Hampton Court branch line

{{Short description|Railway branch line in Surrey, England}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{Infobox rail line

| box_width =

| name = Hampton Court branch line

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| image = Thames Ditton stn look north3.JPG

| image_width = 300px

| caption = The line at {{stnlink|Thames Ditton}} station

| type = Suburban rail, Heavy rail

| system = National Rail

| status = Operational

| locale = Greater London
Surrey
South East England

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| stations = 2

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| open = 1849

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| owner = Network Rail

| operator = South Western Railway

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| linelength = {{convert|1.54|mi}} (1 mi 51 chains)

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| electrification = 750 V DC third rail

| speed = {{convert|40|mph|km/h|abbr=on}} in the up direction, {{convert|45|mph|km/h|abbr=on}} in the down direction

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}}

The Hampton Court branch line is a {{cvt|1|mile|52|ch|km|adj=on}} railway branch line in north Surrey, England. It runs from its terminus, Hampton Court station in East Molesey, via an intermediate station at Thames Ditton to a junction on the South Western Main Line, near {{rws|Surbiton}}. The line is double tracked and is electrified using the 750 V DC third-rail system.

The line was constructed by the London and South Western Railway primarily to cater for tourists visiting Hampton Court Palace and opened in 1849. All trains are operated by South Western Railway (SWR) and run to and from {{rws|London Waterloo}} via Surbiton and {{rws|Clapham Junction}}. SWR manages both stations on the branch.

Infrastructure and stations

{{Hampton Court Branch Line RDT|collapse=y}}

The Hampton Court branch line is a double track railway line in north Surrey, England. It runs for {{cvt|1|mile|52|ch|km}} from its terminus at Hampton Court station to a grade-separated junction with the South Western Main Line,{{cvt|13|mile|27|ch|km}} down the line from London Waterloo.{{sfn|"Sectional Appendix"|2009|p=33}} The maximum speed on the branch is {{cvt|45|mph}} in the down direction (away from London) and {{cvt|40|mph}} in the up direction.{{sfn|"Route Specifications"|2016|pp=28-30}} There is one level crossing on the line, immediately to the south of the terminus,{{sfn|"Sectional Appendix"|2009|p=170}} and the majority of the line is built on an embankment, which reaches a maximum height of {{cvt|18|ft}} above the surrounding ground level.{{cite newspaper The Times |title= Railway intelligence |date= 27 January 1849 |issue= 20084 |page= 4 }} The line is electrified using the 750 V DC third-rail system. Signalling is controlled by Woking signal box and Track Circuit Block is in operation.{{sfn|"Sectional Appendix"|2009|p=170}}

File:Train waiting at Hampton Court Station - geograph.org.uk - 4639227.jpg units at Hampton Court station with the River Mole below]]

There are two stations on the branch, both of which have two operational platforms. Hampton Court railway station, the terminus, is {{cvt|14|mile|76|ch|km}} down the line from London Waterloo and Thames Ditton railway station is {{cvt|14|mile|1|ch|km}} from Waterloo.{{sfn|"Sectional Appendix"|2009|p=170}} All platforms are at least {{cvt|205|m}} long and are capable of accommodating 10-carriage trains.{{sfn|"Sectional Appendix"|2009|pp=125-126, 129}} Both stations are managed by South Western Railway, which operates all services.{{cite web |title= Hampton Court and Thames Ditton to London Waterloo |date= December 2023 |publisher= South Western Railway |url= https://www.southwesternrailway.com/-/media/files/plan-my-journey/timetables/december-2023/ptt14-december-2023.pdf

|access-date= 22 January 2024 }} The rolling stock used on the line is typically Class 455 electrical multiple units.{{cite magazine |title=SWR withdraws '456s' following service cuts |magazine=Rail |issue=949 |date=26 January 2022 |pages=10–11}} Trains typically travel the length of the branch in seven minutes{{sfn|"Route Specifications"|2016|pp=28-30}} and reach London Waterloo from Hampton Court in around 35-40 minutes.

History

=Authorisation and opening=

Hampton Court Palace was opened to the public by Queen Victoria in 1838.{{cite web |title= The story of Hampton Court Palace |publisher= Historic Royal Palaces |url= https://www.hrp.org.uk/hampton-court-palace/history-and-stories/the-story-of-hampton-court-palace/ |access-date= 29 January 2024 }} On 21 May of that year, the first part of the South West Main Line opened between Nine Elms and Woking Common. At first, the closest railway station to the palace was {{rws|Esher}}, initially called Ditton Marsh and recorded as "Esher for Hampton Court" in Bradshaw's Guide of 1839.{{sfn|Williams|1968}}{{sfn|Quick|2023|p=185}} In the mid-1840s, the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) proposed the construction of a branch from the main line with a terminus on the south side of the River Thames at East Molesey to better serve the palace. The company chairman, William Chaplin, noted that the new line would "afford a fresh means of cheap and legitimate recreation to the poorer classes".{{sfn|Williams|1968|p=181}}

The act of parliament authorising the construction of Hampton Court branch line was granted royal assent in July 1846{{cite news |title= House of Lords - Thursday : Royal Assent |date= 17 July 1846 |work= The Standard |issue= 6844 |page= 3 }} and the land required was purchased by the LSWR by August the following year.{{cite news |title= London and South-Western |date= 8 August 1847 |work= The Observer |page= 2 }} There was a delay before construction started, while the company debated whether to continue the branch towards Staines and Windsor.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=180}} The engineer, Joseph Locke, was a strong proponent of extending the line towards Berkshire,{{sfn|Oppitz|1988|p=102}} but after the rival Windsor, Staines and South Western Railway scheme was approved by parliament in 1847, the LSWR decided to build the Hampton Court branch to its original design.{{sfn|Williams|1968|p=181}}

Construction started in January 1848{{sfn|Oppitz|1988|p=103}} and the first proving run with a locomotive took place on 1 January 1849.{{cite news |title= Opening of the Hampton Court branch of the South Western Railway |date= 2 January 1849 |work= The Standard |issue= 7609 |page= 2 }} The branch opened a month later on 1 February.{{cite news |title= South-Western Railway |date= 16 February 1849 |work= The Standard |issue= 7648 |page= 1 }} Initially six trains per day ran in each direction, four each way on Sundays, with a typical journey time between Waterloo and Hampton Court of around 50 minutes. The return fare was 5 s.{{cite newspaper The Times |title= London and South-Western Railway : Opening of the Hampton Court branch |date= 26 January 1849 |issue= 20083 |page= 3 }}{{efn|In 1865, 13 of the 47 daily mainline departures from Waterloo were services to Hampton Court.{{sfn|Oppitz|1988|p=102}}}}

A letter published in The Times on 13 February 1849 by a correspondent writing under the pseudonym, Medicus, reported that, a few days earlier, the 12:45 departure from Hampton Court had been hauled by a horse. Once the carriage had reached the junction with the main line, it had then been attached to a steam-hauled service from Dorchester.{{cite newspaper The Times |title= The Hampton Court railway |date= 13 February 1849 |issue= 20098 |page= 8 }} It is unclear whether this method of operation was a regular occurrence in the first few years after opening.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=181}} The railway historian, Alan A. Jackson, suggests that horse-power may have been used to mitigate an unstable embankment{{sfn|Jackson|1999b|p=45}} or because of an initial lack of locomotives.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=181}}

File:Hampton Court opening.jpg

On opening, Hampton Court railway station had two platforms – one for arrivals and one for departures. It was positioned on an island between the River Mole and River Ember, with access to East Molesey via a drawbridge over the Mole.{{sfn|Jackson|1999b|p=45}} It is unclear whether the current station building, believed to have been designed by the architect, William Tite, was complete by the time the line opened. The railway historian, Gordon Biddle, suggests that the goods shed may have been used initially by passengers.{{sfn|Biddle|1973|p=66}}

In November 1849, the LSWR reported that the branch had cost £36,189 8s 4d to build and that revenue for the first six months had totalled £564.{{cite news |title= London and South Western |date= 29 November 1849 |work= The Morning Post |issue= 23706 |page= 3 }} In August 1851, the company stated that it had been disappointed with the financial performance of the line in its first two years of operation, but expressed the expectation that passenger numbers would rise.{{cite news |title= London and South Western |date= 29 November 1849 |work= The Morning Post |issue= 23706 |page= 3 }}

File:Railway bridges, Thames Ditton - geograph.org.uk - 3100500.jpg

The station at Thames Ditton opened in November 1851.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=181}} The station building and station master’s house were built into the east side of the embankment adjacent to the London-bound platform.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=182}}

The opening of the Hampton Court branch line was slow to promote residential development in the area. Housebuilding began in the Kent Town neighbourhood of East Molesey in the 1860s{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=181}} and in the Thames Ditton area in the final decade of the 19th century.{{sfn|Jackson|1999b|p=46}} Further substantial suburban growth occurred during the interwar period.{{sfn|Jackson|1999b|p=46}}

=Later developments=

A map of the Molesey area, published in 1870, shows that the terminus had a single arrivals line with platforms on both sides. There was a turntable at the northernmost point of the line and an engine shed on the eastern side of the line.{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Hampton Court}} An 1897 map shows a short extension to a wharf beside the Thames, although this appears to have been removed by 1914. The turntable is absent from the 1897 map.{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Hampton Court}} A new engine shed was erected at Hampton Court {{circa|1895}}{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=180}} and the original shed, designed by Tite, became the goods shed.{{sfn|Jackson|1999b|p=44}}

Between 1897 and 1899, the existing platforms at Hampton Court were extended and a new platform was built. The signalling for the new layout allowed arriving and departing trains to use all platforms without shunting. A new 43-lever signal box was constructed at the same time. Pedestrian access to the station was improved with the provision of an additional footbridge over the River Mole in 1905.{{sfn|Faulkner|Williams|1988|p=45}} Hampton Court Bridge, across the Thames, was constructed in mid-1930s, requiring the platforms at the river end of Hampton Court station to be cut back. The goods yard was reduced in size at around the same time{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=183}} and finally closed on 3 May 1965.{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Fig. 9}}

The South West Main Line was quadrupled between Surbiton and Hampton Court Junction on 29 July 1883.{{sfn|Williams|1973|p=78}} Until the mid-1910s, trains accessing the branch had to cross the lines heading towards London on the flat.{{cite news |title= Electrification of the South Western |date= 7 December 1912 |work= Daily Telegraph |issue=17981 |page= 7 }} In July 1915, a flyover was opened, carrying the down branch line over the main lines on a {{cvt|160|ft|adj=on}} steel truss girder bridge.{{sfn|Faulkner|Williams|1988|p=55}}{{efn|The diveunder, allowing trains from {{rws|Hinchley Wood}} on the New Guildford Line to access the up main lines, had opened in October 1908.{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Fig. 17}}}} The Hampton Court branch was included in the first phase of the LSWR suburban electrification programme{{cite news |title= Electrification on the South-Western |date= 2 March 1914 |work= Surrey Advertiser |volume= LXXX |issue= 7006 |page= 2 }} and electric services began on 18 June 1916. {{sfn|Faulkner|Williams|1988|p=107}}{{efn|Three of the four berthing sidings at Hampton Court station were electrified in 1916. The sidings were decommissioned in 1971.{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Fig. 10}}}} Bomb damage to Hampton Court junction, caused by a V-2 flying bomb on 2 November 1944, closed the branch for two days.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=183}}{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Fig. 17}}

By the end of the 19th century, the line was controlled from a 20-lever signal box adjacent to the level crossing at the southern end of Hampton Court station{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Fig. 5}} and a six-lever signal box in the main station building at Thames Ditton.{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Fig. 13}} A new signal box was constructed at Hampton Court in 1957 and became fully operational on 15 September 1958.{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Fig. 6}} Colour light signalling controlled from Surbiton was implemented on 22 March 1970, although the signal box at Hampton Court was retained to control the level crossing. The box was closed completed on 23 September 1979 when CCTV was implemented, allowing signallers to monitor the crossing remotely.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=183}}

Demand for travel on the Hampton Court branch was stimulated at the end of the 19th century with the creation of Hurst Park Racecourse in 1889. The course was around {{cvt|1|mi}} to the west of Hampton Court station between the village of West Molesey and the River Thames.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=181}}{{efn|The Hurst Park course was created by relandscaping the former Hampton racecourse. The inaugural race meeting took place on 19 March 1890.{{cite newspaper The Times |title= Hurst Park Club inaugural meeting |date= 20 March 1890 |issue= 32964 |page= 11 }}}} The busiest day of the year on the line was Whit Monday (in late May or early June), when the most popular meeting took place.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=181}}{{efn|On Whit Monday in 1958, trains ran at five-minute intervals on the branch to transport racegoers for Hurst Park. The increased frequency of trains was facilitated by the staffing of Thames Ditton signal box, which enabled the block sections on the line to be shortened and which in the 1950s was only opened on Whit Mondays.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=181}}{{sfn|Mitchell|Smith|1990|loc=Fig. 14}}}} Two additional sidings for race-day traffic were added at Hampton Court station in 1908{{sfn|Faulkner|Williams|1988|p=45}} and racehorses were transported via the line until the course closed in October 1962.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=181}} A few months later, Hurst Park was sold to the construction firm, Wates, for £905,000.{{cite newspaper The Times |title= Hurst Park stake in betting shops |date= 13 February 1963 |issue= 55624 |page= 10 }} Housebuilding on the racecourse site began in the late 1960s.{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=183}}

The first annual Hampton Court Flower Show, now known as the Hampton Court Garden Festival, was opened by Anne, Princess Royal in July 1990. It was sponsored by Network SouthEast, the then operators of the branch line, which paid the organisers around £700,000 to subsidise the event.{{sfn|Green|Vincent|1994|pp=46, 48}}{{cite news |last= Petty |first= John |date= 11 June 1990 |title= A vision of speed and cleanliness |work= Daily Telegraph |issue= 41978 |page= 33 }} Six trains ran each hour from Waterloo off peak to bring visitors to the show from central London{{sfn|Jackson|1999a|p=183}}{{sfn|Green|Vincent|1994|pp=46, 48}} and a spokesperson for Network SouthEast later confirmed that the operator had recouped the cost of the sponsorship from fares.{{sfn|Elliott|2004|p=143}} The Network Southeast subsidy for the flower show ended after the July 1992 event.{{cite news |last= Whitsey |first= Fred |date= 27 November 1992 |title= Cash-hit flower show is rescued |work= Daily Telegraph |issue= 42746 |page= 22 }}

Proposals

The Hampton Court branch line is proposed to be incorporated into Crossrail 2.{{cite news |title= Crossrail 2 stations proposed by London business leaders |date= 5 February 2013 |work= BBC News |url= https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-21333361 |access-date= 24 January 2024 }}

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{reflist}}

Bibliography

{{refbegin}}

  • {{cite book |last= Biddle |first= Gordon |year= 1973 |title= Victorian Stations |publisher= David & Charles |location= Newton Abbot |isbn= 978-0-71-535949-5 }}
  • {{cite book |last= Elliott |first= Brent |year= 2004 |title= The Royal Horticultural Society: A history 1804-2004 |publisher= Phillimore |location= Chichester |isbn= 978-1-86-077272-6 }}
  • {{cite book |last1= Faulkner |first1= J.N. |last2= Williams |first2= R.A. |year= 1988 |title= The LSWR in the twentieth century |publisher= David & Charles |location= Newton Abbott |isbn= 978-0-71-538927-0 }}
  • {{cite book |last1= Green |first1= Chris |last2= Vincent |first2= Mike |year= 1994 |title= The Network Southeast story |publisher= Ian Allan |location= Hersham |isbn= 978-0-86-093653-4 }}
  • {{cite book |last= Jackson |first= Alan A. |year= 1999a |orig-year= 1978 |title= London's local railways |edition= 2nd |publisher= Capital Transport |location= Harrow Weald |isbn= 978-0-71-537479-5 }}
  • {{cite book |last= Jackson |first= Alan A. |year= 1999b |title= The railway in Surrey |publisher= Atlantic Transport Publishers |location= Penryn |isbn= 978-0-90-689990-8 }}
  • {{cite book |last1= Mitchell |first1= Vic |last2= Smith |first2= Keith |year= 1990 |title= Branch lines around Effingham Junction |publisher= Middleton Press |isbn= 978-0-90-652074-1 }}
  • {{cite book |last= Oppitz |first= Leslie |year= 1988 |title= Surrey railways remembered |publisher= Countryside Books |location= Newbury |isbn= 978-1-85-306005-2 }}
  • {{cite book |last= Quick |first= Michael |year= 2023 |orig-year= 2001 |title= Railway Passenger Stations in Great Britain |edition= 5.05 |publisher= Railway and Canal Historical Society |location= London |url= https://rchs.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Railway-Passenger-Stations.pdf |access-date= 29 January 2024 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Williams |first=R. A. |year=1968 |title=The London & South Western Railway |volume= 1: The Formative Years |publisher= David & Charles |location= Newton Abbot |isbn=0-7153-4188-X }}
  • {{cite book |last=Williams |first=R. A. |year=1973 |title=The London & South Western Railway |volume= 2: Growth and Consolidation |publisher= David & Charles |location= Newton Abbot |isbn=0-7153-5940-1 }}
  • {{cite web |title= Kent / Sussex / Wessex Routes Sectional Appendix |publisher= Network Rail |year= 2009 |url= https://sacuksprodnrdigital0001.blob.core.windows.net/sectional-appendix/Sectional%20Appendix%20full%20PDFs%20December%2023/Kent%20Sussex%20and%20Wessex%20Sectional%20Appendix%20December%202023%20.pdf |access-date= 23 January 2024 |ref= {{harvid|"Sectional Appendix"|2009}}}}
  • {{cite web |title= Delivering a better railway for a better Britain {{!}} Route Specifications: Wessex |year= 2016 |publisher= Network Rail |url= https://www.networkrail.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Route-Specification-2016-Wessex-1.pdf |access-date= 23 January 2024 |ref= {{harvid|"Route Specifications"|2016}}}}

{{refend}}

{{commons category-inline|Hampton Court Branch Line}}

{{Transport in Surrey}}

{{Railway lines in South East England}}

Category:Rail transport in Surrey

Category:Railway lines in South East England

Category:Railway lines opened in 1849

Category:1849 establishments in England