Wimbledon and Sutton Railway

The Wimbledon and Sutton Railway (W&SR) was a railway company established by an
Delays in finding the funding, opposition from the two mainline companies that the line was intended to connect, and World War I, led to the start of construction work being delayed until 1927. The line was completed and opened in January 1930, although the planned extension of the DR was not implemented and the service was provided by the
Today, the railway is part of the Sutton Loop Line from Streatham through Wimbledon to Sutton.
History
Background
During the second half of the 19th century, the Surrey villages of Wimbledon and Sutton experienced rapid residential growth, stimulated by the railways running through their areas,[n 1] with landowners in both areas profiting from the development of new suburban housing on their previously rural estates. Less accessible to the railways, the parishes of Merton and Morden, which lay between Wimbledon and Sutton, remained largely rural and, starting in the 1880s, a series of railway schemes were proposed to bring a new line through the area and increase the value of the land.[2]
Unsuccessful
Establishment
On 7 October 1908, engineer H. D. Searles-Wood and Sir George Smallman organised a meeting to consider a new plan for a Wimbledon to Sutton railway, and a committee was formed to promote the plan.[2] A further meeting, held in 1909, included landowner William Innes,[7] nephew of John Innes, the developer of Merton Park. It was estimated that £350,000 (approximately £45.1 million today)[8] of capital was required, only part of which was to be provided by the promoters.[2] Some of the remainder was sought from the DR (now the London Underground's District line) which the promoters hoped would operate the service over the line by extending its service from Wimbledon. On 16 November 1909, notice of the intention to bring a private bill before Parliament was published.[9]
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Planned 1910
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The bill proposed a 5.5-mile (8.9 km) line with ten stations, to be operated by electric trains, which would provide a service taking 32 minutes to reach Waterloo from Sutton. The LB&SCR opposed the line on the grounds that it would compete with its own services from Sutton to Central London, and claimed that its own planned electrification of its lines to Victoria and London Bridge would offer quicker journeys than the W&SR route. The LB&SCR also believed that a connection for the W&SR would give the DR service the chance to extend its service to Epsom and beyond. The L&SWR had concerns that its tracks from Putney to Wimbledon, over which the DR provided the service, were already at capacity and could not cope with the extended DR service to Sutton.[7]
Act of Parliament | |
![]() 10 Edw. 7 & 1 Geo. 5. c. xlvii | |
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Royal assent | 26 July 1910 |
Text of statute as originally enacted |
Nonetheless, the Wimbledon and Sutton Railway Act 1910 (
Delays
From the beginning, the company encountered delays in implementing its plans. Neither of the two main line railway companies were interested in investing in the line, so the W&SR's promoters approached the DR for assistance. In 1911,
On 22 November 1912, both the W&SR[14] and the DR[15] published notices that further bills would be submitted to extend the time limit imposed by the 1910 act for the compulsory purchase of the land needed for the railway, to enable the W&SR to raise additional capital, and to give the DR powers to take over the W&SR. The DR bill contained provisions to increase the capacity on the DR-owned section of the Wimbledon branch, by constructing further additional tracks from south of Parsons Green to south of Walham Green station (now Fulham Broadway).[11]
The requested extension of time and other powers were granted by the Wimbledon and Sutton Railway Act 1913 (
On 16 November 1914, after the outbreak of
Revised plans
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Planned 1922
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In November 1922, notices of new bills to be placed before Parliament were published by the W&SR,[20] and by the UERL's subsidiaries the London Electric Railway (LER)[21] and the City and South London Railway[22] (C&SLR, now part of the London Underground's Northern line). Taken together, the bills brought significant changes to the plans for the Wimbledon to Sutton line.
The C&SLR was an underground railway running in deep tunnels. In 1922, its line ran from
The
In July 1923, an agreement was made that the SR would withdraw its objection in exchange for a transfer of the UERL's interests in the W&SR.
The C&SLR soon started construction of its southern extension which opened to a terminus at Morden on 13 September 1926,[28] with a depot south of the station and within 200 yards (183 m) of the W&SR route, although no connection was made between the two lines. Without the extension of the District line to Sutton, the additional tracks between Wimbledon and Putney were not required and the work was not carried out. The additional tracks between Parsons Green and Fulham Broadway were constructed, but have only been used as sidings.[11] Once the C&SLR line was opened, the Underground company established a network of bus routes to the south, using Morden station as their hub. These routes had a significant impact on the SR's operations in the area, with the SR estimating in 1928 that it had lost approximately four million passengers per year.[23][29] The UERL, though, was able to demonstrate that its passenger numbers on its buses to Sutton station were actually more than double those for Morden.[29]
Construction

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Construction of the line from Wimbledon to Sutton was slower. Work started at Wimbledon in October 1927, but property purchases were not completed until the middle of 1928 and the contractor,
The station buildings at the two end stations, Wimbledon and Sutton, were rebuilt between 1927 and 1930 and six stations were constructed at
Opening and Operation
Work from Wimbledon to South Merton was completed quickly, so that services could begin running as a single-track operation on 7 July 1929.[30] The remainder of the line opened on 5 January 1930,[30] more than forty-five years after the first Wimbledon to Sutton link was proposed.
As hoped by the original promoters, the opening of the line stimulated the construction of new areas of private and public residential development throughout the 1930s, although large areas remain as parks and playing fields. The St. Helier Estate was completed in 1936. The opening of the Wimbledon to Sutton line and the C&SLR led the population of the parish of Morden, previously the most rural of the areas through which the lines passed, to increase from 1,355 in 1921 to 12,618 in 1931 and 35,417 in 1951.[32]

Ordinary ticket sales from Morden South station increased from 9,840 in 1930 to 50,817 in 1938 but, from the SR's perspective, the line was not a great success. The service, originally operating from
Goods services operated on the line, to a goods yard at St. Helier station, until it was closed in 1963,[31] and to an Express Dairies bottling plant adjacent to Morden South station, which opened in 1954 and closed in 1992.[31][33]
The line is now called the St Helier Line,
Notes and references
Notes
- ^ The population of Wimbledon increased from 2,693 in 1851 to 41,652 in 1901 and the population of Sutton increased from 1,387 in 1851 to 17,223 in 1901.[1]
- ^ Wimbledon Chase replaced Elm Grove and Cannon Hill. Morden South replaced Morden. St Helier replaced Elm Farm. West Sutton replaced Collingwood Road and Cheam.
References
- ^ 1851 Census of Great Britain: Table [1]. 1901 Census: England and Wales, County Report: Surrey, Table 12
- ^ a b c d Jackson 1966, p. 675.
- ^ "No. 25290". The London Gazette. 23 November 1883. pp. 5779–5781.
- ^ "No. 25762". The London Gazette. 29 November 1887. pp. 6629–6631.
- ^ "No. 25996". The London Gazette. 26 November 1889. pp. 6711–6714.
- ^ "No. 26109". The London Gazette. 25 November 1890. pp. 6583–6585.
- ^ a b c d Jackson 1966, p. 676.
- ^ a b UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
- ^ a b "No. 28310". The London Gazette. 19 November 1909. pp. 8567–8570.
- ^ "No. 28402". The London Gazette. 29 July 1910. p. 5498.
- ^ a b c d e f Jackson 1966, p. 677.
- ^ "No. 28552". The London Gazette. 21 November 1911. pp. 8626–8629.
- ^ "No. 28634". The London Gazette. 9 August 1912. pp. 5915–5916.
- ^ "No. 28665". The London Gazette. 22 November 1912. pp. 8812–8813.
- ^ "No. 28665". The London Gazette. 22 November 1912. pp. 8808–8810.
- ^ "No. 28747". The London Gazette. 19 August 1913. p. 5930.
- ^ "No. 28984". The London Gazette. 24 November 1914. pp. 9839–9843.
- ^ "No. 29206". The London Gazette. 25 June 1915. p. 6164.
- ^ "No. 32750". The London Gazette. 26 September 1922. p. 6846.
- ^ "No. 32769". The London Gazette. 21 November 1922. pp. 8233–8234.
- ^ "No. 32769". The London Gazette. 21 November 1922. pp. 8230–8233.
- ^ a b "No. 32770". The London Gazette. 24 November 1922. pp. 8314–8315.
- ^ a b c d e Jackson 1966, p. 678.
- ^ National Archives - piece: RAIL 647/70, Heads of Agreement, 25 July 1923
- ^ National Archives - piece: RAIL 647/71, Heads of Agreement, 25 July 1923
- ^ "No. 32850". The London Gazette. 3 August 1923. p. 5322.
- ^ "No. 32882". The London Gazette. 23 November 1923. pp. 8102–8103.
- ^ Rose 1999.
- ^ a b Barman 1979, p. 68.
- ^ a b c Jackson 1966, p. 679.
- ^ a b c d e Jackson 1966, p. 680.
- ^ 1921 and 1931 data – 1931 Census: England and Wales: Series of County Parts, Part I. County of Surrey, Table 3. 1951 data – 1951 Census: England and Wales: County Report: Surrey, Table 3.
- ^ "News in Brief - Northern Foods to axe 400 jobs". The Guardian: 13. 15 April 1992. Retrieved 18 May 2009.
- ^ Network Rail (April 2001). Southern Appendix. Vol. Module SO. p. 1/272. A0260A03.
Bibliography
- Barman, Christian (1979). The Man Who Built London Transport: A Biography of Frank Pick. ISBN 0-7153-7753-1.
- Jackson, Alan A. (December 1966). "The Wimbledon & Sutton Railway – A late arrival on the South London suburban scene" (PDF). The Railway Magazine: 675–680. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
- Rose, Douglas (1999). The London Underground, A Diagrammatic History. Douglas Rose/Capital Transport. ISBN 1-85414-219-4.
External links
- London Transport Museum Poster Archive Underground Group plan from 1922 showing the W&SR and proposed extension of C&SLR to Sutton
- Southern E-Group - photographs of construction of Wimbledon to Sutton Line