Construction The merger of the
Midland Counties Railway, the
North Midland Railway, and the
Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway in 1844 created the Midland Railway which, having no route to London of its own, relied on the
London & Birmingham Railway to feed traffic through to the capital. Delays in processing traffic led to a proposal in 1847 for a line connecting
Leicester with
Hitchin. Although authorisation for the line was obtained, the scheme was postponed until 1852 due to unfavourable economic conditions.
Thomas Brassey was principal contractor on the line which included the 882-yard
Warden Tunnel. The line was officially opened on 7 May 1857 and an initial service to Hitchin of four trains each way on weekdays, with freight services beginning some six months later. Through services to London were introduced from February 1858, once the Midland Railway had reached agreement with the
Great Northern Railway (GNR) for the use of its rails between Hitchin and
King's Cross.
Decline and closure In 1862, the GNR formally evicted the Midland from the overcrowded
sidings at King's Cross, which prompted it to seek an alternative through route to London of its own. The result was the extension of the Midland Main Line from Bedford to St. Pancras, which had the effect of reducing the Bedford to Hitchin line to rural branch status. Having been built as a
trunk route, the line was little prepared to eke out an existence carrying passenger traffic between the rural communities along the route. Passenger services were subsequently reduced to a shuttle between Bedford and Hitchin, and the track was singled in 1911 except between Shefford and Southill. Traffic briefly increased during the
First and
Second World Wars, with
RAF camps being set up at
Cardington and
Henlow. However, competition from local bus services had an effect and by the 1950s trains comprised one carriage only; not even the introduction of 3
railbuses in 1958 could halt the decline. The last passenger train departed from Hitchin at 19:00 on Saturday 30 December 1961, and goods services were withdrawn in 1964, the same year that scenes for the film
Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines were shot near Warden Tunnel, using an ex-
Highland Railway locomotive and set of coaches disguised as a train of
France's
Chemin de Fer du Nord. On 5 Oct 1963 The Wandering 1500 Railtour London Broad Street via Hitchin, Bedford and Northampton to Stratford on Avon with B12 4-6-0 61572 was the very last passenger train to use the branch, returning via the Leamington Spa to Rugby branch line and the LNWR main line back to Broad Street. == The line today ==