Chatham Main Line

Main railway line in south-east England

4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gaugeElectrification750 V DC third railOperating speed145 km/h (90 mph)
Route map

(Click to expand)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Chatham Main Line
Legend
London Victoria London Underground
Grosvenor Road
Grosvenor Bridge
River Thames
Battersea Park
Battersea Park Road
Brighton Main Line
to London Waterloo
all lines to Clapham Junction
South London line
Factory Junction
Stewarts Lane TMD
Wandsworth Road Jn
Wandsworth Road London Overground
Voltaire Road Jn
Clapham High Street London Overground
Shepherds Lane Jn
Brixton Jn
Brixton London Underground
Down arrow Catford Loop Line
Herne Hill
West Dulwich
Sydenham Hill
Sydenham (Hill) or Penge Tunnel
2,141 yards (1,958 m)
to Crystal Palace
Crystal Palace and
South London Junction Rwy
Penge East
Kent House
Beckenham Junction Tramlink
Up arrow Catford Loop Line
Shortlands Jn
Shortlands
Bromley South
Bickley
to London Bridge and
other London terminals
St Mary Cray
to Orpington
and Tonbridge
Swanley
Swanley Junction
Farningham Road
Horton Kirby Boys Home
Fawkham Junction
Longfield
to High Speed 1 and
former Gravesend West Branch
Meopham
Sole Street
M2 motorway
North Kent Line
towards London
Medway Valley line
to Maidstone
Strood
Rochester Bridge (LCDR)
Goods station
Rochester
Rochester Common
Chatham Central
Fort Pitt Tunnel
428 yards (391 m)
Chatham
Chatham Tunnel
297 yards (272 m)
Gillingham Tunnel
897 yards (820 m)
Gillingham
Rainham
Newington
Sittingbourne
Teynham
Faversham
Dover branch
Ramsgate branch
Whitstable Town
Whitstable
Chestfield & Swalecliffe
Hampton pier
Herne Bay and Hampton-on-Sea
(1861-1863)
Herne Bay
RAF Manston
Birchington-on-Sea
Westgate-on-Sea
Margate
Margate Sands
(SER)
Selling
Margate East
Broadstairs
Tivoli
Ramsgate Harbour Tunnel
1,124 yards (1,028 m)
Ramsgate Harbour
Dumpton Park
Ramsgate Town
(SER)
Ramsgate
St Lawrence for Pegwell Bay
Ebbsfleet and Cliffsend Halt
Canterbury East
Bekesbourne
Adisham
Aylesham
Snowdown
East Kent Railway
Shepherds Well
Shepherd's Well Tunnel
2,376 yards (2,173 m)
Stonehall and
Lydden Halt
Kearsney
Buckland Junction
Charlton Tunnel
265 yards (242 m)
Priory Tunnel
158 yards (144 m)
Dover Priory
Dover Harbour Tunnel
684 yards (625 m)
Dover Harbour
Mileage change
77 mi 76 ch (Victoria)
76 mi 50 ch (Charing Cross)
Hawkesbury Street Junction
Connection to train ferry
Dover Town
Pier Junction
Archcliffe Junction
Admiralty Pier
Dover Marine ferry/water interchange

The Chatham Main Line is a railway line in England that links London Victoria[1] and Dover Priory / Ramsgate, travelling via Medway (of which the town of Chatham is part, hence the name).

Services to Cannon Street follow the route as far as St Mary Cray Junction where they diverge onto the South Eastern Main Line near Chislehurst.

Thameslink services to Luton run in parallel from Rainham to Rochester, diverging once across the River Medway at Rochester Bridge Junction onto the North Kent Line via Gravesend and Dartford.

A shuttle service operates on the Sheerness Line which starts at Sittingbourne.

Services

Most services on the Line are run by SE Trains and Southern. Govia Thameslink Railway run some Thameslink services, the first starting from London Blackfriars and travelling via Denmark Hill on the Catford Loop, joining at Shortlands Junction, travelling to Swanley before heading to Sevenoaks. The second service starts from Kentish Town and also travels via the Catford Loop to Shortlands Junction, travelling to Bickley before heading off to Orpington. The final service starts at Luton and goes via London Bridge, Greenwich, Dartford and Gravesend to Rochester before terminating at Rainham in the bay platform 0.

While travelling between Bromley South and London Victoria, the trains can either travel on the main line, through Beckenham Junction, Herne Hill and Brixton, or via the Catford Loop Line, coming away from the main line at Shortlands Junction, travelling through Catford and Peckham Rye, and then just past Brixton it either picks up the Southeastern line all the way, or can follow the Southern (Atlantic) Line through Clapham High Street before crossing back over to the Southeastern Line to London Victoria. The hourly stopping service is now scheduled to run via Catford, additionally stopping at Denmark Hill.

The off-peak timetable consists of two trains per hour from Victoria, calling at Bromley South, Longfield, Meopham, Rochester, Chatham, Gillingham and Rainham. One service will call at Newington, Sittingbourne, Teynham and Faversham, then all stations to Dover Priory via Canterbury East. The other service will just call at Sittingbourne and Faversham, then all stations to Margate and Ramsgate. These trains no longer split up at Faversham. There is an hourly service from Victoria calling at Denmark Hill via the Catford Loop, Bromley South, St Mary Cray then all stations to Gillingham. It then becomes a semi-fast service, calling at Rainham, Sittingbourne, Faversham, Canterbury East, and Dover Priory. A High Speed Service sees two trains per hour from St Pancras International to Faversham via Gravesend and Chatham. One service terminates at Faversham before travelling back to St Pancras International via Chatham and Gravesend. The other service continues coastbound as a semi-fast service calling at Whitstable, Herne Bay, Birchington, Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate. It then carries on, stopping at Sandwich, Deal, Walmer, Martin Mill, Dover Priory, Folkestone Central, Folkestone West and Ashford International, before picking up the High Speed Line to Ebbsfleet International, Stratford International and arriving back at St Pancras International. A service operates in the opposite direction. There is one other High Speed Service that runs on a small part of the line, starting from Margate and calling at Broadstairs and Ramsgate before heading to Canterbury West, and Ashford International, then picking up the High Speed Line and calling at the remaining stations to St Pancras International. A Thameslink service now starts from Rainham and calls at nearly all stations via Strood, Gravesend, Dartford, Abbey Wood (for Elizabeth line services), Woolwich Arsenal and Greenwich (both for the Docklands Light Railway), London Bridge, Blackfriars and beyond. Passengers for Waterloo East, Charing Cross or Cannon Street now have to change at London Bridge.

Rolling stock

The following trains are operated on the line : Class 465 "Networker" since 1992, Class 466 "Networker" since 1993, Class 375 "Electrostar" since 2001, Class 395 "Javelin" since 2009, and 8-car Class 700 "Desiro City" since 2018.

History

The line was built by the London, Chatham and Dover Railway, who were in competition with the South Eastern Railway (hence the duplication of stations in Kent). They subsequently built lines to Sevenoaks and Ashford (via Maidstone) from the Chatham Main Line.

The line was electrified (750 V DC third rail) in a series of stages. Initially the new Southern Railway electrified the urban (within London) workings of the SECR in the 1920s. In July 1925 "South Eastern Electrification (Stage 1)" saw the line from Victoria to junction with the South Eastern Main Line at Bickley, including the Catford Loop Line electrified.[2] This was extended to outer suburban workings to Sevenoaks via Swanley (Bickley junction to Swanley) in two stages, reaching St Mary Cray in May 1934[2] and Swanley in January 1935.[2] Full outer suburban electrification was achieved with the "Maidstone & Gillingham Electrification" scheme in July 1939, extending electrification from Swanley to Gillingham.[2] Post war, under the BR's 1955 Modernisation plan, electrification was completed (Gillingham to Ramsgate and Dover) under "Kent Coast Electrification" stage 1 in 1959.[2] At the same time the four track section between Shortlands and St Mary Cray junction was extended to Swanley Junction with a complete rebuilding of the St Mary Cray Junction. Two passing loops were added (to create a four-track section) between Rainham and Newington.

A short branch was built during World War One to service the construction of RAF Manston with a junction off the up line at Birchington on Sea.

Eurostar

Heading away from Victoria, between Farningham Road and Longfield Stations, the line which was originally used by Eurostar trains travelling from Waterloo International towards Fawkham Junction to access High Speed 1 still exists, but is currently not in use.

At one time this line was reserved for emergency use only by Class 395 Javelins travelling to/from Ashford International but, as the route knowledge has not been updated, no trains run on this line any more.

The Eurostar trains can no longer use this line as the Class 373 "Eurostar e300" trains had their 750V DC third rail shoes removed in 2007, whilst the new Class 374 "Eurostar e320" trains are not fitted with third rail equipment.

East Kent re-signalling project

The idea of this project is for control of East Kent from Longfield to Ramsgate and just short of Dover Priory to be under the control of the East Kent Signalling Centre (EKSC) based at Gillingham.

Phase 1 of the project was carried out over the Christmas and New Year period of 2011, which involved the complete re-signalling from just east of Sittingbourne to Faversham, then on to Minster Junction and Buckland Junction, just short of Dover Priory. The old signal boxes were then abolished at Faversham, Margate, Ramsgate, Canterbury East and Shepherdswell. Phase 2 involved the re-signalling of the line between Sittingbourne to Longfield and Strood, including the Sheerness Branch Line and the Medway Valley Line to operate from the East Kent Signalling Centre at Gillingham, which is now operational. This means that the Signal Boxes at Rainham and Rochester have now closed, although Sittingbourne remains open as a relay signal box for the Sheerness Branch Line, controlled from Gillingham.

On 13 December 2015, a new £26M Rochester station on Corporation Street opened 500 m west of the original station which it replaced. This station has three platforms and can accommodate 12-car trains instead of the 10-cars maximum length at the original station. Some 12-car peak-time trains are additionally stopping here. At the time, only platforms 1 and 2 were operational. From Easter 2016, Platform 3 was only a Bay Platform with a maximum length of eight cars, but since 10 October 2016, Platform 3 became a through platform with services either able to head towards the Kent Coast or terminating here before head back up towards London. At the East End of the platform, a third line now runs all the way up to the old Rochester Station passing through what was Platform 4 before rejoining the Down Main towards Chatham. This can also enable long freight trains to be held here, allowing passenger services to pass, therefore removing a potential bottleneck.

Rainham has a new bay platform off the up-line, which can accommodate a 12-car train, labelled Platform 0. It was being used temporarily as a Terminus for a couple of evening rush hour trains, but since the introduction of the new Thameslink Metro timetable in 2018, this is now the terminus for services to Luton via Gravesend, Dartford, Woolwich Arsenal and Greenwich, stopping at all but a few stations to London Bridge.

Strood has also been lengthened to accommodate 12-car trains.

Accidents and incidents

  • On 10 September 1963, a freight train became divided and was derailed between Farningham Road and Longfield due to defects in a wagon. The line was closed until 13 September.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Quail Map 5 – England South [pages 2–13] Sept 2002 (Retrieved 14 December 2011)
  2. ^ a b c d e "Electric Railways". Stendec Systems. 2007. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 29 March 2007.
  3. ^ Glover, John (2001). Southern Electric. Hersham: Ian Allan. p. 141. ISBN 0-7110-2807-9.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chatham Main Line.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Main lines
Primary
Secondary
Branch
Regional
Intra-London
Disused
 London transport portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
Primary
International
National
Secondary
Berks/Bucks/Oxon
to London
Kent to London
Surrey/Sussex/Hants
to London
Others
Non-passenger
Heritage