Though only sixteen miles separate these two towns plans for no fewer than six routes between them had been made by 1845. The Great Western countered the Richmond, Staines & Newbury Junction Railway, the nearest to the one existing today, with a London, Staines, Ascot & Reading Junction Railway from Old Oak Common to Reading via Hounslow, Staines and Wokingham. Of the 1845 proposals the Reading, Guildford & Reigate Railway, authorised in 1847, opened between Farnborough and Reading in July 1849, Wokingham station being commissioned shortly afterwards. And the London & South Western Railway planned a branch from Weybridge to Staines via Chertsey and Thorpe, terminating on the south side of the Thames close to Staines bridge: the WeybridgeChertsey section opened in February 1848.
The Windsor, Staines & South Western…