Yearly Archives: 2023

Mitcham Junction Railway Station

Railway station off Carshalton Road next to the Golf Course and Mitcham Common. It is currently served by Thameslink and Southern trains, see the National Rail website.

Contents

Maps

Bridge reconstruction

Newspaper Articles

Anecdotes

Maps

Before the Croydon Tramlink replaced the Wimbledon to Croydon railway line in 2000, Mitcham Junction railway station was a junction, as can be seen in this 1953 OS map:

1953 OS map reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland, reuse CC-BY (NLS).

The signal box is shown on this map as ‘SB’, to the east of the platforms. For photos and more information see the Signal Box website.

Undated photo by B. Brooksbank and licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons Licence.

Undated postcard. Reverse of postcard:- “Canon” Series. B. 64. Printed in Saxony.

Older maps

1894 OS map reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland, reuse CC-BY

1866 OS map reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland, reuse CC-BY

Reconstruction of Mitcham Junction Bridge

The bridge in Carshalton Road over the lines was widened in 1955, but according to these extracts from Mitcham Borough Council minutes, the work started in 1939 (but was halted due to the war).

10th February 1938

Read letter from Surrey County Council stating that at a meeting held on January 25, 1938, the County Council had sanctioned a contribution of £2,306 or one half of the net cost of the scheme towards the reconstruction of the Mitcham Junction Railway Bridge. Resolved, That the Surrey County Council be informed that as the Carshalton Road is a main county road the Town Council are of opinion that the total net cost be borne by county funds.

10th March 1938

Read letter from Surrey County Council stating that the County Council were not prepared to increase the agreed contribution towards the cost of reconstructing Mitcham Junction Bridge. The Town Clerk reported that he understood that, as a matter of policy, the County Council had decided that in all cases of bridge reconstruction the County Council expect some portion of the cost to be borne by the local authority. Resolved, that the Council accept the contribution offered on January 25, 1938.

16th May 1939

Read letter from the Ministry of Health enclosing the formal consent of the Minister to the borrowing of the following sums in connection with the widening of the bridge over the Southern Railway at Mitcham Junction:-

Acquisition of land £150
Bridge works £1,875
Road works £566

23rd May 1939

Read letter from the Demolition and Construction Co. Ltd., enclosing draft of a clause to cover the contract against increase of wages and costs in the event of war, and asking that this clause should be included in the contract for the reconstruction of Mitcham Junction Bridge. Resolved, That the Council agree to the inclusion of this clause in the contract.

From the Norwood News – Friday 22nd July 1955

Bridge widening soon.

Workmen may soon begin widening the bridge over the railway at Mitcham Junction. The Ministry of Transport have promised a grant of £30,825 towards the estimated cost of £41,000 so the work can be completed. It was began before the last war.

Newspaper Articles

Evening News (London) – Monday 30 October 1933

HE FAMILY OF STATION-MASTERS FATHER AND FOUR SONS

When Mr. Ernest Holden retires from the post of stationmaster at Mitcham and Mitcham Junction stations, Southern Railway, to-morrow, a family service with the railway totalling 275 years will come to an end. Mr. Holden has been station-master on the Southern at Mitcham for 10 years, and has had 44 years’ service with the railway. His father was station-master at Drayton and his three brothers (two of whom are still living) were all stationmasters — at Bexhill-on-Sea, Hove and Forest Hill.

Memories of 40 years in signal boxes at Mitcham Junction, an article from the Mitcham Advertiser of 11th October, 1945.

Wavy Canopy Edge of Mitcham Junction

(The following story refers to Mitcham Junction but the rest of the article implies that the body was found near the Eastfields level crossing.)

From the Norwood News – Friday 18 October 1929

CUT TO PIECES.

Depressed man on line at Mitcham.

TRAGEDY OF ILLNESS.

“So as not to alarm my passengers, I ran my train about 100 yards before pulling up,” said the driver of a Southern Railway electric train, at the inquest, on Monday, on Jesse Vince (63), outdoor labourer, of Greyhound-terrace, Lonesome, Mitcham, whose decapitated body was found on the line at Eastfields, Mitcham, the previous Thursday night.

The inquest was held at Mitcham mortuary chapel by the deputy-coroner for Surrey, who sat with a jury, of which Mr. Champion was foreman.

Mrs. Elisabeth Vince, the widow, who was greatly distressed, said her husband had been ill about 13 weeks, suffering from sun-stroke. He had seen a doctor. He was always complaining of his head aching.

The coroner: What was he depressed about?
– Because be felt ill and could not get work. That is the truth, sir.

REPORTED MISSING.

Witness added that her husband had never threatened to take his life. He left home about half past three on Thursday afternoon, the 10th inst. He did say where he was going. As he had not returned at 9.30 — his usual time being about 5 o’clock—witness informed the police that he was missing.

Frederick Parker, of New Cross, an engine driver on the Southern Railway, said he was driving the 6.30 train from Victoria to Epsom Town and when approaching the footbridge at Mitcham Junction signal box, his train struck something on the line. It was dark and he had seen nothing.

“So as not to alarm my passengers.” added witness, “I ran my train about 100 yards before pulling up, I then informed the man in the signal box, and asked him to have the line searched before another train passed over it.”

Witness further stated that he could find no marks on the train. The level-crossing gates were closed when he passed.

LINE SEARCHED

John Wyatt, of Eastfields, Mitcham, the signalman, said when the last witness informed him of his suspicions he arranged for the line to be searched. Witness had seen no one loitering on the line. He could not have missed seeing a man if he had got on the line at the level crossing. There was no right-of-way, or footpath, apart from this crossing.

James Percy Douglas Edwards, of Gipsy-hill, Upper Norwood, a shunter, spoke to searching the line and finding the decapitated body of deceased. It was terribly mutilated. Witness picked up a watch and chain. He informed the police.

“I have been given to understand,” added witness, “that deceased worked for Messrs. Mizen Bros., the market gardeners, and, knowing the spot, it would be possible for him to get on to the line from their greenhouses, which back on to the railway.”

FINGER PRINTS.

John William Coleman, a railway detective, said he had examined the scene, and discovered several finger prints which indicated that the man got on to the line by climbing a small tree and mounting a wall.

P.-c. William Kemp, attached to the Mitcham Police Station, spoke to recovering the remains and helping to remove them to the mortuary. The property on the body included a razor. Witness did not think it possible for the man to have got on to the line from Messrs. Mizen’s greenhouses. He thought the only way of access was from the public level crossing.

STRUCK BY TRAIN.

Dr. Bentley said the body was terribly cut up, and he came to the conclusion that the man must have been lying down when the train struck him.

Summing up, the deputy-coroner said the evidence all pointed to deceased being a trespasser on the railway. He had no ticket, and there was no suggestion that he was a passenger and fell out of the train. The witnesses all said it was difficult for a man to get on to the line, but possibly it was not so hard after all to a man who knew the place, as deceased did.

The jury returned a verdict of ” Suicide whilst of unsound mind. “

Anecdotes

From a train driver via Twitter:
Brick thrown at windscreen of train

I have one memory of an incident there circa 2003. I was watching what I thought was plastic bag blowing about in the wind. I watched it as it ‘blew’ towards my train. It occurred to me it wasn’t just a plastic bag. Someone had put a brick in it & it shattered my windscreen.

I was shocked & a little shaken up, the windscreen bore the damage it was safety glass. The train had to come out of service & that service was cancelled.

People have done all sorts to damage trains, molotov cocktails, trolleys thrown off bridges, items on the line to de-rail trains.

My experience in buying tickets in around 2015:

I’d used the online journey planner for a trip to Collington, near Bexhill-on-sea, for visiting relatives there. I had the notes and coins to make the exact cost of the ticket, and I set off by tram to Mitcham Junction. The chap at the ticket office at the station seemed surprised by the destination. He remarked that he had never sold a ticket for that station before. He told me the fare, I don’t recall how much it was, and I then counted out the exact fare. He seemed to freeze, in fact he was almost shocked, and said that being given the exact fare was most unusual. “This is such a small station,” he said. “People often present a £20 note for a fare that’s less than £10, sometimes less than £5.” He grinned. He was grateful of getting the exact money.

PC Harold ‘Tanky’ Challenor at Mitcham Police Station in mid-1950s

Harold Gordon “Tanky” Challenor, MM (16 March 1922 – 28 August 2008) was a wartime member of the SAS, decorated for his part in Operation Speedwell. After the war, he joined the Metropolitan Police, spending much of his career in Criminal Investigation Department (CID).

Source: Wikipedia

In his memoirs, published in 1990, he wrote that:

My first posting as a very keen but fledgling constable was to the Mitcham Division – invariably called the manor – where I pounded a beat, played soccer and pulled my weight in the tug-of-war team. I studied on the bus to and from work, and passed my first two qualifying exams with marks of 85 per cent and 93 per cent. But I knew I was never going to be a policeman in the publicly accepted sense. I was always going to be a maverick, and this came to me when I was crossing through a factory area and I spotted a young man who had been posted as a deserter from the Army. As soon as he saw me he set off like a hare who has spotted the lurchers. But I was extremely fit and he couldn’t shake me off, and I finally cornered him in a deserted corner of the factory complex. “You bastards,” he yelled in frustration, “are all right in uniform but you haven’t got the guts of a louse without it”. That was like a red rag to a bull to me, and I replied, “That mean you want to fight?” and he sneered, “You haven’t got the guts.”

I took off my tunic, hung my helmet over a convenient post and squared up to him. I floored him twice, but he was a game little bastard and got up each time and caught me with a haymaker which brought me to my knees. He stood off while I got up, and when we went back into action he said breathlessly, “I’ll call it a day if you’re willing.” I was, and that was the end of the scrap. I had a huge swelling on my cheek and he had black eye. “I’ll come in quietly,” he said, and as I put on my tunic and helmet I casually asked him if he had any problems. “Yes,” he said, “but I need time to sort them out.” I knew where my duty lay, but I ignored the rule book. “Look son, sort things out, then report back to your unit under your own steam. That’ll be much better than being nicked and taken back.” Having expounded that pearl of wisdom I invited him to join me in a pint.

At the Bath Tavern, situated in the middle of a gypsy camp near Mitcham Common, I put my helmet on a hatstand and called for two pints. The landlord, Charlie Monk, dipped his handkerchief in my pint and bathed my cheek. I reported back at the nick at the end of my tour of duty and told the sergeant I had tripped and banged my face on a gate post.

Some weeks later I saw the young deserter back in uniform and quite content to soldier on, having sorted out his domestic problems. I thought: There’s nothing like a good punch-up to make an assessment of a man’s character.

Source: pages 128-9, “Tanky Challenor – SAS and the Met”, by Harold Challoner and Alfred Draper.

He doesn’t mention in the book when this took place but, as he had joined the police in 1951 and moved to West End Central by 1962, then it could have been in the early to mid 1950s.

This newspaper article puts him at Mitcham Police Station in July 1955.

Youths Remanded On Theft Charges

Clifford E. Bonny, of Clair-rd., Whitstable, and Joseph P. Murphy, of Paddington-gdns. Liverpool, both 19, were charged at Wimbledon with breaking out of a cafe at Coombe-lane, Raynes Park, Surrey on June 14, having stolen 900 cigarettes, chocolate and other property value together at £9 7s. 6d. Asking for a remand and objecting to bail, the police said the pair had absconded from Borstal. They were remanded in custody until July 1. At Mitcham police station Pc Challoner told them he had reason to believe they had stolen from cafes at Wimbledon and Slough, and Bonny replied, “Yes, I suppose you know all about it.”

Source: Kentish Express – Friday 1 July 1955, via the British Newspaper Archive.

This newspaper article from 1958 refers to him as Detective Constable Harold Challoner.

POLICE CHASED VAN: TWO MEN FOR TRIAL

A CHISEL, two screw-drivers and two pairs of gloves with a torch stuffed inside one of them were found in a van stopped by police after a man had been seen behaving suspiciously at Pitlake Bridge, Croydon, after 1 a.m. on May 12, it was alleged on Monday at Croydon Magistrates’ Court. Before the Bench were Frank William Baker (34), press setter, of Selhurst Road, South Norwood, and Vincent James Murtagh (24), dealer. of no fixed address. They were charged with loitering at Lower Church Street and Pitlake Bridge, Croydon, on May 12 with intent to commit a felony, and with being found by night at Thomson Crescent, Croydon, in possession of house-breaking implements. Bold pleaded not guilty. Det-con. Harold Challoner said that a man went up to a radio shop in Pitlake Bridge and shone a torch on the door. When two cars came over the bridge he went away round a corner. A van then drove up and stopped by the radio shop. After a time it was driven away towards Mitcham. The van was followed and stopped in Thomson Crescent. Murtagh was driving, with Baker as passenger. The gloves and torch were found in the dashboard cavity and the chisel and screwdrivers underneath the passenger’s seat. Asked to explain them, Murtagh ” I do a bit of dealing. The gloves and torch are handy when you are examining a car.” When charged, Baker said: “It’s a lot of rot.” Murtagh said: “Put down the same for me.” Both men were remanded to appear at Croydon Quarter Sessions on May 30, Baker on bail and Murtagh in custody. Each reserved his defence.

Source: Croydon Advertiser and East Surrey Reporter – Friday 23 May 1958, via the British Newspaper Archive.