|
When first opening an old map of Finchley I was surprised to see the railway marked as the "Edgware Line" not the "Barnet Line". Was this the mistake it seemed?
London’s first railway was opened in February 1836, between Deptford and Bermondsey. Main lines soon followed and the Great Northern Railway opened into Kings Cross in 1852. The 1850's and 60's saw the construction of most of London’s network of suburban railways, including, in 1867, the Highgate and Edgware Railway, connecting to the GNR at what is now Finsbury Park, and subsequently bought up by them. Double tracks, initially to Highgate, were extended to Finchley, [Church End] when, in 1872, a double track branch line was added from Church End to High Barnet. A year later, a further branch was opened from Highgate to serve the newly constructed Alexandra Palace, with an intermediate station at Muswell Hill. A shilling return fare from Kings Cross included admission. Within 16 days of opening, the palace was burned down with loss of 3 lives, but fortunately for the railway, a second palace opened two years later.
As the surrounding countryside was built over, additional stations were built at Stroud Green (1881), Cranley Gardens (c.1905), the Hale (1906), and West Finchley (1933).
|