Slough to Windsor & Eton Line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Slough to Windsor & Eton Line
( Reading – Paddington )
Great Western Main Line
HLUECKE eABZ3lg ABZ3rg HSTR HBHF HLUECKE
Slough
exSTR eABZld exKDSl
Slough Loco Shed (81B) (closed 1964)
exSTRlf eABZlg
West ('Royal' or 'Queen's') Curve (lifted)
SBRÜCKE
A4 (Bath Road)
eHST
Chalvey Halt (1929-1930)
AKRZ-UKu
M4 motorway
WASSER WBRÜCKE WASSER
Jubilee River
AKRZu
A332 Windsor Relief Road
STR
ELEVa
ELEV
Brick arch viaduct
ELEVe
WASSER WBRÜCKE1 WASSER
River Thames (Windsor Railway Bridge)
ELEVa exENDEa
ELEV exSTRrg exABZrf
ELEV exELEVa exSTR
Goods Yard incline (lifted 1960s)
eABZrg-ELEV exSTRrf-ELEV exKDSe
Windsor Goods Yard (lifted 1960s)
KBFe-ELEV
Windsor & Eton Central
A 2-car Class 165 DMU, on the brick viaduct carrying the GWR line into Windsor (looking east towards Eton College).
A 2-car Class 165 DMU, on the brick viaduct carrying the GWR line into Windsor (looking east towards Eton College).
The wrought iron railway bridge at Windsor.(Picture shows downstream side, looking towards Windsor.)
The wrought iron railway bridge at Windsor.
(Picture shows downstream side, looking towards Windsor.)

The Slough to Windsor & Eton Branch Line is a short railway line between the towns of Slough and Windsor in Berkshire, England. Trains run from a dedicated bay platform at Slough to Windsor and Eton Central Station. At Slough, the branch is connected to the Great Western Main Line, but no service trains currently use this connection.

Contents

[edit] Services

Trains along this line are operated by First Great Western and run every 30 minutes in each direction for most of the day, increasing to roughly every 20 minutes during peak periods.

All services terminate at Slough (platform 1) and passengers wishing to travel to onward stations should change there. Despite the need to change, passengers taking this 'Western' route enjoy considerably faster journey times between Windsor and London than those using the 'Southern' line between Windsor and Eton Riverside and London Waterloo (around 30-40 minutes, via Slough, compared with the near one-hour duration for the direct, but stopping, South West Trains service via Staines).

[edit] Rolling Stock

As with all other First Great Western railways west of Hayes and Harlington railway station, the Windsor Branch is not electrified and all trains are diesel-powered.

Services are currently provided using Class 165 and Class 166 2- and 3-car diesel multiple units.

In the 1970s and 1980s, 'First Generation' DMUs like the Class 117 and Class 121 ('Bubblecars') were used.

[edit] History

The line opened, despite opposition from Eton College, on 8 October 1849. It was built as a broad gauge line but dual gauge track was laid in 1862.[1]

For a period from 1863, Metropolitan Railway trains served the line. Between 1 March 1883 and 30 September 1885 the branch was also served by the Metropolitan District Railway.

[edit] Chalvey Halt

There was only ever one intermediate stop on the branch line, a halt in Chalvey,[2] [3]. 47 chains (945 metres) south of Bath Road Junction.[4] The appropriately named Chalvey Halt was authorised on 24th February 1929, at an estimated cost of £840, and opened on 6 May 1929. It comprised both up and down platforms, built from heavy timbers to the standard GWR design for halt platforms. Also provided were waiting shelters, and steps down to a nearby road.[5]

After only fourteen months of operation, the halt closed on 7 July 1930. A note in the GW Engineer's Department minutes of 19 October 1930, records that the materials from Chalvey Halt had been used to build Cashes Green Halt, on the Gloucester to Swindon "Golden Valley Line", between Stroud and Stonehouse.[6]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Windsor Branch workings in the Postwar Years, abstracts from Great Western Railway Journal Volume 4. Accessed 10 February 2007
  2. ^ Around Slough in Old Photographs, p53, Judith Hunter & Karen Hunter, Alan Sutton Publishing (1992)
  3. ^ The Changing Face of Slough, p69, Slough Museum, Breedon Books (2003)
  4. ^ Quayle, H.I.; Stanley C. Jenkins (1980). Branch Lines into the Eighties. David & Charles, pp30-32. ISBN 0-7153-7980-1. 
  5. ^ Robertson, Kevin (1990). Great Western Railway Halts (Volume One). Irwell Press, p51. ISBN 1-871608-17-1. 
  6. ^ Robertson, p48

[edit] Further reading

  • Mitchell, Vic and Smith, Keith (2002). Branch Lines to Henley, Windsor and Marlow. Middleton Press. ISBN 1-901706-77x.