At the conclusion of a parliamentary struggle, the
Great Northern Railway was authorised in 1846 to build a railway line from London to
York. York was already reached from London by linked railways in the group controlled by
George Hudson, the so-called Railway King. His business methods were tough and effective, but they were also underhand and dishonest, and eventually he was found out and disgraced. The Great Northern Railway promoters had wanted branches to
Sheffield and
Leeds, but these were cut out of the authorisation in Parliament. Leeds was an important commercial centre, and the GNR had to take alternative steps to reach it. For a time the only possibility was over the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway from Askern Junction (north of
Doncaster) to
Knottingley and
Methley, and from there over the
Midland Railway to Gelderd Junction, immediately outside the Leeds Central station. GNR trains making that journey finally reached the station by reversing over a short length of the
Leeds and Thirsk Railway. The first GNR trains reached Leeds by this route on 1 October 1849. The Midland Railway was firmly under the control of George Hudson and was therefore hostile to the GNR, but Hudson was at the final stage of his powers and his initial antagonism became ineffective. On 1 August 1854, the
Leeds, Bradford and Halifax Junction Railway opened its line between Leeds and Bowling, near
Bradford. Great Northern Railway trains ran over it, reaching
Halifax over the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway. For the first time a direct communication from Halifax to London without break of journey was created. Although the LB&HJR was independent, the beginnings of a Great Northern Railway network in West Yorkshire were visible. ==Authorisation==