Early struggle for survival , chairman of Speyer Brothers and UERL chairman from 1906|alt=A Dark-haired gentleman with a bushy moustache leans, arms crossed on a table. He is wearing a velvet smoking jacket and bow-tie. A dark curtain is behind him. Apart from the electrification of the DR, Yerkes did not live to see the completion of the fast-paced construction works that he set in motion; he died in New York on 29 December 1905 and was replaced as UERL chairman by
Edgar Speyer. Speyer was chairman of the UERL's backer Speyer Brothers and a partner in Speyer & Co.
Sir George Gibb, general manager of the
North Eastern Railway, was appointed managing director. The BS&WR opened to passengers on 10 March 1906. The GNP&BR followed on 15 December 1906, with the CCE&HR on 22 June 1907. The three tube lines quickly came to be known as the Bakerloo Tube, Piccadilly Tube and Hampstead Tube. Yerkes also did not live to see the UERL's financial struggle during the first years after the opening of the new lines. Because of greatly over-optimistic pre-opening predictions of passenger numbers, the lines failed to generate the income expected and needed to fund the interest payments on the UERL's substantial borrowings. In the Bakerloo Tube's first twelve months of operation, it carried 20.5 million passengers, less than sixty per cent of the 35 million that had been predicted during the planning of the line. The Piccadilly Tube achieved 26 million of a predicted 60 million and the Hampstead Tube managed 25 million of a predicted 50 million. For the DR, the UERL had predicted an increase to 100 million passengers after electrification, but achieved 55 million. The lower than expected passenger numbers were partly due to competition between the UERL's lines and those of the other tube and sub-surface railway companies, and the further spread of electric trams and motor buses, replacing slower, horse-drawn road transport, that took a large number of passengers away from the trains. The low price of tickets also depressed income. The crisis point for the UERL was the need to redeem the five-year profit-sharing secured notes on 30 June 1908. The UERL did not have the money. Speyer unsuccessfully tried to persuade the
London County Council (LCC) to inject £5 million into the UERL and used some of his own bank's money to pay-off disgruntled shareholders threatening bankruptcy proceedings. Eventually, Speyer and Gibb managed to obtain agreement from the shareholders to convert the notes into long-term debt to be repaid in 1933 and 1948.
Consolidation (Lord Ashfield from 1920), managing director of the UERL from 1910 and chairman from 1919|alt=A balding, white-haired man wearing 1920s formal business attire (jacket and waistcoat with wing collar and tie) leans to his left on a table and looks directly at the viewer. His right hand rests in front of his left on the edge of the table next to some papers and a pen. As Speyer and Gibb worked to restructure the debt, the UERL's general manager,
Albert Stanley, appointed by Gibb in 1907, began to increase the UERL's income by improving management structures. With commercial manager
Frank Pick, Stanley instigated a plan to increase passenger numbers; developing the "Underground" brand and establishing a joint booking system and coordinated fares throughout all of London's underground railways, including those not controlled by the UERL. from 1908 showing the UERL's lines and those of the other tube companies and the Metropolitan Railway|alt=A map titled "London Underground Railways" showing each of the underground railway lines in a different colour with stations marked as blobs. Faint background detail shows the River Thames, roads and non-underground lines. In 1909, the UERL overcame the objections of previously reluctant American investors, and announced a parliamentary
bill for the formal merger of the Bakerloo, Hampstead and Piccadilly Tube lines into a single company, the
London Electric Railway Company (LER). This bill received
royal assent and was enacted on 26 July 1910 as the
London Electric Railway Amalgamation Act 1910 (
10 Edw. 7. & 1 Geo. 5. c. xxxii). The DR was not merged with the tube lines and remained a separate company. As managing director of the UERL from 1910, Stanley led further transport consolidation with the UERL's take-over of
London General Omnibus Company (LGOC) in 1912 and the CLR and the C&SLR on 1 January 1913. The LGOC was the dominant bus operator in the capital and its high profitability (it paid dividends of 18 per cent compared with Underground Group companies' dividends of 1 to 3 per cent) subsidised the rest of the group. Through the UERL's shareholding in the London and Suburban Traction Company (LSTC), which it owned jointly with
British Electric Traction, the UERL took control in 1913 of the
London United Tramways, the
Metropolitan Electric Tramways and the
South Metropolitan Electric Tramways. The UERL also took control of bus builder
AEC. The much enlarged group became known as the Combine. Only the MR (and its subsidiaries the Great Northern & City Railway and the East London Railway) and the W&CR (by then fully owned by the
London and South Western Railway) remained outside of the Underground Group's control.
Extensions and improvements , St James's, headquarters of the London Electric Railway|alt=Two wings of a large white stone office building with regularly spaced rectangular windows. The building rises to twelve storeys, stepping back to a central tower surmounted by a clock and a flagpole. Another way in which the UERL tried to improve income was the construction of extensions to its lines to generate additional passenger traffic, often through the stimulation of new housing developments in the areas through which the lines ran. The DR was extended to
Uxbridge in 1910, by a connection made to the MR. In 1913, the Bakerloo Tube was extended to
Paddington and to
Queen's Park and
Watford Junction four years later. The Hampstead tube was extended a short distance at its southern end to provide an interchange with the Bakerloo and the DR at
Embankment in 1914. It was extended at its northern end from
Golders Green into the Middlesex countryside to reach
Edgware in 1924. In 1926, the Hampstead tube was extended south to connect to the C&SLR at
Kennington in conjunction with a reconstruction of the C&SLR and its 1926 extension from
Clapham Common to
Morden. The CLR was extended to
Ealing Broadway in 1920. Permission for an
extension of the line to Richmond was obtained in 1913 and again in 1920, but was not used. Later, during 1932 and 1933, the Piccadilly Tube was extended at both ends: in the north from Finsbury Park to
Cockfosters, and in the west from Hammersmith to Hounslow and Uxbridge using the DR's tracks. In addition, a programme of modernising many of the Underground's busiest central London stations was started; providing them with escalators to replace lifts. New and refurbished rolling stock was gradually introduced on a number of lines with automatic sliding doors along the length of the carriages instead of manual end gates, reducing boarding times. By the middle of the 1920s, the organisation had expanded to such an extent that a large, new headquarters building designed by
Charles Holden was constructed at
55 Broadway over
St James's Park station. ==Move to public ownership==