Bow railway station
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Bow | |
|---|---|
Remains of the entrance in 1961 | |
| Location | Bow |
| Grid reference | TQ372830 |
| Owner | |
| Number of platforms | 4 |
| Key dates | |
| 1850 | Opened |
| 1944 | Closed |
| Other information | |
Bow was a railway station in Bow, east London, that was opened in 1850 by the East & West India Docks and Birmingham Junction Railway, which was later renamed the North London Railway (NLR). The station was situated between Old Ford and South Bromley, and was located on the north side of Bow Road, close to the second Bow Road station which was open from 1892 to 1949. A covered footway connected the two stations between 1892 and 1917.
The original Bow station was replaced by a much grander station in 1870, designed by Edwin Henry Horne, which incorporated a concert hall that was 100 feet (30 m) long and 40 feet (12 m) wide. Bow was served not only by the NLR but also by Great Eastern Railway (GER) trains to Fenchurch Street and a shuttle service to Plaistow.
The NLR line was severely damaged in the Blitz of World War II and the line east of Dalston Junction was closed in 1944 and never re-opened to passengers. The station buildings remained in use as a parcel office until it was closed in 1965. After being left derelict, Bow station was ultimately demolished during the construction of the Docklands Light Railway (DLR) which reused the old NLR line. Today, the station site is occupied by a car hire firm, and directly opposite lies Bow Church DLR station.

By 1892 Bow station had four platforms and a direct walkway link to Bow Road GER station at the north end.
To the north of the station was a junction where the Bromley curve diverged from the main line and just north of that the GER line that linked Stratford and Fenchurch Street (known as the Blackwall London Extension Railway) crossed over the line. A short distance further north, the Great Eastern Main Line crossed over the NLR line and north of that was a goods yard. A signal box known as Tilbury Junction was located between the two railway overbridges controlling this junction.[1]
The four platforms were linked by a footbridge connected to the walkway link at the north end of the station. The station building was located on the north side of Bow Road and straddled all four platforms. In 1892 the station which had been rebuilt in 1867 was an imposing building. The ground floor, which, was designed by architect Edwin Henry Horne and it was not until 26 March 1870 that the building was completed.

The elegant facade featured simple round arches. At road level was a booking hall, waiting and refreshment rooms and on the upper floor was a spacious concert hall designed to seat 1,000 people. On 2 September 1870 The Engineer published detailed illustrations of Bow station, naming Horne and including sectional drawings of the building as well as the frontage, concluding that "the building, is, in our opinion, as good an example of what a railway station should be as any we have ever seen".[2]
The picture shows the structure photographed from the western side. The large windows above the house the Bromley Institute and the protruding dome like structure beneath the roof line housed the organ which was installed in 1874. Entrance to the institute was from the porch and an identical one existed at the other end of the building. An ornate fountain was installed in 1872 to commemorate the local firm Bryant and May who had led a campaign to defeat the match tax proposed by then Chancellor of the Exchequer, Robert Lowe. The fountain was designed by Rowland Plumbe.[3]
To the immediate south of the station there was a junction east towards Fenchurch Street which joined the Blackwall London Extension Railway at Gas Factory Junction. This was a steeply graded line and heavy trains required banking assistance (a second locomotive at the rear) from Bow to get up the gradient in the early days of operation. Bow Junction signal box was located here.
To the west and south of the station Bow railway works was located and the pedestrian access for this was directly opposite the station on the opposite side of Bow Road.