Central London Railway designed the surface buildings for the CLR, such as this one at
Oxford Circus. The
Central London Railway (CLR) was given permission in 1891 for a tube line between
Shepherd's Bush and a station at
Cornhill, and the following year an extension to
Liverpool Street was authorised, with a station at
Bank instead of at Cornhill. The line was built following the streets above rather than running underneath buildings, because purchase of wayleave under private properties would have been expensive. While the tracks in opposite directions mostly run side-by-side, in some places one line runs above another due to lack of space, with platforms at different levels at
St Paul's,
Chancery Lane and
Notting Hill Gate stations. The tunnels were bored with the nominal diameter of , increased on curves, reduced to near to stations. The tunnels generally rise approaching a station, to aid braking, and fall when leaving, to aid acceleration. The Central London Railway was the first underground railway to have the station platforms illuminated electrically. All the platforms were lit by Crompton automatic electric
arc lamps, and other station areas by
incandescent lamps. Both the
City and South London Railway and the
Waterloo and City Railway were lit by gas lamps, primarily because the power stations for these lines had been designed with no spare capacity to power electric lighting. With the white glazed tiling, all underground Central London Railway platforms were very brightly lit. The use of electric lighting was further made possible because the Central London was also the first tube railway to use
AC electrical distribution and the
substation transformers, not compatible with DC, were able to reduce the voltage to the level required for lighting. Earlier tube lines used
DC power generators at the 500volts required to run the trains. The line between Shepherd's Bush and Bank was formally opened on 30 June 1900, public services beginning on 30 July. With a uniform fare of 2
d the railway became known as the "Twopenny Tube". It was initially operated by
electric locomotives, with motor armatures built directly on the axles to eliminate noise-producing gearboxes, hauling carriages. This did not allow springing, and the locomotives' considerable unsprung weight caused much vibration in the buildings above the line, so that the railway rebuilt the locomotives to use geared drives. This allowed higher-speed and lighter motors to be used, which reduced the unsprung, and total, weight of the locomotive. The railway also tried an alternative approach: it converted four coaches to accommodate motors and control gear. Two of these experimental motor coaches were used in a 6-coach train, the control gear being operated by the system used on the Waterloo and City Railway. The modified locomotives were a considerable improvement, but lighter purpose-designed motor coaches were even better. The CLR ordered 64 new motor cars designed to use
Sprague's recently developed
traction control system. The CLR was exclusively using the resulting
electric multiple units by 1903. In July 1907, the fare was increased to 3d for journeys of more than seven or eight stations. The line was extended westwards with a loop serving a single platform at
Wood Lane for the 1908
Franco-British Exhibition. A reduced fare of 1d, for a journey of three or fewer stations, was introduced in 1909, and
season tickets became available from 1911. The extension to Liverpool Street opened the following year, providing access to the
Great Eastern Railway station and the adjacent
Broad Street railway station by escalators. The Central London Railway was absorbed into the
Underground Group on 1 January 1913. In 1911, the
Great Western Railway won permission for a line from
Ealing Broadway to a station near to the CLR's
Shepherd's Bush station, with a connection to the
West London Railway, and agreement to connect the line to the Central London Railway, and for the CLR to run trains to Ealing Broadway. Construction of the extension from the CLR to Ealing Broadway started in 1912, but opening was delayed by
World War I. The CLR purchased new rolling stock for the extension, which arrived in 1915 and was stored before being lent to the
Bakerloo line. The rolling stock returned when the extension opened in 1920. In 1912, plans were published for a railway from Shepherd's Bush to
Turnham Green and
Gunnersbury, allowing the Central London Railway to run trains on
London and South Western Railway (L&SWR) tracks to
Richmond. The route was authorised in 1913, but work had not begun by the outbreak of war the following year. In 1919, an alternative route was published, with a tunnelled link to the disused L&SWR tracks south of
their Shepherd's Bush station then via
Hammersmith (Grove Road) railway station. Authorisation was granted in 1920, but the connection was never built, and the L&SWR tracks were used by the
Piccadilly line when it was extended west of
Hammersmith in 1932.
London Transport and the Second World War On 1 July 1933, the Central London Railway and other transport companies in the London area were amalgamated to form the
London Passenger Transport Board, generally known as
London Transport. The railway was known as the "Central London Line", becoming the "Central line" in 1937. The 1935–40
New Works Programme included a major expansion of the line. Construction restarted after the war, and the western extension opened as far as Greenford in 1947 and West Ruislip in 1948. The powers to extend the line to Denham were never used due to post-war establishment of the
Green Belt around London, which restricted development of land in the area. The eastern extension opened as far as Stratford in December 1946, with trains continuing without passengers to reverse in the cutting south of Leyton. In 1947, the line opened to Leytonstone, and then Woodford and Newbury Park. Stations from Newbury Park to Woodford via Hainault and from Woodford to Loughton were served by tube trains from 1948. South of Newbury Park, the west-facing junction with the main line closed in the same year to allow expansion of Ilford carriage depot. The extension transferred to London Underground management in 1949, when Epping began to be served by Central line trains. The single line to Ongar was served by a steam
autotrain operated by British Rail (BR) until 1957, when the line was electrified. BR trains accessed the line via a link from Temple Mills East to Leyton. On 8 April 1953, 12 people were killed and 46 were injured as a result of a
rear-end collision in a tunnel just to the east of
Stratford station, caused by
driver error after a
signal failure. The Central line stations east of Stratford kept their goods service for a time, being worked from
Temple Mills, with the Hainault loop stations served via Woodford. The BR line south of Newbury Park closed in 1956 and Hainault loop stations lost their goods service in 1965, the rest of the stations on the line following in 1966. Early morning passenger trains from Stratford (Liverpool Street on Sundays) ran to Epping or Loughton until 1970. The single-track section from Epping to Ongar was electrified in 1957 and then operated as a shuttle service using short tube trains. However, carrying only 100 passengers a day and losing money, the section closed in 1994, and is now used by the heritage
Epping Ongar Railway. The entire Central line was shut between January and March 2003, after 32 passengers were injured when a train derailed at Chancery Lane due to a traction motor falling on to the track. The line was not fully reopened until June. In 2003, the infrastructure of the Central line was partly privatised in a
public–private partnership, managed by the
Metronet consortium. Metronet went into
administration in 2007, and
Transport for London (TfL) took over its responsibilities. == Route ==