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London and Croydon Railway

The London and Croydon Railway (L&CR) was an early railway in England. It opened in 1839 and in February 1846 merged with other railways to form the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LB&SCR).

Origins edit

The Croydon line and other railways edit

 
Railways in South East London in 1840

The Surrey Iron Railway had been opened in 1806 between Wandsworth and Croydon; it was a plateway operating on the toll principle, in which carriers could move wagons with their own horses. However, the Surrey Iron Railway's terminal on the Thames was rather far west and sea-going vessels were discouraged from connecting with it.[1]

Edge railways using locomotive traction represented a clear technological advance, marked particularly by the Stockton and Darlington Railway (1825) and the Liverpool and Manchester Railway (1830), and promoters put forward a scheme to link Croydon, then an industrial town, with London. The Croydon Canal of 1809 was moribund, and it was proposed to purchase it and to utilise its course. It was to extend northwards from the Croydon Canal terminal at New Cross, so as to make a junction at Corbetts Lane (then spelt Corbets Lane), in Bermondsey with the London and Greenwich Railway; its trains were to run over that line to its London Bridge station.

The engineer Joseph Gibbs surveyed the route; this involved complex judgments, and is described below. The company obtained an authorising act of Parliament on 12 June 1836.[note 1] The line was 8+34 miles (14.1 km) long and at the southern end followed the alignment of the Croydon Canal from Anerley to a terminus at Croydon, with a locomotive depot, on the site of the canal basin. This was later to be developed to the present-day West Croydon station.[1]

The London and Greenwich Railway Company intended that its proposed London Bridge terminus would accommodate trains of several other companies and had acquired land sufficient for the purpose; at this time however it had inadequate funds to carry out the actual construction, and the Croydon company was obliged to do the work itself, taking some of the London and Greenwich Railway Company's land on the north side for the purpose, obtaining the necessary parliamentary powers on 14 July 1836. At this stage the Greenwich line had not yet been opened into London Bridge: this was completed on 1 December 1836.

The South Eastern Railway got its authorising act of Parliament on 21 June 1836 for a line from Dover, joining the London and Croydon line end-on at Croydon, and the London and Brighton Railway obtained its act on 15 June 1837, also relying on running over the London and Croydon from Norwood. Over the following two years the point of convergence with the L&CR was varied, but all the lines converged at or before Corbett's Lane Junction. Capacity at London Bridge was clearly going to be an issue, and the L&CR took further powers (11 June 1838) to enlarge its station then under construction at London Bridge. A parliamentary select committee also became concerned about the safety of the arrangements, and in response the London and Greenwich Railway Company was given powers to widen its viaduct on the southern side so as to make a four-track viaduct from Corbett's Lane to London Bridge.[1]

Determining the route edit

In its first conception, the line was to follow the bed of the Croydon Canal for much of the route. A jury determined the value of the canal as £40,250 as if it was a going concern. When detailed route design was undertaken (before handover of the canal), it was clear that the meanderings and zigzags made by the canal were unsuitable, and that the line needed to be built alongside the general course. The levels around New Cross were also difficult, and to find the best compromise a 1 in 80 gradient was selected, involving at that time the use of assistant engines due to the steepness. Even so, a cutting of considerable depth was unavoidable.

When the SER's line became authorised, the Croydon company reconsidered the matter, as its line would now be part of a trunk route, and it was decided to ease the gradient from New Cross to 1 in 100; this involved a deeper, and longer, cutting, and the line would only reach surface level at the present-day Forest Hill station. The deeper cuttings required more surface area of land; and some curvature improvements further south also required unanticipated land acquisition.

Stations were to be at New Cross, Dartmouth Arms (named after a nearby hostelry that is still extant in 2013),[2] Sydenham, Penge, Annerley (later Anerley; the Scottish owner of the land said that his was the "annerley hoose" in the area), Jolly Sailor (also named after a public house just north of the current Norwood Junction).[3] and the terminus at Croydon (now West Croydon).

Freight traffic was considered to be impracticable for handling at London Bridge, and the London freight terminal point was built at New Cross; the adjacent Surrey Canal was considered to give sufficient onward connectivity. There was also an engine shed at New Cross; coal was brought in by the canal, there being at the time no rail connection to coal mines.[4]

Construction edit

 
The railway at New Cross, 1839

The consultant engineer was William Cubitt. The line proved to be expensive to build, costing £615,000 rather than the estimated £180,000, due to large cuttings at New Cross and Forest Hill.[5] The only severe gradient was 1:100 (1%) for 2+34 miles (4.4 km) from New Cross to Forest Hill. In addition to the viaduct where it joined the L&GR, there were 18 bridges, and three level road crossings, each attended by a "policeman".

The track was laid to standard 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) gauge, although during the construction the directors were undecided and ordered extra-long 9 ft (2,743 mm) sleepers with a view to conversion to 7 ft (2,134 mm) broad gauge, which never happened.[6] The line used "Vignoles" flat bottomed rail, broader in the base and lower than modern rail. These were mounted on longitudinal timbers with cross sleepers.

A new station was built at London Bridge for Croydon trains, on the north side of the L&GR one, with track shared as far as Corbetts Lane. The line opened on 5 June 1839[7] There were six intermediate stations, at New Cross (now New Cross Gate), Dartmouth Arms (now Forest Hill), Sydenham, Penge, Anerley Bridge (now Anerley), and Jolly Sailor (replaced by Norwood Junction in 1859). The terminus was at London Road in Croydon.

Because of the planned additional traffic following the opening of the L&BR and the SER, the L&CR sought powers to widen the viaduct from Corbetts Lane to London Bridge in 1840. Parliament decided that the widening should be undertaken by the owners, the L&GR.[8] This work was completed by 1842. By this time the L&CR had joined the newly opened SER and L&BR to form a committee, and agreement was reached with the L&GR to exchange their stations at London Bridge in 1843 in order to avoid their trains crossing over at Corbetts Junction.

Bricklayers Arms Terminus edit

 
Lewis Cubitt's Bricklayers Arms station, 1844

By 1843, the L&CR and the SER were becoming concerned about the tolls charged by the L&GR for the use of its line between Corbetts Junction and London Bridge. As a result, they jointly constructed a branch from the L&CR at New Cross to a new terminus designed by Lewis Cubitt at Bricklayers Arms, thereby avoiding use of the L&GR. From 1844 the SER transferred all of its services to the new terminus, and the L&CR operated services from both termini.[9] This arrangement lasted until 1852.

Epsom extension edit

In April 1844 the L&CR directors approved an extension to Epsom, not completed until after the railway became a part of the LB&SCR.

Deptford Dockyard extension edit

London and Croydon Railway Act 1846
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act to enable the London and Croydon Railway Company to construct a Branch to Deptford; and for amending the Acts relating to such Railway.
Citation9 & 10 Vict. c. ccxxxiv
Dates
Royal assent27 July 1846

In July 1846 an act of Parliament, the London and Croydon Railway Act 1846 (9 & 10 Vict. c. ccxxxiv), was passed granting authority for a branch from New Cross to Deptford Dockyard. This was commenced after the railway became a part of the LB&SCR.

Locomotives and rolling stock edit

The railway owned seven 2-2-2 locomotives and one 0-4-2. The first five 2-2-2s and one 0-4-2 were built by Sharp, Roberts and Company, and were delivered between July 1838 and July 1839. The remaining two were built by G. and J. Rennie, in August 1838 and May 1839.[10]

Summary table edit

Brighton, Croydon and Dover Joint Committee edit

From 1842 the L&CR pooled its locomotive stock with the SER, to form the Croydon and Dover Joint Committee. From March 1844 the L&BR joined the scheme and the locomotives were thereafter operated by the Brighton, Croydon and Dover Joint Committee, which also ordered further locomotives. These arrangements caused great operating problems for the L&CR and the L&BR and in April 1845 they gave notice of withdrawal from the arrangement in January 1846, when the locomotives were divided between the three companies. The L&CR received eight locomotives back in April 1845, seven of which had been owned by other railways.[11]

Summary table edit

Motive power depots and workshop edit

The railway opened an early example of a roundhouse motive power depot at New Cross 1 June 1839, but this brick-built building was burned down 14 October 1844. It was replaced by a nearby traditional straight shed in 1845, and the original turntable and associated lines were incorporated into a locomotive repair depot in the same year.[12] There was also a small depot at Croydon

Carriage stock edit

There were first and second-class four-wheeled carriages, both of the three-compartment type usual for the period, the main difference seeming to be that the first-class coaches carried 18 passengers, the second-class 24.

Operation edit

The line into London Bridge became increasingly congested so at Corbetts Lane a white disc was installed, to be operated by the pointsman. If the disc was face on, or a red light at night, the route was set for Croydon; edge on or a white light, the junction was set for Greenwich. It is believed that this was first fixed signal used to control a junction. Greenwich trains ran every 15 minutes, Croydon trains were hourly. The first railway semaphore signal was erected by Charles Hutton Gregory on the railway at New Cross, about 1842.[13]

Atmospheric railway edit

 
Jolly-sailor station in 1845, the atmospheric pumping station, with its Gothic chimney/exhaust vent, in the foreground.[14]

In 1844, the L&CR was given parliamentary authority to lay an additional line next to the existing track and test an atmospheric railway system. Pumping stations were built at Portland Road, Croydon and Dartmouth Arms, which created a vacuum in a pipe laid between the running rails. A free-running piston in the pipe was attached to the train through a slit sealed by a leather valve. The piston, and hence the train, was propelled towards the pumping station by atmospheric pressure. The pumping stations were built in a Gothic style, with a very tall ornate tower, which served both as a chimney and as an exhaust vent for air pumped from the propulsion pipe.

As part of the construction works for the atmospheric system, the world's first railway flyover (overpass) was constructed south of Jolly Sailor, to carry the atmospheric line over the conventional steam line.[15] The railway experienced many problems with the pumping engines and the valves during 1846, creating dissatisfaction among the shareholders with the directors. The added directors from the L&BR, after the amalgamation in August, were even less interested in continuing the experiment.[16] In 1847, the atmospheric experiment was abandoned. The engine house at Dartmouth Arms was largely demolished in 1851 and an electricity sub-station was built on the site in 1928. Stone from the Croydon pumping station was reused in construction of the Surrey Street waterworks building, which still exists. According to one historian the use of the atmospheric system cost the railway £500,000 and was 'a sad fiasco'.[17]

 
Railways in the South East of England in 1840

Accidents edit

The railway is not known to have suffered any serious accidents, which is remarkable given its early operation over shared lines.[13]

Amalgamation edit

As a result of the poor financial performance of both the L&CR and the L&BR, a group of shareholders organised an amalgamation of these companies with the Brighton and Chichester Railway and the Brighton Lewes and Hastings Railway (both under construction) to form the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway on 27 February 1846.[18]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Howard Turner states (page 27) that the date has often been erroneously quoted as 5 June.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c John Howard Turner, The London Brighton and South Coast Railway: I - Origins and Formation, B. T. Batsford Ltd, London, 1977, ISBN 0 7134 0275 X
  2. ^ "Dartmouth Arms". Forest Hill: Dartmouth Arms. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  3. ^ "The Jolly Sailor Public House". Liane Lang. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  4. ^ Howard Turner chapter 4
  5. ^ Dendy Marshall (1963) p.38.
  6. ^ Dendy Marshall (1963)p.39
  7. ^ Brown, Joe (2015) [2006 p=40]. London Railway Atlas (4th ed.). Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7110-3819-6.
  8. ^ Dendy Marshall (1963) p.41.
  9. ^ Howard Turner, J.T. (1977). London Brighton and South Coast Railway. London: Batsford. pp. 192–204. ISBN 0-7134-0275-X.
  10. ^ Bradley, D.L. (1963). Locomotives of the South Eastern Railway. Solihull: Railway Correspondence and Travel Society. pp. 11–12.
  11. ^ Bradley, D.L. (1963). Locomotives of the South Eastern Railway. Solihull: Railway Correspondence and Travel Society. pp. 13–16.
  12. ^ Griffiths, Roger, and Paul Smith (1999). The Directory of British Engine Sheds 1. Southern England, the Midlands, East Anglia and Wales. Oxford: Oxford Publishing Co. p. 95. ISBN 0-86093-542-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ a b Dendy Marshall (1963) p.50.
  14. ^ "Jolly-sailor Station". The Pictorial Times. 1845.
  15. ^ Connor, J.E. (2006). London's Disused Stations: The London Brighton & South Coast Railway. Colchester: Connor & Butler. p. 70. ISBN 0-947699-39-2.
  16. ^ Howard Turner, J.T. (1977). London Brighton and South Coast Railway. London: Batsford. pp. 272–4. ISBN 0-7134-0275-X.
  17. ^ Hamilton Ellis, C. (1971). The London Brighton and South Coast Railway. London: Ian Allan. p. 31. ISBN 0-7110-0269-X.
  18. ^ Brown, Joe (2015) [2006]. London Railway Atlas (4th ed.). Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7110-3819-6.

References edit

  • Whishaw, F., (1840) The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland: Practically described and illustrated London: Simpkin, Marshall and Co.
  • Simmons, J., (1995 ppb ed) The Victorian Railways, London: Thames and Hudson

Further reading edit

  • Whishaw, Francis (1842). The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland Practically Described and Illustrated (2nd ed.). London: John Weale. pp. 275–283. OCLC 833076248.

london, croydon, railway, early, railway, england, opened, 1839, february, 1846, merged, with, other, railways, form, london, brighton, south, coast, railway, contents, origins, croydon, line, other, railways, determining, route, construction, bricklayers, arm. The London and Croydon Railway L amp CR was an early railway in England It opened in 1839 and in February 1846 merged with other railways to form the London Brighton and South Coast Railway LB amp SCR Contents 1 Origins 1 1 The Croydon line and other railways 1 2 Determining the route 2 Construction 2 1 Bricklayers Arms Terminus 2 2 Epsom extension 2 3 Deptford Dockyard extension 3 Locomotives and rolling stock 3 1 Summary table 3 2 Brighton Croydon and Dover Joint Committee 3 2 1 Summary table 3 3 Motive power depots and workshop 3 4 Carriage stock 4 Operation 5 Atmospheric railway 5 1 Accidents 6 Amalgamation 7 Notes 8 Citations 9 References 10 Further readingOrigins editThe Croydon line and other railways edit nbsp Railways in South East London in 1840The Surrey Iron Railway had been opened in 1806 between Wandsworth and Croydon it was a plateway operating on the toll principle in which carriers could move wagons with their own horses However the Surrey Iron Railway s terminal on the Thames was rather far west and sea going vessels were discouraged from connecting with it 1 Edge railways using locomotive traction represented a clear technological advance marked particularly by the Stockton and Darlington Railway 1825 and the Liverpool and Manchester Railway 1830 and promoters put forward a scheme to link Croydon then an industrial town with London The Croydon Canal of 1809 was moribund and it was proposed to purchase it and to utilise its course It was to extend northwards from the Croydon Canal terminal at New Cross so as to make a junction at Corbetts Lane then spelt Corbets Lane in Bermondsey with the London and Greenwich Railway its trains were to run over that line to its London Bridge station The engineer Joseph Gibbs surveyed the route this involved complex judgments and is described below The company obtained an authorising act of Parliament on 12 June 1836 note 1 The line was 8 3 4 miles 14 1 km long and at the southern end followed the alignment of the Croydon Canal from Anerley to a terminus at Croydon with a locomotive depot on the site of the canal basin This was later to be developed to the present day West Croydon station 1 The London and Greenwich Railway Company intended that its proposed London Bridge terminus would accommodate trains of several other companies and had acquired land sufficient for the purpose at this time however it had inadequate funds to carry out the actual construction and the Croydon company was obliged to do the work itself taking some of the London and Greenwich Railway Company s land on the north side for the purpose obtaining the necessary parliamentary powers on 14 July 1836 At this stage the Greenwich line had not yet been opened into London Bridge this was completed on 1 December 1836 The South Eastern Railway got its authorising act of Parliament on 21 June 1836 for a line from Dover joining the London and Croydon line end on at Croydon and the London and Brighton Railway obtained its act on 15 June 1837 also relying on running over the London and Croydon from Norwood Over the following two years the point of convergence with the L amp CR was varied but all the lines converged at or before Corbett s Lane Junction Capacity at London Bridge was clearly going to be an issue and the L amp CR took further powers 11 June 1838 to enlarge its station then under construction at London Bridge A parliamentary select committee also became concerned about the safety of the arrangements and in response the London and Greenwich Railway Company was given powers to widen its viaduct on the southern side so as to make a four track viaduct from Corbett s Lane to London Bridge 1 Determining the route edit In its first conception the line was to follow the bed of the Croydon Canal for much of the route A jury determined the value of the canal as 40 250 as if it was a going concern When detailed route design was undertaken before handover of the canal it was clear that the meanderings and zigzags made by the canal were unsuitable and that the line needed to be built alongside the general course The levels around New Cross were also difficult and to find the best compromise a 1 in 80 gradient was selected involving at that time the use of assistant engines due to the steepness Even so a cutting of considerable depth was unavoidable When the SER s line became authorised the Croydon company reconsidered the matter as its line would now be part of a trunk route and it was decided to ease the gradient from New Cross to 1 in 100 this involved a deeper and longer cutting and the line would only reach surface level at the present day Forest Hill station The deeper cuttings required more surface area of land and some curvature improvements further south also required unanticipated land acquisition Stations were to be at New Cross Dartmouth Arms named after a nearby hostelry that is still extant in 2013 2 Sydenham Penge Annerley later Anerley the Scottish owner of the land said that his was the annerley hoose in the area Jolly Sailor also named after a public house just north of the current Norwood Junction 3 and the terminus at Croydon now West Croydon Freight traffic was considered to be impracticable for handling at London Bridge and the London freight terminal point was built at New Cross the adjacent Surrey Canal was considered to give sufficient onward connectivity There was also an engine shed at New Cross coal was brought in by the canal there being at the time no rail connection to coal mines 4 Construction edit nbsp The railway at New Cross 1839 The consultant engineer was William Cubitt The line proved to be expensive to build costing 615 000 rather than the estimated 180 000 due to large cuttings at New Cross and Forest Hill 5 The only severe gradient was 1 100 1 for 2 3 4 miles 4 4 km from New Cross to Forest Hill In addition to the viaduct where it joined the L amp GR there were 18 bridges and three level road crossings each attended by a policeman The track was laid to standard 4 ft 8 1 2 in 1 435 mm gauge although during the construction the directors were undecided and ordered extra long 9 ft 2 743 mm sleepers with a view to conversion to 7 ft 2 134 mm broad gauge which never happened 6 The line used Vignoles flat bottomed rail broader in the base and lower than modern rail These were mounted on longitudinal timbers with cross sleepers A new station was built at London Bridge for Croydon trains on the north side of the L amp GR one with track shared as far as Corbetts Lane The line opened on 5 June 1839 7 There were six intermediate stations at New Cross now New Cross Gate Dartmouth Arms now Forest Hill Sydenham Penge Anerley Bridge now Anerley and Jolly Sailor replaced by Norwood Junction in 1859 The terminus was at London Road in Croydon Because of the planned additional traffic following the opening of the L amp BR and the SER the L amp CR sought powers to widen the viaduct from Corbetts Lane to London Bridge in 1840 Parliament decided that the widening should be undertaken by the owners the L amp GR 8 This work was completed by 1842 By this time the L amp CR had joined the newly opened SER and L amp BR to form a committee and agreement was reached with the L amp GR to exchange their stations at London Bridge in 1843 in order to avoid their trains crossing over at Corbetts Junction Bricklayers Arms Terminus edit nbsp Lewis Cubitt s Bricklayers Arms station 1844 By 1843 the L amp CR and the SER were becoming concerned about the tolls charged by the L amp GR for the use of its line between Corbetts Junction and London Bridge As a result they jointly constructed a branch from the L amp CR at New Cross to a new terminus designed by Lewis Cubitt at Bricklayers Arms thereby avoiding use of the L amp GR From 1844 the SER transferred all of its services to the new terminus and the L amp CR operated services from both termini 9 This arrangement lasted until 1852 Epsom extension edit In April 1844 the L amp CR directors approved an extension to Epsom not completed until after the railway became a part of the LB amp SCR Deptford Dockyard extension edit London and Croydon Railway Act 1846Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act to enable the London and Croydon Railway Company to construct a Branch to Deptford and for amending the Acts relating to such Railway Citation9 amp 10 Vict c ccxxxivDatesRoyal assent27 July 1846 In July 1846 an act of Parliament the London and Croydon Railway Act 1846 9 amp 10 Vict c ccxxxiv was passed granting authority for a branch from New Cross to Deptford Dockyard This was commenced after the railway became a part of the LB amp SCR Locomotives and rolling stock editThe railway owned seven 2 2 2 locomotives and one 0 4 2 The first five 2 2 2s and one 0 4 2 were built by Sharp Roberts and Company and were delivered between July 1838 and July 1839 The remaining two were built by G and J Rennie in August 1838 and May 1839 10 Summary table edit L amp CR No Type Manufacturer Delivered Name Jt Cttee No 1845 disposal 1 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 1838 07 Surrey 1 L amp BR 2 2 2 2 G and J Rennie 1838 08 Croydon 2 SER 3 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 1838 09 Sussex 3 L amp BR 4 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 1839 02 Kent 4 L amp BR 5 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 1839 03 London 5 SER 6 2 2 2 G and J Rennie 1839 07 Archimedes 6 SER 7 0 4 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 1839 07 Hercules 7 SER 8 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 1839 08 Sydenham 8 L amp CR Brighton Croydon and Dover Joint Committee edit From 1842 the L amp CR pooled its locomotive stock with the SER to form the Croydon and Dover Joint Committee From March 1844 the L amp BR joined the scheme and the locomotives were thereafter operated by the Brighton Croydon and Dover Joint Committee which also ordered further locomotives These arrangements caused great operating problems for the L amp CR and the L amp BR and in April 1845 they gave notice of withdrawal from the arrangement in January 1846 when the locomotives were divided between the three companies The L amp CR received eight locomotives back in April 1845 seven of which had been owned by other railways 11 Summary table edit L amp CR No Type Manufacturer Name Jt Cttee No Original Rly 17 2 2 0 William Fairbairn 74 L amp BR 25 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company Sydenham 8 L amp CR 43 0 4 2 Sharp Roberts and Company Achilles 35 Jt Cttee 44 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company Kingston 50 L amp BR 48 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 68 L amp BR 49 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 69 L amp BR 50 2 2 2 Sharp Roberts and Company 88 Jt Cttee 51 2 2 2 Sharp Brothers 90 Jt Cttee Motive power depots and workshop edit The railway opened an early example of a roundhouse motive power depot at New Cross 1 June 1839 but this brick built building was burned down 14 October 1844 It was replaced by a nearby traditional straight shed in 1845 and the original turntable and associated lines were incorporated into a locomotive repair depot in the same year 12 There was also a small depot at Croydon Carriage stock edit There were first and second class four wheeled carriages both of the three compartment type usual for the period the main difference seeming to be that the first class coaches carried 18 passengers the second class 24 Operation editThe line into London Bridge became increasingly congested so at Corbetts Lane a white disc was installed to be operated by the pointsman If the disc was face on or a red light at night the route was set for Croydon edge on or a white light the junction was set for Greenwich It is believed that this was first fixed signal used to control a junction Greenwich trains ran every 15 minutes Croydon trains were hourly The first railway semaphore signal was erected by Charles Hutton Gregory on the railway at New Cross about 1842 13 Atmospheric railway editFurther information Atmospheric railway London and Croydon Railway nbsp Jolly sailor station in 1845 the atmospheric pumping station with its Gothic chimney exhaust vent in the foreground 14 In 1844 the L amp CR was given parliamentary authority to lay an additional line next to the existing track and test an atmospheric railway system Pumping stations were built at Portland Road Croydon and Dartmouth Arms which created a vacuum in a pipe laid between the running rails A free running piston in the pipe was attached to the train through a slit sealed by a leather valve The piston and hence the train was propelled towards the pumping station by atmospheric pressure The pumping stations were built in a Gothic style with a very tall ornate tower which served both as a chimney and as an exhaust vent for air pumped from the propulsion pipe As part of the construction works for the atmospheric system the world s first railway flyover overpass was constructed south of Jolly Sailor to carry the atmospheric line over the conventional steam line 15 The railway experienced many problems with the pumping engines and the valves during 1846 creating dissatisfaction among the shareholders with the directors The added directors from the L amp BR after the amalgamation in August were even less interested in continuing the experiment 16 In 1847 the atmospheric experiment was abandoned The engine house at Dartmouth Arms was largely demolished in 1851 and an electricity sub station was built on the site in 1928 Stone from the Croydon pumping station was reused in construction of the Surrey Street waterworks building which still exists According to one historian the use of the atmospheric system cost the railway 500 000 and was a sad fiasco 17 nbsp Railways in the South East of England in 1840 Accidents edit The railway is not known to have suffered any serious accidents which is remarkable given its early operation over shared lines 13 Amalgamation editAs a result of the poor financial performance of both the L amp CR and the L amp BR a group of shareholders organised an amalgamation of these companies with the Brighton and Chichester Railway and the Brighton Lewes and Hastings Railway both under construction to form the London Brighton and South Coast Railway on 27 February 1846 18 Notes edit Howard Turner states page 27 that the date has often been erroneously quoted as 5 June Citations edit a b c John Howard Turner The London Brighton and South Coast Railway I Origins and Formation B T Batsford Ltd London 1977 ISBN 0 7134 0275 X Dartmouth Arms Forest Hill Dartmouth Arms Retrieved 5 April 2017 The Jolly Sailor Public House Liane Lang Retrieved 5 April 2017 Howard Turner chapter 4 Dendy Marshall 1963 p 38 Dendy Marshall 1963 p 39 Brown Joe 2015 2006 p 40 London Railway Atlas 4th ed Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 3819 6 Dendy Marshall 1963 p 41 Howard Turner J T 1977 London Brighton and South Coast Railway London Batsford pp 192 204 ISBN 0 7134 0275 X Bradley D L 1963 Locomotives of the South Eastern Railway Solihull Railway Correspondence and Travel Society pp 11 12 Bradley D L 1963 Locomotives of the South Eastern Railway Solihull Railway Correspondence and Travel Society pp 13 16 Griffiths Roger and Paul Smith 1999 The Directory of British Engine Sheds 1 Southern England the Midlands East Anglia and Wales Oxford Oxford Publishing Co p 95 ISBN 0 86093 542 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Dendy Marshall 1963 p 50 Jolly sailor Station The Pictorial Times 1845 Connor J E 2006 London s Disused Stations The London Brighton amp South Coast Railway Colchester Connor amp Butler p 70 ISBN 0 947699 39 2 Howard Turner J T 1977 London Brighton and South Coast Railway London Batsford pp 272 4 ISBN 0 7134 0275 X Hamilton Ellis C 1971 The London Brighton and South Coast Railway London Ian Allan p 31 ISBN 0 7110 0269 X Brown Joe 2015 2006 London Railway Atlas 4th ed Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 3819 6 References editWhishaw F 1840 The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland Practically described and illustrated London Simpkin Marshall and Co Simmons J 1995 ppb ed The Victorian Railways London Thames and HudsonFurther reading editWhishaw Francis 1842 The Railways of Great Britain and Ireland Practically Described and Illustrated 2nd ed London John Weale pp 275 283 OCLC 833076248 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title London and Croydon Railway amp oldid 1220382886 Brighton 2C Croydon and Dover Joint Committee, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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