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26 Apr, 2025
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Tiny UK village 50 miles from capital where London Underground once stopped
@Source: mirror.co.uk
Verney Junction is a small village located in the rolling Buckinghamshire countryside that has an incredible and seemingly unlikely connection to London's transport system . It was once a remote stop at the end of the Metropolitan Railway, the world's first subterranean train line, which opened in 1863 and served six stations between Paddington and Farringdon. It has long been disconnected from the National Rail network, but up until 1936 trains linked Verney Junction, located in the parish of Middle Claydon in north Buckinghamshire, with Baker Street in the City of Westminster . While it is technically a disused London Underground terminus, it's worth noting that the outpost was never a deep-level tube station. Verney Junction was part of the Metropolitan Railway, which was later incorporated into the London Underground, but all services north of Aylesbury were withdrawn after it was integrated with the other tube lines. The small hamlet's origins and identity are inextricably linked to the development of the British railway network in the Victorian era . The tiny village, consisting primarily of stone cottages, was established in the mid-19th century to house workers employed on the railway. The hamlet’s name derives from the junction it grew around and remains a testament to the transformative impact of the railways on rural England . When it was built, there was no existing settlement nearby that could lend its name to transport hub, so it was named in honour of Sir Harry Verney — principal local landowner and major investor in the Aylesbury and Buckingham Railway (A&BR) Company. The arrival of the railway prompted the construction of accommodation for railway workers and the establishment of amenities including a cricket ground. The station was eventually opened in 1868, coinciding with the extension of the A&BR, making Verney Junction the northernmost end of the line. During its heyday, Verney Junction served as a modest but important interchange for both passengers and produce. The station had three platforms, and by the late 1800s featured facilities including a goods yard with cattle docks and a station hotel, reflecting optimism about future passenger numbers. But despite its early promise, its fortunes waned in the 20th century as the rural location limited passenger numbers and competition from more direct routes reduced its necessity. The two World Wars brought a temporary increase in cargo traffic, but the post-war period saw a steady decline and passenger journeys south to Aylesbury were withdrawn in 1936, with freight services following suit in 1964. The station closed entirely to passengers in 1968, following the closure of the Oxford to Cambridge line. The village's story is commemorated at TFL’s London Transport Museum , where a plaque states: "The furthest destination from central London is Verney Junction, nearly 80km (50 miles) from Baker Street. "Suburban development never did follow the railway this far out and the Metropolitan line service here was withdrawn in 1936. Today the tiny village in rural Buckinghamshire is still called Verney Junction. But there are no trains."
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