The EC&TJR was incorporated by the '
(7 & 8 Vict. c. lxxi) on 4 July 1844. It opened on 29 April 1846 from Stratford to Bow Creek to transport coal from a pier on the mouth of the River Lea. A year later it was extended to North Woolwich via Silvertown, under powers in the (8 & 9 Vict. c. lxxxv), allowing connections with the Woolwich Ferry; the same year it was taken over by the Eastern Counties Railway under the ' (
10 & 11 Vict. c. clvi). In 1846 a branch was added to the Pepper Warehouses belonging to the East India Dock Company, under the '''''' (
9 & 10 Vict. c. ccclxvii) This entailed a drawbridge over Bow Creek (as depicted on OS London and its environs Sheet VIII.SW 1948). When the
Royal Victoria Dock opened in 1855 the line between Canning Town and North Woolwich had to have a
swingbridge over the entrance to the dock, which increased journey times. In response, the line was rerouted north of the dock through two new stations, at
Custom House and
Tidal Basin. The southern line remained in service for local factories and was renamed the
Silvertown Tramway. After the construction of the
Albert Dock, with the same problem envisaged on the route to
Silvertown, in 1878 the railway built the
cut and cover Connaught Tunnel (also known as the Silvertown Tunnel or Albert Dock Tunnel), at the new dock's entrance; it emerges on the eastern side just short of the old
Tate & Lyle factory. In 1935, after it was discovered that larger ships entering the docks were scraping the roof of the tunnel, an iron casing was placed along the section under the dock. In 1872 the
Gas Light and Coke Company opened a branch running north-east to
Beckton (not the site of
Beckton DLR station) to serve its
gasworks; in 1880, as the
Royal Albert Dock opened, a branch line to
Gallions was opened by the London & St Katherine Dock Company, which ran due east along the north edge of the dock to the
River Thames on the far side of the dock. Both of these branches left the main line at Custom House. At the same time, the line was connected to the
Palace Gates Line to
Palace Gates in North London, and regular services between North Woolwich and Palace Gates operated. The line was quadrupled between Stratford Market and Tidal Basin in stages by 1892, though the western pair of tracks became less used over the years. ==Demise==