railway through Brookmans Park was built in 1850, its owners saw no need for a station there until 76 years later - and the next station down the line, Welham Green, didn't open until a further sixty years after that!
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Post by Deleted on Jan 6, 2015 15:50:39 GMT
So it seems that competition has created the convenience for us passengers Doubtless the network would have been sparser, but with better connections, if there had been no competition. Mostly, because the GN local stations beyond New Barnet start to diverge away from the tube lines (looking at it on a map). And people in areas like Brookman's Park and Welham Green are stuck with only one line, sadly. The radial lines inevitably diverge as you get further from the centre - that's simple geometry. But the tube lines don't go beyond the Barnet area anyway. South of the Thames there was less competition in each area, as the main line companies developed suburban networks much more quickly (there being less long-distance traffic except the rather exclusive connections with cross-channel and Transatlantic sailings, and precious little coal). This meant that by the time the Tube came along the southern companies had each already created a dense suburban network. In the south and south west there was no situation like the multiple parallel competing routes through the West/South Hampstead area., or the multiple routes to Birmingham, Manchester, Sheffield etc. The SER and LCDR fought long and hard over Kent and SE London, again leaving a legacy of many lines, (albeit each with a relatively sparse service by Tube standards) , and little scope for the Tube to exploit the area.. If there was no competition, I think that LU would be a lot more like the Moscow Metro is now, where the different lines are very much far apart from each other - www.legendtour.ru/foto/rus/02metro.gifSo, if you lived in south of Moscow and near any station on Line 10, realistically you only had that line to use. And if Line 10 was to be disrupted, you have no other choice of line at least by walking/bus distance. I've experienced that problem in Moscow. And also stations are much further apart than in London. At least London lines did have some competition, unlike Moscow. On the other hand, all lines interchange with each other, unlike in LU where the Jubilee Line is the only line to have interchanges with everything. Swings and roundabouts. I rely on the Northern, Piccadilly and GN local lines in my area and any shortcomings of a line (or disruptions) could easily be overcome by going to another line. So if I want to go to Hackney with one change, I just hop onto the GN line. And if I want to go to Harrods direct, I hop onto the Picc. I like it this way far more than when I lived in Moscow. And in terms of the diverging, I meant why didn't the company who was responsible for the Cockfosters extension at least extend it to Potters Bar so it could compete with whoever was running the now GN line, instead of just terminating in the Barnet area? I realise that tube extensions are not the way to go in terms of better connecting London to its nearby commuter towns, but the tube does go to Hertfordshire after all.
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Post by norbitonflyer on Jan 6, 2015 16:07:41 GMT
Swings and roundabouts. I rely on the Northern, Piccadilly and GN local lines in my area and any shortcomings of a line (or disruptions) could easily be overcome by going to another line. So if I want to go to Hackney with one change, I just hop onto the GN line. And if I want to go to Harrods direct, I hop onto the Picc. I like it this way far more than when I lived in Moscow. You wouldn't like it down here in leafy Surrey then. Hobson's choice. (and it's not often Surrey is likened to Moscow!) why didn't the company who was responsible for the Cockfosters extension at least extend it to Potters Bar so it could compete with whoever was running the now GN line, instead of just terminating in the Barnet area? . In 1933 the LNER ran the GN line, as the "Big Four" successor to the GNR, from which the modern service gets its name. It was the UERL "combine" that built the Picadilly extension, although Cockfosters was completed shortly after the formation of London Transport in 1933. Whether it had aspirations to go further I don't know - there were certainly plans to extend other lines, for example beyond Edgware and (on the Southern) beyond Chessington - but six years later war broke out, and shortly after that all the railways including London Transport came under state control, with full nationalisation in 1948. Green belt legislation put paid to any other extension plans. but the tube does go to Hertfordshire after all. Only the Metropolitan, independent until 1933 and with aspirations to be a main line (indeed they had a fight on theoir hands not to be absorbed into one of the Big Four in 1923), made it into Hertfordshire on its own tracks, although the Bakerloo ran over LNWR tracks as far as Watford until the 1980s.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 6, 2015 16:24:38 GMT
Indeed, most early lines avoided settlements such as Kingston, Barnet and Harrow as it was cheaper to build on agricultural land and they were more interested in longer distance trafffic to the more lucrative ports and coalfields - thus arose new coimmunities around places like Surbiton, New Barnet and Wealdstone, with the older centres later served by secondary lines, often as part of a land grab. In Harrow, it was to some extent the influence of Harrow School that prevented the London & Birmingham Railway passing closer than Kenton, or opening a station nearer than what is now Wealdstone (the settlement was originally called Station End; the Weald Stone is actually in Harrow Weald). While the School authorities had relented by the time the Metropolitan Railway reached Harrow, they still objected to the extension of the Middlesex County Council/Metropolitan Electric Tramways from Sudbury via Harrow to Watford.
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Post by grahamhewett on Jan 6, 2015 16:29:47 GMT
norbitonflyer - sorry I didn't make myself as clear as I would have wished - there were very few main lines built for the purposes of competition. In some cases, as you state,companies did exploit the network that had already been built for other reasons as the basis for competition. The GC and the Welsh valleys are amongst the very few. (I agree some companies -eg the GW to Brum - did build some cutoffs and minor extensions to improve their competition prospects, but not wholly new lines). @envy123 - two things discouraged the further extension of the tube beyond the present builtup area: the Green Belt,and the very long journey times that further extension would have imposed. (Lord Ashfield famously remarked that he thought the growth of London was limited by the patience of the straphanger, which interestingly he estimated at 45 minutes).
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Post by norbitonflyer on Jan 6, 2015 16:30:26 GMT
Swings and roundabouts. I rely on the Northern, Piccadilly and GN local lines in my area and any shortcomings of a line (or disruptions) could easily be overcome by going to another line. So if I want to go to Hackney with one change, I just hop onto the GN line. And if I want to go to Harrods direct, I hop onto the Picc. I like it this way far more than when I lived in Moscow. You wouldn't like it down here in leafy Surrey then. Hobson's choice. (and it's not often Surrey is likened to Moscow!) why didn't the company who was responsible for the Cockfosters extension at least extend it to Potters Bar so it could compete with whoever was running the now GN line, instead of just terminating in the Barnet area? . In 1933 the LNER ran the GN line, as the "Big Four" successor to the GNR, from which the modern service gets its name. It was the UERL "combine" that built the Picadilly extension, although Cockfosters was completed shortly after the formation of London Transport in 1933. Whether it had aspirations to go further I don't know - there were certainly plans to extend other lines, for example beyond Edgware and (on the Southern) beyond Chessington - but six years later war broke out, and shortly after that all the railways including London Transport came under state control, with full nationalisation in 1948. Green belt legislation put paid to any other extension plans. but the tube does go to Hertfordshire after all. Only the Metropolitan, independent until 1933 and with aspirations to be a main line (indeed they had a fight on theoir hands not to be absorbed into one of the Big Four in 1923), made it into Hertfordshire on its own tracks, although the Bakerloo ran over LNWR tracks as far as Watford until the 1980s.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 6, 2015 16:50:13 GMT
Swings and roundabouts. I rely on the Northern, Piccadilly and GN local lines in my area and any shortcomings of a line (or disruptions) could easily be overcome by going to another line. So if I want to go to Hackney with one change, I just hop onto the GN line. And if I want to go to Harrods direct, I hop onto the Picc. I like it this way far more than when I lived in Moscow. You wouldn't like it down here in leafy Surrey then. Hobson's choice. (and it's not often Surrey is likened to Moscow!) why didn't the company who was responsible for the Cockfosters extension at least extend it to Potters Bar so it could compete with whoever was running the now GN line, instead of just terminating in the Barnet area? . In 1933 the LNER ran the GN line, as the "Big Four" successor to the GNR, from which the modern service gets its name. It was the UERL "combine" that built the Picadilly extension, although Cockfosters was completed shortly after the formation of London Transport in 1933. Whether it had aspirations to go further I don't know - there were certainly plans to extend other lines, for example beyond Edgware and (on the Southern) beyond Chessington - but six years later war broke out, and shortly after that all the railways including London Transport came under state control, with full nationalisation in 1948. Green belt legislation put paid to any other extension plans. but the tube does go to Hertfordshire after all. Only the Metropolitan, independent until 1933 and with aspirations to be a main line (indeed they had a fight on theoir hands not to be absorbed into one of the Big Four in 1923), made it into Hertfordshire on its own tracks, although the Bakerloo ran over LNWR tracks as far as Watford until the 1980s. For me, transport is the main driver of the area that I live in. I had considered Surrey to commute from, but although a lot of it is beautiful (Guildford, especially) unlike the skyscraper jungle of southern Moscow, the Hobson's choice (as you put it) of lines has convinced me otherwise. Same reason why I've crossed off Brookman's Park and Potters Bar in my list. I don't want to be unable to get to work because a line is down. In the tale of two cities, northern connections are better than southern connections, for some odd reason. Oh, didn't know about the green belt being a reason why tube extensions from Cockfosters didn't happen. norbitonflyer - sorry I didn't make myself as clear as I would have wished - there were very few main lines built for the purposes of competition. In some cases, as you state,companies did exploit the network that had already been built for other reasons as the basis for competition. The GC and the Welsh valleys are amongst the very few. (I agree some companies -eg the GW to Brum - did build some cutoffs and minor extensions to improve their competition prospects, but not wholly new lines). @envy123 - two things discouraged the further extension of the tube beyond the present builtup area: the Green Belt,and the very long journey times that further extension would have imposed. (Lord Ashfield famously remarked that he thought the growth of London was limited by the patience of the straphanger, which interestingly he estimated at 45 minutes). And also, if the Picc was extended, my local station Arnos Grove would have it impossible to get on the train. And I'm a "hardy soul" (according to London Reconnections) to get onto the GN train from New Southgate to Moorgate just because I want to avoid King's X at peak times.
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