Uxbridge had enjoyed the benefit to its trade of a location on the London to
Oxford coach route before the railway came. This led interests in the town to oppose the routing of railways through the town, and an 1829 proposed line to
Birmingham (not actually built), and then the
Great Western Railway main line were designed to avoid the town, and accordingly the GWR approached no closer than West Drayton, away. As well as the road transit, at the time West London could be reached by
packet boat on the Paddington branch of the
Grand Union Canal, recorded in the name Packet Boat Lane in Cowley Peachey. The commercial disadvantage of not having a railway connection was soon apparent, and in the mid-1840s a branch line was promoted; it was the
Great Western and Uxbridge Railway, authorised by an act of Parliament, the '''''' (
9 & 10 Vict. c. clxvi) of 16 July 1846. However local investors were reluctant to support the scheme and it went no further for the time being. ==Real progress==