South Eastern and Chatham Railway

South Eastern and Chatham Railway
1920 map of the railway
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)
Length637 miles 61 chains (1,026.4 km) (1919)[1]
Track length1,302 miles 24 chains (2,095.8 km) (1919)[1]

The South Eastern and Chatham Railway Companies Joint Management Committee (SE&CRCJMC),[2] known as the South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SE&CR), was a working union of two neighbouring rival railways, the South Eastern Railway (SER) and London, Chatham and Dover Railway (LC&DR), which operated between London and south-east England. Between 1899 and 1923, the SE&CR had a monopoly of railway services in Kent and to the main Channel ports for ferries to France and Belgium.

The companies had competed extensively, with some of the bitterest conflicts between British railway companies. Competing routes to the same destinations were built, so several towns in Kent had been served with a similar frequency service by both companies. In places, unfettered competition allowed two stations and services to multiple London termini.

It would be a constituent of the Southern Railway as part of the 1923 Grouping.

Railway lines in Kent, showing most of the SE&CR network
  1. ^ a b The Railway Year Book for 1920. London: The Railway Publishing Company Limited. 1920. p. 246.
  2. ^ Awdry (1990), page 199