Talk:Chesham branch

Latest comment: 4 years ago by Vincent60030 in topic Copyedits made
Good articleChesham branch has been listed as one of the Engineering and technology good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
Did You Know Article milestones
DateProcessResult
October 13, 2010Good article nomineeListed
July 21, 2011Featured article candidateNot promoted
July 24, 2020Featured article candidateNot promoted
Did You Know A fact from this article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "Did you know?" column on October 22, 2010.
The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that Chesham tube station on the Chesham branch is both the northernmost and westernmost point of the London Underground?
Current status: Good article

Name of Article

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Can I suggest that there is a discussion here first on the name of the article. Renaming an article and using the edit summary to justify the move is wholly inappropriate. Seek concensus here to the name first please, anything less is disrespectful to other editors of this page and those with an interest in the topic. Tmol42 (talk) 13:05, 17 October 2010 (UTC)Reply

Just to kick things off a quick search on Google quickly brought up this page amongst others referring to 'Chesham Branch' from the London Underground (LU) consultation on possible changes in 2005.Tmol42 (talk) 13:43, 17 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
We could quite legitimately use either. There are a few reliable sources which call it the Chesham branch linethis one is a good example). TfL seems to use the shorter title, as do a number of self-published sources like this. But then there's Clive Foxwell's book about the line (currently cited a number of times in the article), which according to Amazon uses the words Branch Line in its title. So where does all that leave us? Alzarian16 (talk) 14:01, 17 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
I was making the move not on the fact of a service but simply that it is a branch line and other railway lines around the UK, this seems the standard naming for branch lines. Simply south (talk) 23:12, 17 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
I think iridescent's reasoning at User talk:Iridescent#Chesham Branch Line is persuasive: if the best recent sources about this line never use "Chesham branch line", neither should we. Ucucha 23:22, 17 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
(ec) As I've already said to you on my talkpage, "Line" has a very specific meaning within London Transport, and the Chesham branch doesn't meet it; an autonomous unit within London Underground with its own management, it's own timetable and its own colour on the tube map. The Chesham branch has none of these and never has. Even the Hammersmith & City and East London lines were just "Metropolitan Line (Hammersmith and City)" and "Metropolitan Line (East London Section)" until they were given full "Line" status in the 1990s; there are plenty of other semi-autonomous sections within LT (the Olympia branch, the Mill Hill East shuttle, the Edgware Road-Wimbledon section, the Uxbridge branch, the Watford branch, the Edgware and High Barnet branches), none of which use this "Foo Branch line" formulation. – iridescent 23:23, 17 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
Limit to outside metro systems? Also, i am not missing your point. Simply south (talk) 23:30, 17 October 2010 (UTC)Reply
[ec] Using "line" in naming this article is anomalous in the context of London Underground's usage of lines and branches and gives the branch the appearance of a higher status than it has without adding anything. It is part of the Metropolitan line and "branch" provides sufficient explanation of its context as a branch off from the main route. We don't refer to the Heathrow branch line, Wimbledon branch line or the Edgware branch line, so why do so with the Chesham branch. --DavidCane (talk) 23:43, 17 October 2010 (UTC)Reply

The Last Shuttle

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I have created a new section to reflect the changeover from the Shuttle Service to Through Service realising of course it will need to be updated once the new service starts to operate. Having no technical knowledge about S stock trains etc no doubt I have made some basic mistake with the title or the jargon for which I am happy to stand corrected.Tmol42 (talk) 16:41, 9 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Once the new trains are up and running, I'll rewrite the legacy section to cover it. Given that LT and Bucks CC are both involved, and neither have a reputation for competence and efficiency, I suspect something will go wrong and the whole thing will be postponed. – iridescent 16:48, 9 December 2010 (UTC)Reply
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I read this great article but was hoping to read something about the navvies who built the line and accidents during its making. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.2.221.102 (talk) 19:31, 28 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

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I have changed the reference instead. VincentLUFan (talk) (Kenton!) 19:15, 3 July 2020 (UTC)Reply
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Copyedits made

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Hello there fellow editors! It's been really dead recently, but I noticed that this article has quite a good potential so I have been trying to address all issues, and most have been resolved. I have been referring to the FA candidate discussion for all of the issues. Feel free to help out. I'll place a list here for easier reference. #roadtoFA Thank you!

Source Issues:

  • FN 68, 105: page(s)?

Other Issues:

  • "under way" is two words
  • I don't think "(pronounced /ˈtʃɛsəm/)" is necessary; "Chesham" is pronounced as it sounds.
  • "almost three times more to buy in Chesham than to buy in Berkhamsted" needs rephrasing: "almost three times as much to buy in Chesham as in Berkhamsted".   Done
  • Why is "Watford" a redlink? There is an article.   Done Used the town wikilink instead
  • I am a bit confused by this: "[T]he line between Harpenden and Boxmoor eventually opened in 1877.[15] (The Harpenden–Boxmoor section was never completed; trains to Boxmoor terminated nearby at Heath Park Halt, and passengers to and from Boxmoor had to complete their journey by horse or horse-drawn bus.)" It would be better to clarify that the Harpenden and Boxmoor line partially opened in 1877.   Done
  • "Watkin turned his attention to the proposal to link to Aylesbury." Link what to Aylesbury?   Done London side actually
  • General point: the habit of inserting parenthetical asides into the text is a bit annoying. I'd get rid of the parentheses, and either absorb the comments into the text or relegate them to footnotes.   Done
  • "As the train pulled into Chesham, it was greeted by celebratory gunfire as it drew into the town..." Note the duplication of phrasing   Done
  • "...but a fast trains each morning..." ?   Done ? Made an assumption based on grammar
  • "The opening of the railway dramatically ended Chesham's isolation" Whose view is being expressed here?   Done removed
  • Perhaps explain why the Metropolitan Railway C Class locomotives performed poorly on the London-Aylesbury line. Was it the gradient?
  • In the Opening of the Aylesbury line section, I don't think the final paragraph is relevant to the Chesham branch line (nor is much of the detail in the preceding paragraph).   Done
  • Please consider this monster sentence, and see if you can split it, probably into three sentences: "On 30 July 1898 John Bell, General Manager of the Metropolitan Railway, took control of the Quainton Road signal box himself and refused to allow a GCR train onto MR-owned tracks on the grounds that it was scheduled to take the Great Western rather than the Metropolitan route south of Aylesbury,[74] while on one occasion in 1901 King Edward VII was travelling home after visiting a friend in Wendover; the MR signalman allowed a slow goods train to run in front of the royal train, causing the King to arrive late back in London.[75]   Done jeez
  • There are further issues of relevance in the Relations with the Great Central Railway section, much of which has no direct connection with the Chesham branch line but is rather more general railway history. I believe that much of this information could be summarised or left out.   Partly done
  • "1915 the extremely effective Metro-land advertising campaign..." Says who?   Done
  • "With the profits generated, the line was further electrified as far as Rickmansworth." When did this happen?   Done
  • "...it suffered two significant accidents in this period". Not clear what "this period" refers to.   Done
  • London Transport section. Again, the text needs to be kept on-topic. The first two paragraphs make no mention of the Chesham line.   Done cut short
  • "...and the line was operated entirely as a shuttle service." Not clear from the context what is meant by "the line".   Partly done cuz im not sure
  • On nationalisation, the LPTB was already in public ownership in 1948 so it is wrong to imply that it was nationalised along with the railway companies   Done
  • "Sunday services on the branch were abolished as a cost-cutting measure, although this decision was reversed following protests." This would be more sensibly worded: "A decision to abolish Sunday services on the branch as a cost-cutting measure was reversed following protests."   Done
  • "The Greater London Council was scheduled for abolition..." Tie this to a year. It's a while since you mentioned 1986.   Done
  • "The Chesham branch was proposed as a terminus for the original Crossrail scheme, which would have seen Crossrail trains running from Paddington to serve the stations between Rickmansworth and Aylesbury and the Chesham branch, allowing London Transport to withdraw from Buckinghamshire and cut the Metropolitan line back to serve only the branches to Watford and Uxbridge." Unwieldly, please split.   Done

EDIT: Just realised I have forgotten to sign. VincentLUFan (talk) (Kenton!) 19:01, 3 July 2020 (UTC)Reply