Competition
for the building of the new railways was fierce. In total three
separate railway companies were competing for railway dominance in
Birmingham. The London and Birmingham Railway, the Grand Junction
Railway and the Derby Junction Railway all had their own agenda and
interests at heart.
The
first rail terminus was at Vauxhall and the first rain came from
Liverpool in 1837 on the Grand Junction Railway. This was only a
temporary terminus and a grand terminal was planned for Curzon Street.
In 1838 the line was open and the impressive building in Curzon Street
still stands today. The outbuildings and station have now gone but a
plaque on the wall reads:
CURZON
STREET STATION This plaque commemorates the 150th anniversary of the
arrival of the first London to Birmingham train at this station on
Monday 17th September 1838
The
importance of the railways and the impact on Birmingham commerce can
not be overestimated. Manufactured goods could now move at a speed and
efficiency that would have been unimaginable a few years previously.
Although this issued the death warrant of the canals which would
deteriorate rapidly over the coming years, the powerhouse of the world
would benefit immensely as a result.
The
London and Birmingham Railway company and the Birmingham and Derby
Junction Railway were followed by the Birmingham and Gloucester Railway
making a total of four railway companies now operating into central
Birmingham.
In 1854
a new station was opened and named New Street Station. This was the
largest station in the UK with a spectacular roof that was the largest
in the world at the time. New Street Station today is still the main
railway terminus for Birmingham.
The
railways in Birmingham were not without problems. The rivalry was such
that competitor railway companies placed obstacles in the way of an
integrated network and caused much controversy at the time. The
classical example of this power struggle is emphasized by a beautiful
and well constructed viaduct at Bordesley that was built at great cost
and never carried a train because of the refusal by one company to
allow its land to be used to carry the necessary track into Curzon
Street.
In 1852
the GWR opened a new station at Snow Hill. This was a much smaller
station than New Street and further away from the city centre.
Extensive improvements were made in the 1900's before closure in 1972.
New
Street Station was detrimental to the passenger services at Curzon
Street and consequently it became a freight terminal and prospered as
such until the first world war. Competition from road transport in the
1950's eventually caused the closure of Curzon Street. The terminus at
Euston which was equally as grand as that of Birmingham was demolished
by British Rail in 1962. Birmingham's Curzon Street was more fortunate
and protected by Birmingham City Council. It still stands today in its
original location.
Snow
Hill Station was reopened in May 27th 1999 by Centro and now serves the
new metro system from Wolverhampton. New Street is a busy terminus with
incoming and outbound all over the UK. It has direct links to the NEC
and several inter city stations within the city of Birmingham are still
used.
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