The station had two wooden platforms, situated on the outside of the tracks, with a small shelter on each. It was built on an embankment, which was prone to slippage over the years, affecting the level and alignment of the platforms.[1] A subway passed under the tracks, and in the station's early years there was a booking office, situated in a wooden building to the east of the station. This was eventually closed and tickets were subsequently sold on the platforms.[2] The station had a 13-lever signal box, which remained in use until closure in 1954.[3] Honor Oak was the only station on the line between the two termini to feature a goods yard. This was located to the south of the station, on the western side of the tracks and had three sidings with capacity for twenty-five wagons. The yard was accessed via a road entrance on Wood Vale.[4]
History
In 1851, the Great Exhibition was held in central London's Hyde Park, in a large purpose-built glass and iron building known as the "Crystal Palace". At the conclusion of the exhibition, the building's designer, Sir Joseph Paxton, decided to relocate the building to some land in the Sydenham Hill in south London, creating a permanent public amenity which he dubbed as a "winter park and garden under glass". The palace was dismantled in Hyde Park, and rebuilt in what is now Crystal Palace Park by 1854.[5] Anticipating passenger demand for travel to the new venue, the London, Brighton & South Coast Railway opened a branch line from the Brighton Main Line at Sydenham, terminating at the new Crystal Palace low level station, south of the palace and opening on the same day. The rival London, Chatham & Dover Railway began building its own line to the venue, which opened in August 1865 with services from Ludgate Hill, branching at Peckham Rye and terminating at Crystal Palace high level station, situated to the north of the palace.[6]
Initially this line had no intermediate stations but additional stops were added within a few months,[6] including Honor Oak, which opened to passengers on 1 December 1865. The area was sparsely populated at the time,[1] but was built to serve the Camberwell Old Cemetery situated across Wood Vale as well as a new housing development to the south. The goods yard, used to store coal,[2] was added at to the station after 1870.[4]
The station was closed from 1 January 1917 to 1 March 1919 in the wartime economy measures, and again from 22 May 1944 to 4 March 1946.[7] It was electrified in 1925, using the direct-current third rail system at 600 volts,[6] but passenger numbers declined after the Crystal Palace burnt down in 1936. Upon the line reopening in 1946 with the cost of repairing the war damage and declining passenger numbers the decision was taken to close the branch in 1954.[2] The station was demolished around 1956–7.
No trace of the station remains and the site is occupied by housing. The nearby Honor Oak Park station, on the Brighton Main Line, proved more popular with passengers and remains open as of 2020.[2]
^Marshall, C.F.D (1963) History of the Southern Railway, 2nd ed, Ian Allan, London
Bibliography
Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (1991). Crystal Palace (High Level) and Catford Loop. Middleton Press.
Further reading
Crystal Palace (High Level) and Catford Loop by V Mitchell & K Smith, Middleton Press, 1991
The Railway through Sydenham Hill Wood, From the Nun's Head to the Screaming Alice by Mathew Frith, The Friends of the Great North Wood and London Wildlife Trust leaflet 1995
London's Local Railways by A A Jackson, David & Charles, 1978
The Crystal Palace (High Level) Branch by W Smith, British Railway Journal 28, 1989