First Great Eastern

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

First Great Eastern Logo2.gif
360111 at Ipswich.jpg
Overview
Franchise(s)Great Eastern
5 January 1997 – 31 March 2004
Main region(s)East London
East of England
Fleet size144
Stations called at61
Parent companyFirstGroup
Reporting markGE
SuccessorOne

First Great Eastern[1] was a train operating company in England owned by FirstGroup that operated the Great Eastern franchise from January 1997 until March 2004.

Logo used from 1997 to 1999

Services[]

First Great Eastern operated all stops and limited stops services on the Great Eastern Main Line from London Liverpool Street to Southend Victoria, Southminster, Braintree, Colchester Town, Clacton-on-Sea, Walton-on-the-Naze, Harwich Town and Ipswich. It also ran services on the Romford to Upminster Line and Gainsborough Line from Marks Tey to Sudbury.[2]

Metro services
Route tph Calling at
Romford to Upminster 2 Emerson Park
Liverpool Street to Shenfield 4 Stratford, Maryland, Forest Gate, Manor Park, Ilford, Seven Kings, Goodmayes, Chadwell Heath, Romford, Gidea Park, Harold Wood, Brentwood
Main line services
Route tph Calling at
London Liverpool Street - Southend Victoria 3 Stratford, Romford (1tph), Shenfield, Billericay, Wickford, Rayleigh, Hockley, Rochford, Southend Airport, Prittlewell
Wickford - Southminster 1.5 Battlesbridge, South Woodham Ferrers, North Fambridge, Althorne, Burnham-on-Crouch
London Liverpool Street - Ipswich 1 Stratford, Shenfield, Chelmsford, Hatfield Peverel, Witham, Kelvedon, Marks Tey, Colchester, Manningtree
London Liverpool Street - Colchester Town Stratford, Romford, Shenfield, Chelmsford, Witham, Kelvedon, Marks Tey, Colchester
London Liverpool Street - Clacton-on-Sea Stratford, Shenfield, Ingatestone, Chelmsford, Witham, Colchester, Wivenhoe, Thorpe-le-Soken
London Liverpool Street - Braintree Stratford, Shenfield, Ingatestone, Chelmsford, Witham, White Notley, Cressing, Braintree Freeport
Marks Tey - Sudbury Chappel & Wakes Colne, Bures
Colchester - Walton-on-the-Naze Colchester Town, Hythe, Wivenhoe, Alresford, Great Bentley, Weeley, Thorpe-le-Soken, Kirby Cross, Frinton-on-Sea

Trains reverse at Colchester Town.

Colchester - Colchester Town (shuttle)
Manningtree - Harwich Town Mistley, Wrabness, Harwich International, Dovercourt

Rolling stock[]

First Great Eastern inherited a fleet of Class 312, Class 315 and Class 321s from British Rail. A Class 153 was hired from Anglia Railways for the Marks Tey to Sudbury service due to it not being electrified, a Class 150 being used on weekdays and a Class 153 on weekends. Prior to this arrangement, a Class 121 Bubble Car was hired from Silverlink.[3]

A franchise commitment was the replacement of the Class 312s. In May 2001, First Great Eastern ordered 21 Class 360 Desiros with the first entering service in August 2003.[4]

Fleet at end of franchise
Class Image Type Top speed Number Routes operated Built
mph km/h
121 Bubble Car 19880827-Paddington-Class121.jpg diesel multiple unit 70 112 Hired from
Silverlink
Marks TeySudbury 1960
150 150245 at Cambridge.JPG 75 120 Hired from
Anglia Railways
1984–1987
153 153335 'Michael Palin' at Cambridge.JPG 1987–1988
312 312718 and 312721 at Kirby Cross.JPG electric multiple unit 90 145 24 ColchesterWalton-on-the-Naze
Harwich TownManningtree
London Liverpool StreetClacton-on-Sea and Ipswich (peak times only)
1975–1978
315 Class 315s at London Liverpool Street.jpg 75 120 43 London Liverpool StreetShenfield and Southminster
RomfordUpminster
1980–1981
321 321334 'Amsterdam' at Colchester.JPG 100 160 77 London Liverpool StreetBraintree, Southend Victoria, Ipswich, Walton-on-the-Naze, Colchester Town, Clacton-on-Sea
WickfordSouthminster (Sundays only)
1988–1990
360/1 Desiro 360111 at Ipswich.jpg 21 London Liverpool StreetClacton-on-Sea and Harwich Town
London Liverpool StreetIpswich (peak times only)
2002–2003

Depot[]

First Great Eastern's fleet was maintained at Ilford depot.

Demise[]

In 2002, as part of a franchise reorganisation by the Strategic Rail Authority, it was announced that the Great Eastern franchise would be merged into the Greater Anglia franchise.[5] In December 2003, the Strategic Rail Authority awarded the Greater Anglia franchise to National Express, and the services operated by First Great Eastern were transferred to One (later National Express East Anglia) on 1 April 2004.[6]

References[]

  1. ^ Companies House extract company no 3007936 Great Eastern Railway Limited
  2. ^ First Great Eastern route map August 2003
  3. ^ "Bubble cars revived, depot opens to solve Great Eastern branch crisis" Rail issue 312 27 August 1997 page 10
  4. ^ Rail issue 468 20 August 2003 page 9
  5. ^ Rail issue 426 9 January 2002 page 4
  6. ^ "National Express wins rail franchise". The Daily Telegraph. London. 22 December 2003.

External links[]

Media related to First Great Eastern at Wikimedia Commons

Preceded by Operator of Great Eastern franchise
1997 – 2004
Succeeded by
Retrieved from ""