Origins
The Hampstead Junction Railway was incorporated by Act of Parliament on 20 August 1853 to build a line from Willesden, on theOpening
The line was opened on 2 January 1860, and was worked by the North London Railway. From 1864 it was managed by the North London Railway, and absorbed by the LNWR in 1867.Route description
The Hampstead Junction Railway left the North London Railway to Willesden, diverging northwards at Camden Road Junction. (The adjacent station on the NLR was called Camden Town from 1870 to 1950). At the point of crossing Prince of Wales Road, a station was opened on 1 April 1867, called Kentish Town. It became ''Kentish Town West'' on 2 June 1924. The line then turned west at the original Kentish Town (later renamed Gospel Oak, on 1 February 1867) through Hampstead Heath station, followed by Hampstead Tunnel, 1166 yards long. The next station was Finchley Road St Johns Wood, later renamed Finchley Road & Frognal from 2 October 1880. Turning south-west, the line crosses the Midland Railway main line, and there is a station originally called West End Lane, and renamed ''West Hampstead'' on 6 May 1975. Next came Edgware Road station, successively renamed Edgware Road and Brondesbury (1 January 1872), Brondesbury (Edgware Road) (1 January 1873 until 1 May 1873), and then Brondesbury. Brondesbury Park was next, opened on 1 June 1908, followed by Kensal Green & Harlesden station. From 1 April 1873 there was a station called Kensal Green at Chamberlayne Wood, then a remote dead end road; it was renamed Kensal Rise on 24 May 1890. The 1873 opening replaced an earlier station half a mile or so to the west, at Green Lane (later Wrottesley Road). Opened on 1 November 1861, this station had staggered platforms, so that stopping trains passed under Green Lane (later Wrottesley Road) before the platform was reached; it closed when the new station opened. Immediately west of the old station, there was later a three-way diverging junction, with the two outer routes leading to the LNWR main line. The centre route leads to a bridge crossing the LNWR main line as the HJR line turns south, joining the N&SWJR at Old Oak Junction. Originally the crossing of the main line was a little to the west of the present route. Gradients on the line rise from each end to a high point in Hampstead Tunnel, the westbound gradient being steep at 1 in 98. The North London was electrified at 600 V DC using the four rail system on 1 October 1916; the trains ran from Broad Street to Richmond and also Kew Bridge. The four rail electrification was altered to a three-rail system in August 1970. In 1996 the line was closed for major upgrade work in connection with the operation of international (Eurostar) trains; this involved substantial alterations and strengthening of the Hampstead Tunnel. The line was reopened on 29 September 1996, and the electrification system was changed to 25 kV AC overhead as part of the work.References
{{Authority control History of rail transport in London Railway companies established in 1853 Railway companies disestablished in 1867 British companies established in 1853 British companies disestablished in 1867