Primrose Hill railway station explained

Primrose Hill
Coordinates:51.5432°N -0.1547°W
Railcode:PRM -->
Platforms:2 (originally 4)
Years1:1852
Events1:Opened (LNWR)
Years2:1855
Events2:Opened (NLR)
Years3:1915
Events3:Closed (LNWR)
Years4:1917
Events4:Closed (NLR)
Years5:1922
Events5:Re-opened (NLR)
Years6:1992
Events6:Closed
Years8:2008
Events8:Platform buildings demolished
Gridref:TQ279843

Primrose Hill was a railway station in Chalk Farm, in the London Borough of Camden, opened by the North London Railway as Hampstead Road in 1855. It was named Chalk Farm from 1862 until 1950, when it was given its final name. From the 1860s to 1915, it was linked with a formerly separate station opened by the London and North Western Railway in 1852. The station closed in 1992, and the platform buildings and canopies were removed in 2008.

History

The London and North Western Railway (LNWR) opened its station as Camden on 1 May 1852. It replaced an earlier station of the same name to the south-east that had opened on 1 November 1851. The station was the first station out of Euston on the West Coast Main Line. In 1866, the LNWR's station's name was changed to Camden (Chalk Farm) and it was resited to the north-west on 1 April 1872 to provide a better connection to the NLR's station. In 1876, the name was changed to Chalk Farm to match the NLR's station.

The North London Railway (NLR) opened the station as Hampstead Road on 5 May 1855, replacing an earlier station of the same name to the east. The station was renamed Chalk Farm on 1 December 1862, and resited to the west, with four new platforms completed on 24 May 1872. From the 1860s the two stations were linked with a footbridge across the tracks. The LNWR platforms closed on 10 May 1915. The NLR platforms closed on 1 January 1917 for wartime economy measures. On 10 July 1922 the NLR reopened two of its station platforms along with the LNWR's platforms. After the station's reopening in 1922, the passenger service was usually provided during peak hours only running between Broad Street and Watford Junction. After Broad Street closed in 1986 the service ran from Liverpool Street. The station was scheduled to close when the Liverpool Street to Watford Junction service was discontinued, but ended early due to flooding. The last eastbound train called at Primrose Hill on 18 September 1992 and the last westbound train called on 22 September 1992. The area is served by the nearby station on the London Underground's Northern line.

On 25 September 1950, the station was renamed Primrose Hill.

The station building was closed in 1987 but remains and is occupied by a business. It is on Regent's Park Road at one end of the footbridge over the railway tracks. The platform canopies and the buildings supporting them were demolished by Network Rail in December 2008.[1]

The nearby Primrose Hill Tunnels, East Portals, and the Western Entrance, have both been listed Grade II on the National Heritage List for England since 1974.

See also

Notes and references

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Notes and References

  1. News: Disused rail station demolished . . . 4 January 2009 . 4 January 2009 . Network Rail said the buildings had fallen into disrepair and the track was still live so, for safety reasons, they were demolished. Campaigners maintained the station should have been reopened to ease congestion on other lines. . https://web.archive.org/web/20090227151456/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7809747.stm . 27 February 2009 . live . dmy-all.