in 2005 showing the station buildings and platforms. The original proposal for the line were promoted by the
Rugby and Leamington Railway Company. The '''''' (
9 & 10 Vict. c. ccclxviii) received
royal assent on 13 August 1846. The line was to be built and operated by the London and Birmingham Railway, which became part of the LNWR the following year. At Rugby, the branch diverged from the main line at a junction west of
Rugby railway station and ran south-west for 15 miles and eight
chains to Leamington, where it was joined end-on to the LNWR's existing branch line
from Coventry to Leamington, which had been extended into Leamington town centre from its original terminus at
Milverton station, which had been on the edge of the town. The line from Rugby to Leamington opened throughout on 1 March 1851. The first intermediate station at
Marton was opened on 1 January 1852, station opened on 1 February 1853. In February 1854,
Leamington Spa Avenue station opened which was closer to the town centre than the original Milverton station, and was alongside the rival
Great Western Railway's (GWR)
Leamington station. The station at was opened twenty years after the opening of the line on 2 October 1871. The line was originally built as
single track, but as traffic grew the line was
doubled in stages from Rugby between 1882 and 1884. The lines were designated
Up to Rugby and
Down to Leamington. Local trains for Leamington used the down (north) end
bay platforms at Rugby. At the other end of the line, services from Rugby ran through to Warwick (Milverton) and this practice continued until closure because the
loco shed and servicing depot for the Rugby-Leamington-Coventry lines was at Milverton. In 1895, a new junction was created when the LNWR's single track
line from Weedon to Daventry was extended westward to join the Rugby to Leamington line at Marton Junction, which was two miles southwest of Marton station in a deep cutting through a ridge of high ground. At Leamington, the LNWR used a single track connection facing Rugby to exchange goods trains with the adjacent Great Western Railway. This connection was doubled in 1908 in order to cope with the increased traffic. The local passenger service was withdrawn by
British Railways in June 1959, and the local goods sidings were closed in the early 1960s, however the line continued to see use as a diversionary route by both passenger and freight trains until 1965, during the electrification of the
West Coast Main Line. When this finished the line was closed as a through route on 4 April 1966, and the line closed between Marton Junction and Leamington, with the remainder of the track singled. The only remaining traffic was goods trains serving the
Rugby Cement works at both Rugby and
Southam, the latter of which was located on a stub of the former line to Weedon and so required trains to reverse at Marton Junction. Trains to the cement works at Southam continued until June 1985, with the track being lifted two years later. Infrequent trains served the cement works at Rugby until July 1991. The track at this end remained, and remains in place however. == Route ==