Brighton Main Line

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Brighton Main Line
Hassocks Station - train arriving from London - geograph.org.uk - 1169890.jpg
Southern Class 377 No. 377 448 Electrostar at Hassocks.
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerNetwork Rail
LocaleGreater London
South East England
TerminiLondon Bridge
London Victoria
Brighton
Service
TypeRegional rail, Suburban rail
SystemNational Rail
Operator(s)Govia Thameslink Railway
Great Western Railway
London Overground
Depot(s)Selhurst
Brighton Lovers Walk
Stewarts Lane
Rolling stockClass 165 "Turbo"
Class 166 "Turbo Express"
Class 171 "Turbostar"
Class 377 "Electrostar"
Class 378 "Capitalstar"
Class 387 "Electrostar"
Class 455
Class 700 "Desiro City"
History
Opened1839-1841
Technical
Number of tracks2-4
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC third rail
Operating speedMax. 90 mph (140 km/h)
Route map
Brighton main line.png
(Click to expand)

The Brighton Main Line (also known as the South Central Main Line) is a major railway line in the United Kingdom that links Brighton, on the south coast of England, with central London. In London the line has two branches, out of London Victoria and London Bridge stations respectively, which join up in Croydon and continue towards Brighton as one line.[1] The line is electrified throughout using the third rail system.[1]

Aside from London and Brighton themselves, the line serves multiple large urban areas along its route, including Redhill, eastern Crawley,[a] Haywards Heath and Burgess Hill.[1] It also serves the major London suburbs of south-west Battersea,[b] Balham, Streatham, Croydon and Purley, as well as London Gatwick Airport – the second-busiest passenger airport in the country.

In addition, the line operates as a "trunk" route for both mainline and suburban services all across Sussex, east Surrey and the southern boroughs of London. Towns such as Sutton, Epsom, Caterham, Reigate, East Grinstead, Eastbourne, Horsham, Hove, Worthing, Littlehampton, Bognor Regis and Chichester do not lie directly on the line, but are instead linked to London by means of a railway line that connects onto the Brighton Main Line.[1][2]

Route[]

The line starts at two central London termini: the western branch runs from London Victoria while the eastern branch originates at London Bridge. The Victoria branch is quadruple-track with fast services running on the western pair of tracks and slow services on the eastern pair. Leaving Victoria the branch runs mostly southwestwards until Clapham Junction, where it turns to run southeastwards towards East Croydon. The London Bridge branch starts off running east, but quickly turns southwards just before the first intermediate station (New Cross Gate) and continues approximately south all the way to East Croydon via Norwood Junction; this branch also has four tracks, but with express services using the inner pair of tracks and local services running on the outer pair. The two branches join together at Windmill Bridge Junction just north of East Croydon station;[1] the line then continues mostly southwards for the remainder of its route. The track layout south of the junction is the same as that on the Victoria branch (i.e. fast services on the western pair of tracks).

This arrangement continues until Stoats Nest Junction just south of Purley; at this point the line splits into two double-track routes, often called "Redhill line" and "Quarry line".[1] The Redhill line is a continuation of the slow tracks and is used by stopping services via Redhill itself. It is also the only one of the two lines to have a junction with both the North Downs line and the Redhill–Tonbridge line.[1] The Quarry line, meanwhile, bypasses Redhill by means of the Redhill Tunnel (passing under the line to Tonbridge) and is a continuation of the fast tracks. As such, it has no intermediate stops,[1] although Coulsdon North station existed on the line until 1983.

The Quarry line passes over the Redhill line south of Coulsdon South station; this means that when the two lines reunite again at Earlswood, the slow tracks are to the west side of the fast tracks.[1] From there, the line continues south past Gatwick Airport and Three Bridges before the two pairs of tracks merge at Balcombe Tunnel Junction (just north of Balcombe Tunnel itself) and the line reduces to double-track. There is a short quadruple-track section at Haywards Heath and a triple-track section at Preston Park (with a northbound passing loop); aside from these the line remains double-track through to Brighton.[1]

The line is 50 miles 49 chains (81.5 km) long, measured from London Victoria to Brighton via the Quarry line. The London Bridge branch is 9 miles 69 chains (15.9 km) long down to Windmill Bridge Junction (compared to 10 miles 12 chains (16.3 km) on the Victoria branch). The Redhill line is 8 miles 76 chains (14.4 km) long between Stoats Nest Junction and Earlswood (compared to 7 miles 17 chains (11.6 km) between the same points via the Quarry line).[1]

Services[]

Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR), which operates the Southern, Gatwick Express and Thameslink brands, operates the majority of passenger services on the line, including all services to and from the two London Terminals:[2][3]

  • Gatwick Express runs non-stop services between London Victoria and Gatwick Airport; some of these are extended to/from Brighton.
  • Thameslink runs services on the Brighton Main Line to and from London Bridge, from which they continue along the Thameslink core section through central London (via London Blackfriars and London St Pancras International) and beyond to destinations north of London, including Peterborough, Cambridge and Bedford. Services between Three Bridges and Bedford operate 24 hours a day.
  • All other GTR services, including those between London Victoria and Gatwick Airport that call at intermediate stations, are branded as Southern.

The only two other train operating companies that operate on the line are:

Bi-directional signalling[]

Normal-running and 'bi-directional' signals outside Haywards Heath tunnel

Between Balcombe Tunnel Junction and Preston Park, the line reduces from four tracks to two, with only a short quadruple-track passing loop between Copyhold Junction and Haywards Heath South Junction (through Haywards Heath station).[6] A broken-down train in this section causes the most disruption; therefore, to minimise the effects, the line is divided into four sections of bi-directional signalling, which allows trains to cross over and run on the right-hand track (i.e. "the wrong way"). These are:[7][8]

  • Balcombe Tunnel Junction to Copyhold Junction;
  • Copyhold Junction to Haywards Heath South Junction (outer tracks only);
  • Haywards Heath South Junction to Keymer Junction;
  • Keymer Junction to Preston Park station.

At the passing loop through Haywards Heath, the two inner tracks are only signalled bi-directionally south of Haywards Heath station itself, which allows trains to reverse at the station to/from the south. North of the station these tracks can only be used in their respective directions.[7][8]

History[]

Original proposals[]

There were six original proposals to build a railway between London and Brighton. The London and Brighton Railway (L&BR) emerged with an Act of Parliament of 15 July 1837 after a prolonged and expensive battle, with the most direct route, from the London and Croydon Railway (L&CR) at Norwood Junction to Brighton, using the L&CR from Norwood to London Bridge. A condition required by Parliament was that the railway should share its line between Croydon and Redhill with the South Eastern Railway main line to Dover. This clause gave rise to 60 years of disputes between the two companies.

Brighton line[]

Land use between London and Brighton was largely rural. The line was planned to traverse the North Downs, the Wealden ridge and the South Downs while avoiding steep gradients.

Owing to the difficult terrain and relatively sparse population between Croydon and Brighton, the line by-passed several towns and villages on the London-Brighton road, such as Reigate and Crawley. Even so, it required substantial earthworks, notably through the North Downs at Merstham, with one of the largest cuttings in Britain; seven tunnels (Merstham, Balcombe, Haywards Heath, Clayton and Patcham initially, then Quarry and Redhill which were constructed later); and several embankments. To avoid steep gradients or detours, the 1,475-foot-long (450 m), maximum 96-foot-high (29 m) Ouse Valley Viaduct was built near Balcombe.

The line opened in two stages:

12 July 1841: Norwood Junction to Haywards Heath.
21 September 1841: to Brighton.

Branch lines[]

The branch line from Brighton to Shoreham-by-Sea was finished on 12 May 1840, before the main line, as it did not involve significant civil engineering works (all the materials arrived by sea from mainland Europe). The Newhaven section did not materialise until 1846, when the Brighton - Hastings line was opened by the Brighton Lewes and Hastings Railway. A few weeks later the L&CR, the L&BR and other railways in Sussex amalgamated to form the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LB&SCR).

Lines to Victoria[]

A branch line from Sydenham to Crystal Palace was opened together with the relocated Palace on 10 June 1854 and extended to Balham and Wandsworth in 1856 by the West End of London & Crystal Palace Railway. It reached Battersea in 1858, and London Victoria in 1860 on opening of the Victoria Station and Pimlico Railway. A connection from Crystal Palsce to Norwood Junction had been made in 1857. A cut-off line reducing the distance between East Croydon and Balham opened in 1862.

Quarry line[]

There were frequent disputes resulting from the companies' sharing of the busy section between East Croydon and Redhill. The LB&SCR owned the section between East Croydon and Coulsdon North, and the SER (later the South Eastern and Chatham Railway) from Coulsdon South to Redhill. Eventually the LB&SCR built the "Quarry Line", a by-pass for express trains between Coulsdon North and Earlswood, avoiding Redhill. It opened on 8 November 1899 (1 April 1900 for passenger trains).

Electrification[]

The line was the first UK main line to be electrified throughout. The LB&SCR electrified its South London Line on 1 December 1909 using an overhead high-tension single-phase system; within three years the line from Victoria to Selhurst railway station was also converted. In 1921 plans were drawn up to extend overhead electrification to Brighton.[9] In 1925[10] it was extended toward the edge of today's Greater London at Coulsdon North, before being scrapped by the amalgamated operator under the 1923 grouping: Southern Railway which decided to standardise on the third-rail system of the former London and South Western Railway. In 1928/29 the lines began conversion to third-rail operation.

The change to third rail electrification was in place southward to Coulsdon North by 1929[11] – to Three Bridges in the north of Sussex in July 1932, then reaching Brighton and West Worthing on the coast on 1 January 1933.[12]

The third rail is electrified at 750 V DC, and in the early part of the 21st century had its power supply upgraded for the introduction of Electrostar stock by Southern. Traction current supply is supervised by Lewisham, Selhurst and Brighton electrical control rooms which will be superseded by the Three Bridges ROC.[13]

Accidents[]

  • In the Clayton Tunnel rail crash on 25 August 1861, a signaller mistakenly allowed a passenger train into the tunnel before the previous one had cleared it. 23 passengers were killed and 176 injured in the collision.
  • On 8 March 1965, a freight train derailed at Streatham Common. All four lines were blocked, closing the route between Balham and Selhurst.[14]
  • On 16 December 1972, two electric multiple unit passenger trains collided at Copyhold Junction, West Sussex after the one of the drivers misread signals. Fifteen people were injured.[15]
  • In the Purley station rail crash on 4 March 1989, an electric multiple unit passed a signal at danger and collided with another just north of Purley station. Part of the front train fell down the embankment, killing five people and injuring 88.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Three Bridges station
  2. ^ Clapham Junction station

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k TRACKatlas of Mainland Britain (3rd ed.). Platform 5. 2017. pp. 12, 14, 20, 112–113, 116–120. ISBN 978 1909431 26 3.
  2. ^ a b Train Times - Southern Railway
  3. ^ Train Timetables - Thameslink
  4. ^ London Overground timetables - Transport for London
  5. ^ Train Times and Timetables - Great Western Railway
  6. ^ "Quail Route Map 5". Archived from the original on 20 April 2009.
  7. ^ a b "Three Bridges to Brighton on YouTube
  8. ^ a b "Brighton to Gatwick (Airport)" on YouTube
  9. ^ Dawson (1921)
  10. ^ Southern Electric fourth edition by G.T.Moody page 23
  11. ^ "Disused Stations: Coulsdon North Station". www.disused-stations.org.uk.
  12. ^ Bonavia (1987) 87-89.
  13. ^ Network Rail: Sectional Appetndix module KSW2/LOR SO500 Sequence 010
  14. ^ Moody (1979) p163
  15. ^ Moody (1979) p219

Sources[]

  • Bonavia, Michael R. (1987). The history of the Southern Railway London:Unwin Hyman. ISBN 0-04-385107-X.
  • Dawson, Philip, (1921) Report by Sir Philip Dawson on proposed substitution of electric for steam operation for suburban, local and mainline passenger and freight services, London Brighton and South Coast Railway.
  • Moody, G. T. (1979) [1957]. Southern Electric 1909-1979 (Fifth ed.). Shepperton: Ian Allan Ltd. ISBN 0 7110 0924 4.

Further reading[]

  • "Operation New Look". Rail Enthusiast. EMAP National Publications. January 1983. pp. 35–37. ISSN 0262-561X. OCLC 49957965.

External links[]

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