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Debden tube station

Debden London Underground
Debden Tube Station.jpg
Station entrance
Debden is located in Essex
Debden
Debden
Location of Debden in Essex
Location Loughton
Local authority District of Epping Forest
Managed by London Underground
Number of platforms 2
Accessible Yes (Eastbound only)
Fare zone 6
London Underground annual entry and exit
2012 Increase 2.20 million
2013 Increase 2.30 million
2014 Increase 2.48 million
2015 Decrease 2.46 million
Railway companies
Original company Great Eastern Railway
Pre-grouping Great Eastern Railway
Post-grouping London and North Eastern Railway
Key dates
24 April 1865 Opened as Chigwell Road
1 December 1865 Renamed Chigwell Lane
22 May 1916 Temporarily closed
3 February 1919 Reopened
25 September 1949 Renamed Debden; BR service replaced by Central line
18 April 1966 Goods yard closed
Other information
Lists of stations
WGS84 51°38′43″N 0°05′02″E / 51.64527°N 0.08388°E / 51.64527; 0.08388Coordinates: 51°38′43″N 0°05′02″E / 51.64527°N 0.08388°E / 51.64527; 0.08388
Underground sign at Westminster.jpg

Debden is a London Underground station on the Central line in the east of Loughton, in the Epping Forest district of Essex. The station is between Loughton and Theydon Bois. It is located in Station Approach off Chigwell Lane (A1168) and is in Travelcard Zone 6.

The station was originally opened on 24 April 1865 by the Great Eastern Railway as part of an extension of the railway's Loughton branch to Epping and Ongar. Initially called Chigwell Road, it was soon renamed on 1 December 1865 as Chigwell Lane, but remained a single-platform halt for the first years of its life. It was the setting for the Victorian ballad The Chigwell Stationmaster's Wife, Chigwell station not having opened until 1903.

Chigwell Lane was one of a number of GER stations that saw a temporary suspension of passenger services, due to the need to make economies during the First World War. The station was closed from 22 May 1916 until 3 February 1919. As a consequence of the 1921 Railways Act, the GER was merged with other railway companies in 1923 to form part of the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER).

As part of the New Works Programme, 1935-1940, the LNER branch was transferred to London Underground, to form part of the eastern extension of the Central line. Although work commenced in 1938 it was suspended upon the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 and work only recommenced in 1946. British Railways (BR, successor to LNER after nationalisation in 1948) steam services were replaced by electric Central line passenger services on 25 September 1949. From the handover, the station was renamed Debden. British Railways goods services continued to be operated on the branch for years afterwards.


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