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Shepperton branch line

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Shepperton branch line
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerNetwork Rail
LocaleGreater London
South East England
Termini
Stations6
Service
TypeCommuter rail, Heavy rail
SystemNational Rail
Services1
Operator(s)South Western Railway
Depot(s)Wimbledon
Rolling stockClass 455
Class 450
Class 707
History
Opened1 November 1864
Technical
Number of tracks2
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC third rail
Operating speed60 mph (97 km/h)
Shepperton branch line
Strawberry Hill depot
12-75
Fulwell
High Street, Hampton Hill,
350 yd
320 m
14-47
Hampton
16-28
Kempton Park
16-64
Sunbury
17-34
Upper Halliford
18-73
Shepperton
from Waterloo via Twickenham

The Shepperton branch line is a railway line in the south west of London and north Surrey. It is also known as the Shepperton line and connects to the Kingston loop by a triangular junction between Fulwell, Strawberry Hill and Teddington stations.

History

The line opened on 1 November 1864 briefly named The Thames Valley Railway with access only from the Twickenham direction. The line was originally intended to reach a terminus on the north bank of the River Thames immediately east of Chertsey Bridge and the town itself but this plan was abandoned in 1862.[1] The line's optional curve linking Fulwell and Teddington initially opened only to freight on 1 July 1894 and first carried passengers on 1 June 1901. The line was electrified by the L&SWR using 630 V DC third rail on 30 January 1916.

'Even the railway is a quite retiring type of line, ending abruptly at Shepperton, which is not in the way of being a metropolis; and so for many years a single train ran quietly to and fro upon a single line, resting a good deal and never hastening. And it is still in this state...till the racing tap is turned on every month or so.'

— Charles Dickens, Jr., Racecourses about London, an article in All the Year Round, 1887[2]

Demand and population in the area increased after the railway's relatively late introduction. Hampton station is the line's busiest with more than 1.2 million journeys made in the 2014-2015 financial year[3] Its recorded use was 0.7 million ten years before.[3] The total of journeys per year of the six stations on the line has reached 2.848 million recorded journeys. Hampton station has formally been assigned C2 (Important feeder) status as its station category.

Stations

Stations on the line are:

Services

Train in the railway cutting at Fulwell approaching the station. The "tunnel" is actually an overbridge.

Service on the line is half-hourly to London Waterloo via Kingston (hourly on Sundays).[4] Monday to Friday, four additional early morning rush-hour trains to Waterloo are routed via Twickenham and Richmond. Three additional evening rush-hour trains from Waterloo arrive via that route.[4]

In common with the 16 hourly off-peak ("inner") commuter services to/from London Waterloo,[5] trains must stop at every intermediate station. There are no mid-track destinations (Waterloo to Wimbledon or Kingston express services) using sidings there. The long travel time of this pattern gives overcapacity at Shepperton and Sunbury where commuters are three miles from faster track stations. It gave overcrowding to these 16 "stopping service routes" during their inner-city phases in the ultra-peak hours due to the great number of stations each service "must" serve per service, much abated by 10-car trains.[6]

Stopping-only formats contrast to most patterns of other historic railway operators in the region.[a]

Notes and references

Footnotes
  1. ^ e.g. New Southern Railway's Tonbridge, Reigate and East Grinstead services which until leaving London only call at Clapham Junction and at East Croydon (they adopt a semi-fast pattern with both of their respective trains per hour). The original rationale may be that any form of transit to/from Sevenoaks, Redhill and Three Bridges, Crawley on the fast tracks was deemed too far from these 'important' market towns.
References
  1. ^ London's Local Railways by Alan A. Jackson, Capital Transport (1999); ISBN 1-85414-209-7
  2. ^ Charles Dickens, Jr.| All the Year Round Volume: 60 p.582.
  3. ^ a b "Station usage estimates". Rail statistics. Office of Rail Regulation.
  4. ^ a b http://www.nationalrail.co.uk
  5. ^ Calling at Earlsfield railway station and all intermediate London stations all managed by South Western Railway, namely:
  6. ^ "10-car SWT hangs in balance". Modern Railways (London): p. 52. December 2010.
  • Mitchell, Vic & Smith, Keith (1990). London Suburban Railways: Kingston and Hounslow Loops. Middleton Press.