It was opened on 2 May 1870 as
Childs Hill and Cricklewood nearly 2 years after the
Midland Railway had built its extension (now called the
Midland Main Line) to
St. Pancras. The station acquired its present name in 1903. To the north of the station, a
motive power depot was built with a large
roundhouse in 1882, with a second in 1893. With this was built a large
marshalling yard and, in later years,
LMS Garratts would be seen with their massive trains of coal from
Toton in the
Nottinghamshire and
Derbyshire coalfields. A loop line, no longer in existence, was built heading north on the western side of the railway yard, then turning east
underneath the main line at the viaduct over the River Brent (and also now the
North Circular Road), then south on the eastern side. This obviously allowed trains to reverse direction, but also conveniently joined the railway yards on the two sides of the main lines. Between 1899 and 1926, a number of proposals were put forward to build an
underground railway along the Edgware Road from Central London to Cricklewood via Kilburn, and envisaged the construction of a Tube station at Cricklewood. None of the schemes succeeded and the line was never built. A mural bearing the inscription (which was a nickname the British press gave
Amy Johnson) was painted in Cricklewood station to commemorate the hundred-year anniversary of women getting the right to vote in the United Kingdom. In 2014, the pedestrian subway of Cricklewood station was refurbished with renewed cladding, lighting and a repaired floor, and
disabled access was improved at the ticket office window. ==Facilities==