Pre-grouping (1850-1922) The East & West India Docks & Birmingham Junction Railway (later
North London Railway (NLR)) was incorporated by Act of Parliament on 26 August 1846. It was empowered to construct a railway from the district of
Poplar and the docks to
Camden Town in north London. The railway's headquarters and
locomotive works were initially in
Bow. By the 1860s the North London Railway was performing well and following the opening of the new NLR terminus at , additional stations were added to the route and on 29 June 1867 this included a new station at Old Ford. On 22 July 1867, two workmen were killed at Old Ford when a freight train collided with a vehicle due to being misrouted by incorrectly set points. The men were in a team loading rails onto a lorry in a siding when the train approached the station and its driver noticed that the points were set to lead his wagon into the siding. The train driver applied his brakes and sounded the whistle, and the men who were engaged in loading the lorry, with the exception of two that were on board the lorry, had time to get out of the way. The subsequent impact destroyed the lorry, killing one of the two men and injuring the other so seriously that he later died. In 1868 the NLR opened a goods depot south of the station and two years later ownership was passed to the London & North Western Railway. In 1902 the opening of the
Whitechapel & Bow Railway and by 1906 the commencement of electric tram services saw a decline in passenger numbers at Old Ford. The
London & North Western Railway (LNWR) took over the working of the North London Railway under a common management arrangement on 1 February 1909 although the North London Railway continued to exist until 1922.
London Midland & Scottish Railway (1923-1944) Following the
Railways Act 1921, also known as the grouping act, operation of the station fell under the control of the
London Midland & Scottish Railway. Traffic had been in decline for some years and the North Poplar Scout Group rented a room on the platform from July 1923 (possibly earlier) and 1935. On 2 January 1929 a girder supporting the building failed and a period of disrupted working followed, with single line working being operated. With increased journey times (and probably train cancellations), many passengers looked for alternative ways and custom was lost at all the stations along the line. The problem was resolved by partial demolition of the station building but it is unclear when normal services resumed. Sunday services to Poplar were withdrawn on 29 January 1940. Old Ford station was closed in 1944 after damage caused by air raids and V1/V2 attacks saw the withdrawal of the passenger service between and stations. A replacement bus service was provided but this was withdrawn on 23 April 1945. The railway was re-opened as the route was a key route for freight to and from the London Docks.
After closure The platform buildings were demolished during 1963 The street-level station buildings were demolished in October 1967, all that remained at track level was the remains of the platforms and stairwells. The goods yard closed on 12 November 1967 and the signal box soon after. The
East Cross Route (formerly the A102(M) but now the
A12) was built alongside the railway alignment in the late 1960s as part of the aborted
London Motorway Box scheme and Old Ford Road was truncated at the old station site (which lay alongside) and a footbridge provided. A rail viaduct over the road was provided north of the former station site. Freight traffic ceased on 3 October 1983 with the track being lifted during May 1984, and a terrace of houses was later built in its place south of the station. A short section of undeveloped track bed exists north of the station, (). ==Notes==