London Post Office Railway Explained

Box Width:301
London Post Office Railway
Type:Private industrial railway
Status:Closed; partially re-opened as museum
Locale:London, England
Start:Paddington Sorting Office
End:Whitechapel Eastern Delivery Office
Stations:9
Routes:1
Open:3 December 1927
Close:31 May 2003
Owner:Royal Mail
Depot:Mount Pleasant
Stock:1980 Greenwood & Batley
Load Gauge:Custom gauge
Electrification:440 V DC Third rail
Speed:40mph through core tunnels; 7mph through stations, platforms and loops
Elevation: below street level

The Post Office Railway, known since 1987 as Mail Rail,[1] is a narrow gauge, driverless underground railway in London that was built by the Post Office with assistance from the Underground Electric Railways Company of London, to transport mail between sorting offices. Inspired by the Chicago Tunnel Company,[2] it opened in 1927 and operated for 76 years until it closed in 2003.[3] [4] A museum within the former railway was opened in September 2017.

Geography

The line ran from Paddington Head District Sorting Office in the west to the Eastern Head District Sorting Office at Whitechapel in the east, a distance of 6.5miles. It had eight stations, the largest of which was underneath Mount Pleasant, but by 2003 only three stations remained in use because the sorting offices above the other stations had been relocated.[5]

History

Use as post office railway

In 1911, a plan evolved to build an underground railway NaNmiles long[6] from Paddington to Whitechapel serving the main sorting offices along the route; road traffic congestion was causing unacceptable delays. The contract to build the tunnels was won by John Mowlem and Co.[7] Construction of the tunnels started in February 1915 from a series of shafts. Most of the line was constructed using the Greathead shield system, with limited amounts of hand-mining for connecting tunnels at stations.

The main line has a single 9feet diameter tube with two tracks. Just before stations, tunnels diverge into two single-track 7feet diameter tunnels leading to two parallel 25feet diameter station tunnels. The main tube is at a depth of around .[8] Stations are at a much shallower depth, with a 1-in-20 gradient into the stations. The gradients assist in slowing the trains when approaching stations, and accelerating them away. There is also less distance to lift mail from the stations to the surface. At Oxford Circus the tunnel runs close to the Bakerloo line tunnel of the London Underground. The tunnel also runs under Selfridges as the recent 2018 refurbishment of the building revealed.[9]

During 1917, work was suspended due to the shortage of labour and materials. By June 1924, track laying had started. In February 1927, the first section, between Paddington and the West Central District Office, was made available for training. The line became available for the Christmas parcel post in 1927 and letters were carried from February 1928.

In 1954, plans were developed for a new Western District Office at Rathbone Place, which required a diversion, opening in 1958.[10] [11] [12] It was not until 3 August 1965 that the new station and office were opened by the Postmaster General, Tony Benn. The disused section was used as a store tunnel; some parts of it still have the track in place.

In 1987, the railway changed its name to Mail Rail in celebration of its 60th anniversary, and some trains were rebuilt with more aerodynamic casings.[1]

Closure

A Royal Mail press release in April 2003 said that the railway would be closed and mothballed at the end of May that year. Royal Mail had earlier stated that using the railway was five times more expensive than using road transport for the same task. The Communication Workers Union claimed the actual figure was closer to three times more expensive but argued that this was the result of a deliberate policy of running the railway down and using it at only one-third of its capacity. A local governmental report by the Greater London Authority stated that the "line carries an average of four million letters and parcels per day" and was in support of continued use and criticized the increase of lorries on local roads, estimated to be 80 more truck loads per week.[13] The railway was closed on 31 May 2003.[4] [14]

In April 2011, an urban exploration group called the "Consolidation Crew" published accounts of illicit access to the tunnels. Detailed photography and text revealed that the railway is still largely in good condition, despite some natural decay.[15] [16] More recently, media have been admitted to the tunnels as part of the pre-launch publicity for the Postal Museum. Photographs show much of the infrastructure in place.[17]

A team from the University of Cambridge has taken over a short, double track section of unused Post Office tunnel near Liverpool Street Station, where a newly built tunnel for Crossrail is situated some two metres beneath. The study is to establish how the original cast-iron lining sections, which are similar to those used for many miles of railway under London, resist possible deformation and soil movement caused by the new works. Digital cameras, fibre optic deformation sensors, laser scanners and other low-cost instruments, reporting in real time, have been installed in the vacated tunnel. As well as providing information about the behaviour of the old construction materials, the scheme can also provide an early warning if the new tunnel bores are creating dangerous soil movement.[18]

Redevelopment and preservation

In October 2013, the British Postal Museum & Archive announced that it intended opening part of the network to the public.[19] [20] After approval was granted by Islington Council, work on the new museum and the railway began in 2014.[21] Special tourist trains were installed in late 2016. It was planned to open a circular route, running beneath the depot at Mount Pleasant with a journey time of around 15 minutes, by mid-2017.[22] [23] [24] The museum opened on 5 September.[25]

In its first year of operation (2017 - 2018), the trains performed 9,000 trips totalling 6213miles, with the railway and museum hosting over 198,000 visitors.[26]

Rolling stock

The first stock was delivered in 1926 with the opening of the system. All stock used was electrically powered.

Electric locomotives

Electric units

Some trains have been preserved at the Launceston Steam Railway.[27]

In fiction

Similar railways

A pneumatic underground railway[30] was used by the Post Office in London between 1863 and 1874 using individual wheeled capsules, operated by the London Pneumatic Despatch Company.

In 1910, a 450m (1,480feet) tunnel railway opened in Munich, Germany between München Hauptbahnhof and the nearby Post office. The tunnels were damaged in World War II, restored in 1948 and partially rebuilt in 1966 to allow for the first Munich S-Bahn tunnel. Operations ceased in 1988.[31]

Postal Telegraph and Telephone (Switzerland) opened the 340m (1,120feet) Post-U-Bahn (underground railway) in Zürich in 1938. It ran between Zürich Hauptbahnhof and the, Zürich's main post office. The track gauge was 60 cm, and the small electric railcar, which could carry 250 kg of mail, collected power from wires between the tracks. Operations ceased on 11 October 1980 when a rubber-tired system replaced the train.[32]

The Chicago Tunnel Company, in operation between 1906 and 1959, delivered freight, parcels, and coal, and disposed of ash and excavation debris. It operated an elaborate network of narrow gauge track in 2.29x tunnels running under the streets throughout the central business district including and surrounding the "Loop".

See also

References

Literature

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Story of Mail Rail . 5 June 2024 . The Postal Museum.
  2. Web site: Speeding London's Mail . MailRail.co.uk . 19 August 2009 . Karslake . Colin .
  3. Subterranean city: beneath the streets of London. Antony Clayton. 2000
  4. Web site: Final delivery for Mail Rail . This Is Local London . 19 August 2009 . 30 May 2003 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090705163438/http://www.thisislocallondon.co.uk/news/topstories/301893.final_delivery_for_mail_rail/ . 5 July 2009 .
  5. Pelling. Andrew. April 2003. The Future of Mail Rail: A Report by the London Assembly's Public Services Committee. Greater London Authority. 1-85261-469-2. www.london.gov.uk.
  6. Romance of London's Underground, Ayer Publishing
  7. Web site: Sign in to Photo Forums. www.time-capsules.co.uk.
  8. London's Post-Office Railway. March 1952. 164. 97. 3. 0032-4558. Popular Mechanics. Hearst Magazines.
  9. Web site: Selfridges London | AJ Buildings Library .
  10. New Tunnels for Post Office Railway Railway Gazette 25 April 1958 page 495
  11. Blackford . S. . Cuthbert . E. W. . 10.1680/iicep.1960.11893 . Underground Station for Western District Post Office, London. (Includes Plate) . ICE Proceedings . 15 . 2 . 81 . 1960 .
  12. Collingridge . V. H. . Tuckwell . R. E. . 10.1680/iicep.1960.11897 . Underground Station for Western District Post Office, London. (Includes Plates) . ICE Proceedings . 15 . 2 . 95 . 1960 .
  13. Web site: The future of Mail Rail. London Assembly's Public Services Committee. Greater London Assembly.
  14. End of the line for Mail Rail Entrain issue 19 July 2003 page 12
  15. Web site: Security-Breach: London Mail Rail. placehacking.co.uk . https://web.archive.org/web/20110429171845if_/http://www.placehacking.co.uk/2011/04/24/security-breach-london-mail-rail/ . 2011-04-29 . 2021-04-25 .
  16. Web site: The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail). silentuk.com . 2012-12-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20121214102741/http://www.silentuk.com/. 20 April 2011 .
  17. Web site: Eight storeys down on abandoned tracks. Leftover London. 10 May 2017.
  18. Web site: Bridging the Knowledge Gap in London's 'Secret Tube'. Cambridge Centre for Smart Infrastructure & Construction. 16 June 2014.
  19. News: Mail Rail: The hidden trains under London's streets. BBC News.
  20. Web site: Mail Rail. British Postal Museum & Archive.
  21. Ride London's abandoned underground 'Mail Rail'. Solon. Olivia. 14 March 2014. Wired UK. 8 June 2014.
  22. Web site: Ride Mail Rail - The Postal Museum -.
  23. Web site: Mail Rail delivers an underground history lesson at London's new Postal Museum. Priya. Khaira-Hanks. 28 July 2017. The Guardian.
  24. News: Attractions The Postal Museum Opening July 2017. The Postal Museum. 2017-04-24. en-US.
  25. News: Engineer lends voice to Mail Rail tours as secret world opens to public. Kennedy. Maev. 2017-09-02. The Guardian. 2017-09-06. en-GB. 0261-3077.
  26. Milner . Chris . Rail Mail's first year of success . . October 2018 . 164 . 1,411 . 10 . Mortons Media . Horncastle . 0033-8923.
  27. Web site: Launceston Steam Railway. www.launcestonsr.co.uk.
  28. Web site: Names of the Dead by Mark Leggatt: Undiscovered Scotland Book Review. By. Undiscovered Scotland. www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk. en-GB. 2017-12-19.
  29. Web site: The London Cage Review. crimereview.co.uk. 2017-12-19.
  30. Book: Martin, Andrew. 10 January 2013. Underground Overground. Profile Books . 978-1846684784.
  31. Web site: Deutsche Bundespost, Bahnpostamt, 80335 München . de . Bahn-Express . 12 December 2013.
  32. Hans Waldburger: Zürichs Post-U-Bahn ist nicht mehr. In: Schweizer Eisenbahn-Revue 4/1980, page 133 (in German)