The Metropolitan Railway opened to the public on 10 January 1863 and was quickly seen as being a great success, carrying 9.5 million passengers in its first year. On 27 November 1863, the NW&CCR's
private bill was announced, one of many speculative underground railways being promoted that hoped to emulate the MR's success. The '''''' (
27 & 28 Vict. c. cccxxiii) received
royal assent on 29 July 1864, but most of the others were unsuccessful. The NW&CCR's proposed line was to run between the
London and North Western Railway's (L&NWR's) terminus at
Euston and the
South Eastern Railway's (SER's) terminus at
Charing Cross (then still under construction), with both mainline companies supporting the proposals. Like the MR, the NW&CCR was to be constructed as a
cut and cover tunnel running beneath roads and a new road south of
Oxford Street was to be constructed along the proposed route. At the northern end, branches were proposed to connect to the MR near
Portland Road (now Great Portland Street) and
Gower Street (now Euston Square) stations and to the L&NWR and the
Midland Railway north of Euston station. At the southern end, the line was to come to the surface to connect to the SER's tracks on
Hungerford Bridge. A further act of Parliament, the '''''' (
29 & 30 Vict. c. cccxi), gave permission for the NW&CCR to make agreements with the L&NWR and the SER to operate trains over its line and to agree fares. The mainline companies were each to be offered half of the NW&CCR's shares. To fund construction of the railway, The NW&CCR intended to pay the contractors constructing the line in its shares, which, it was expected, would increase in value and pay dividends once the railway was operational. This was a common method of payment for capital-intensive railway projects. To pay for the actual works during construction period, contractors were financed by banks; however, before work could start on the NW&CCR a number of contractors and banks failed in the
Panic of 1866, a major crash in the London and international
stock markets, after which the NW&CCR found it impossible to raise the funding it needed to begin construction and the proposals were abandoned in 1869. ==Euston, St Pancras and Charing Cross Railway and London Central Railway==