Northampton loop

The Northampton loop is a railway line serving the town of Northampton. It is a branch of the West Coast Main Line, deviating from the faster direct main line which runs to the west. The WCML is a four track line up to either end of the Loop: the 'up' and 'down' fast tracks take the direct route while the 'up' and 'down' slow tracks are diverted via Northampton railway station.

Northampton loop
Southbound train emerging into Roade cutting having climbed the incline on the loop line from Northampton to join the main line. The bridge in the distance is on Blisworth to Courteenhall Road
Overview
TypeHeavy rail
SystemNational Rail
StatusOperational
LocaleNorthamptonshire
East Midlands
West Midlands (region)
TerminiWolverton (West Coast Main Line)
Rugby (West Coast Main Line)
StationsTwo
Operation
Opened1881
OwnerNetwork Rail
Operator(s)London Northwestern Railway
Avanti West Coast
Rolling stockClass 319
Class 350 "Desiro"
Class 390 "Pendolino"
Technical
Line lengthApprox 23 34 miles (38.2 km)
Number of tracksTwo
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification25 kV 50 Hz AC OHLE
Operating speed75 mph (120 km/h)
Route map
Birmingham Loop Line
Trent Valley Junction
Rugby
Hillmorton Junction
Rugby Parkway
(proposed)
Kilsby and Crick
Daventry South Junction
Crick Tunnel
Watford Lodge Tunnel
Long Buckby
Althorp Park
Church Brampton
Northampton
Blisworth
Roade
Castlethorpe
Wolverton
Milton Keynes Central

The southern interconnect between the Northampton loop and the direct LondonBirmingham main line is at Hanslope Junction, just north of Milton Keynes. The lines continue to run alongside until the two routes diverge north of Roade at the northern end of Roade cutting. The loop line then runs north east for several miles until it reaches Northampton station. After Northampton, the line heads to the north-west for around twenty miles, until it re-joins the main line at Hillmorton Junction at Rugby, just east of Rugby station. The line is a total of 23 34 miles (38.2 km) long.

Services and operations

The majority of passenger services on the line are provided by West Midlands Trains using Class 350 electric multiple units. Class 319 units are used for peak-hour express services between Northampton and London Euston. The service consists of three 'semi fast' trains per hour between London Euston and Birmingham New Street. There is also an hourly local service between Northampton and Birmingham. Prior to December 2012 there was also a service to and from Crewe, but a few serve the loop line during morning and evenings and hourly on Sundays.

Avanti West Coast provide a small number of Class 390 Pendolino services to London at the extremes of the day. But nearly all Avanti West Coast trains use the direct main line. Line speeds on the loop line are currently limited to 75 mph (120 km/h)[1] compared to 125 mph (200 km/h) on the fast line, making the line unattractive to the routing of fast services. As of 2011, line speeds were expected to increase to 90 mph (140 km/h) once signalling improvements are in place north of Northampton up to Rugby.[1]

Long Buckby; the one other station on the line, is served by the London–Birmingham/Northampton–Birmingham services. The London–Crewe service does not stop at Long Buckby except on Sundays.

The line sees heavy freight traffic, as it is used by all freight trains on the southern part of the WCML. Many of these are container trains, with some serving the Daventry International Railfreight Terminal (DIRFT), which is between Northampton and Rugby (thus on the loop line).

History

Aerial photo, looking North, shows where the Northampton loop (right) diverges from the main line (left) at Roade.

When the London and Birmingham Railway (L&BR) was constructed in the 1830s, Northampton was by-passed, with the line running on high ground to the west via Kilsby Tunnel. Traditionally this was said to have been because Northampton landowners objected to having a railway run to the town.[2] However, more recently, railway historians have argued that Northampton was by-passed because the gradients would have been too steep for early locomotives to easily cope with. Robert Stephenson the engineer of the London and Birmingham Railway was determined to avoid gradients steeper than 1:330. As Northampton is located in the Nene Valley, 120 feet (37 metres) lower than Blisworth, the closest point the L&BR came, connecting the town would have required gradients steeper than this.[3][4]

This meant however that Northampton, despite being a large town, did not have direct rail links to London. A branch from the main line was built to Northampton in the early 1840s, the Northampton and Peterborough Railway, from Blisworth, which gave the town indirect rail links to London and Birmingham.

The loop line was constructed in the late 1870s by the London and North Western Railway and was opened in 1881 (by this stage locomotives had become far more powerful). It was constructed to improve rail services to Northampton and give the town a direct link to London. It also had the advantage of doubling capacity on the line from Roade to Rugby without the expense of widening the tunnel at Kilsby.

The line was electrified along with the rest of the WCML during the 1960s in the wake of the BR 1955 Modernisation Plan.

Stations

The only stations that are currently operational on the route are Northampton and Long Buckby. Previously there were five stations on the loop line, but only these two survive. The three stations closed were:

Proposed future development

Warwickshire County Council have proposed a new station on the Northampton Loop Line called Rugby Parkway, which would be on the south-eastern outskirts of Rugby serving the Hillmorton area of the town. The purpose of this would be to accommodate the future expansion of the town. If it goes ahead the new station is planned to open in 2019.[5]

Accidents and incidents

  • In January 1906, a young woman; 19 year old Lily Yolande Marie Rochaid was found dead in Crick Tunnel, having fallen from the train she was travelling on from London to Rugby. A search was called after the train arrived at Rugby and it was noticed that the door of the carriage was open and no-one was inside. The circumstances of her death were never fully explained.[6]
  • Two very similar railway accidents occurred on the Northampton loop in 1967 and 1969. The 1967 incident was near the village of Milton Malsor between Roade and Hunsbury Hill tunnel and the other in 1969 near the northern end of Roade cutting.
  • On 20 March 1985, the body of 35 year old social worker Janet Maddocks was found beside the line to the north of Northampton station. Jack Roy, aged 15 at the time, was later convicted of murdering her and throwing her from a train.[7]
gollark: Cool.
gollark: What do you do "at work"?
gollark: Lots of money spent on fancy engineering and/or wizardry?
gollark: There actually is a 60GHz WiFi standard which I bet requires much dark sorcery. 802.11ad.
gollark: I wonder what sort of nonmicrowave uses there are. Extremely overpowered WiFi?

References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. "Current Campaigns & Earlier Successes". Northampton Rail Users Group. 2013. Archived from the original on 18 January 2016.
  2. "Kilsby Tunnel". Archived from the original on 3 September 2013.
  3. Kingscott 2008.
  4. Elliot 1985.
  5. "Second train station to be built as Rugby expands". Rugby Advertiser. 15 October 2015. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
  6. "MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF A PRINCETHORPE GIRL. ANOTHER TUNNEL MYSTERY". The Tablet. Archived from the original on 27 August 2016. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  7. "The Train Killer". Daily Record. Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  • Healy, John M.C. (1989). The Last Days Of Steam In Northamptonshire. ISBN 0-86299-613-9.
  • Elliot, Peter H. (1985). Rugby's Railway Heritage. ISBN 0-907917-06-2.
  • Kingscott, Geoffrey (2008). Lost Railways Of Northamptonshire. Countryside Books. ISBN 978-1-84674-108-1.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.