Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway

The Stratford Upon Avon & Midland Junction Railway (SMJR) was a small independent railway company that ran a railway network across part of central England. Its lines covered south Northamptonshire and south Warwickshire and its services extended to parts of north Buckinghamshire and north Oxfordshire. The company adopted its "Stratford Upon Avon & Midland Junction" name in 1909. In Britain's 1923 railway grouping the SMJR was made part of the new London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS). In Britain's 1948 transport nationalisation the former SMJR was made part of British Railways (BR). BR closed much of the former SMJR's network in the 1950s, and now only 5 miles (8 km) of it remain in use.

Railway Clearing House 1911 map of railways around Banbury. The blue lines show the SMJR

The SMJR was formed by the merger of the East & West Junction Railway (E+WJR), the Evesham, Redditch and Stratford Railway (ER+SR), and changed its name to the Stratford-upon-Avon, Towcester and Midland Junction Railway (ST+MJR), the Easton Neston Mineral and Towcester, Roade and Olney Junction Railway (ENM+TROJR). In 1910 The Northampton & Banbury Junction Railway (N+BJR) merged with the SMJR. As the SMJR the company ran services between Broom Junction and Stratford-upon-Avon and Banbury in the west through Towcester to Blisworth and Olney in the east, promoting itself as "The Shakespeare Route".

History

The SMJR was formed by the amalgamation of four railways in 1909/10:

On 1 January 1923 the SMJR was taken over by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMSR) and became an important asset to it, providing a direct route (avoiding Birmingham), between the western line hitherto owned by the Midland Railway and the main line south of Bedford. It was extensively used by excursion traffic between the two world wars. There was also a "race special" once a year to Towcester from London. In 1948 the SMJR became part of British Railways.

Map of Railways in 1903 - includes the Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway

The route

Stratford-upon-Avon and
Midland Junction Railway

Legend
Gloucester Loop Line
EveshamBirmingham New Street

Broom Junction
Bidford-on-Avon
Binton

Stratford-upon-Avon(GWR)
Honeybourne Line
 

Stratford-upon-Avon
Old Town

(SMJ)

River Avon
Stratford and Moreton Tramway
Ettington
Kineton
Kineton Depot
Edge Hill Light Railway
Burton Dassett
North End
Chiltern Main Line

Fenny Compton West

Banbury Merton Street

Byfield

Chiltern Main Line
Farthinghoe

Cockley Brake Junction
to Verney Junction

Great Central Main Line
Morton Pinkney
Helmdon Village
Blakesley

Wappenham
Towcester

Stoke Bruern
Tiffield
West Coast Main Line
via Rugby

Northampton to Peterboro’ Line
Blisworth

Roade
Northampton Loop Line

Salcey Forest
Ravenstone Wood Junction
to Northampton

Olney
Turvey
Bedford Midland
Midland Main Line
 

Once all the portions of the line came together on the first day of 1909 (except for the Northampton & Banbury junction Railway which was taken over the following year) the SMJR consisted of a main line from Blisworth to Broom and two branches: one from Towcester to Ravenstone Wood Junction, Olney and the other from Towcester to Cockley Brake Junction. There were connections along the route with:

The line was single track throughout apart from passing loops: the countryside was undulating, and there were frequent changes of gradient and sharp curves, making it difficult to work for train crews. The track itself, until taken over by the LMSR, was mostly secondhand; because of this, the line was dubbed the "Slow, Mouldy and Jolty Railway" by travellers.

In 1923 the SMJR owned 13 locomotives, and by that time all of them were old. They were incompatible with the new company’s modernisation scheme so the LMS had them all scrapped by 1931.

The Edge Hill Light Railway, which began working in 1922 and closed in 1946, ran from Burton Dassett sidings, west of Fenny Compton.

In 1960 a new East to South curve was opened by British Railways at Stratford upon Avon to allow freight traffic to run from Banbury to Honeybourne - so allowing the closure of the Broom Junction section.[1]

Operating

The line’s original raison d’etre (that of conveying ironstone to the ironworks of South Wales) was ended when cheap Spanish ore displaced that from the Northamptonshire quarries. This brought about financial problems, and for a time in the 1870s the E&WJR was in the hands of the receiver. By 1911, however, the line was showing a reasonable profit.

Lias limestone was conveyed from the Ettington Lime Works; but from the early 20th century it became important as a through route for freight of all kinds between the West of England and London. One such freight working was the express banana train between Avonmouth Dock and St Pancras.

Remains of Byfield railway station in 1963

Passenger services generally on the SMJR were sparse, with often just three or four trains a day. For some months in 1932 the LMS experimented on the SMJR with a Ro-Railer  — a bus converted to run on rails  — but this was not successful and the LMS withdrew the service in June 1932.

Closures

SMJR today

Today the only part of the SMJR still open is the 5 miles (8 km) section between Fenny Compton and the Ministry of Defence depot at Kineton.

References

  1. Dunn, J.M. (1977) [1952]. The Stratford & Midland Junction Railway. Oakwood Library of Railway History. Salisbury: Oakwood Press. p. 17. ISBN 0-85361-036-3. OL10.

External links

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