Varsity Line | |
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Bletchley station, at the midpoint of the line, in 1962
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Overview | |
Type | Heavy rail |
System | National Rail |
Status |
Operational: Bletchley–Bedford, Oxford–Bicester Village Rebuild scheduled: Bicester Village–Bletchley Closed: Bedford–Sandy–Cambridge |
Locale | South East England |
Termini |
Oxford Bedford |
Stations | 13 open 2 planned |
Operation | |
Opened | 1846–1851 |
Closed | 1993 (mothballed Clayton Junction–Bletchley) |
Owner | Network Rail |
Operator(s) |
Chiltern Railways (Oxford–Bicester) London Midland (Bletchley–Bedford) |
Technical | |
Number of tracks | 1–2 |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
The Varsity Line (or Oxford to Cambridge line) is the railway route that used to link the English university cities of Oxford and Cambridge, operated successively by the London and North Western Railway, the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, and British Railways.
Services were withdrawn from the Oxford–Bletchley and Bedford–Cambridge sections at the end of 1967, even though the line had not been listed for closure as part of the Beeching Axe in 1963. Only the Bletchley–Bedford section remained open for passenger traffic.
Proposals to reopen the route began to gain momentum in the 2000s, led by the East West Rail Link consortium. As of the end of 2016, the section between Oxford and Bicester Junction (for Chiltern Main Line to Marylebone) has reopened; Network Rail has a (funded) schedule to rebuild the mothballed section between Bicester and Bletchley.
In the absence of a rail service, Stagecoach in Bedford's X5 coach service provides a passenger service by road between Oxford and Cambridge via Bicester, Milton Keynes and Bedford.
The line was built in two stages, the first by the Buckinghamshire Railway between Oxford and Bedford in 1845. and the second by the Bedford and Cambridge Railway which opened on 7 July 1862.
Proposed from 1844, the supporting and surveying engineers were George and Robert Stephenson. The engineers' proposal to junction with the London and Birmingham Railway at Bletchley was eventually accepted by the shareholders, with construction starting in December 1845 and completed by September 1846. All operations were subcontracted to the LNWR.