The station was opened in 1912 by the London and North Western Railway as the terminus of the branch line of the Watford-Rickmansworth line. The original wooden station building was burned in the early hours of 10 March 1913 by a group of Suffragettes.[2] A goods yard opened just to the east of the station shortly after, which by 1939 it was expanded and a loop constructed from the southern to the northern siding.[3]
The London Midland Region of British Railways, and later Network SouthEast after sectorisation, continued to run services until the line's closure. Not far from the terminus, a depot was built to maintain BR trains, and for stabling 1938 tube stock Bakerloo linetrains which closed in 1985.
Originally, there were some services direct to Broad Street and Euston. The station and branch line were earmarked for closure by the first Beeching report,[4] but the proposal was refused. Instead, passenger services ceased on the southern curve of the triangle junction towards Bushey on 6 June 1966,[3] the stretch eventually being lifted in the 1980s, so the shuttle to Watford Junction remained. A half-hourly daytime service was introduced to revive passenger usage on the branch line in 1988, however this was reduced to a parliamentary train service consisting of three return workings from 21 January 1991, later as a single return journey from 17 May 1993.[5]
In 1989, the original platform was removed due to safety concerns and a temporary timber-framed platform was built on the other side of the track. This was followed by a temporary wooden stairway leading up to the tracks in 1990 to replace the dilapidated sheltered stairway.[3]
The last train ran on 22 March 1996 and the line and station were closed, supposedly temporarily; the station furniture, including the lighting and the wooden platform remained in situ.[6]
A section of the embankment just east of the Grand Union Canal bridge was removed to make way for a dual carriageway to improve traffic flow to the nearby business park. It was considered uneconomical to bridge the road, and so the station remains breached from the rest of the line. The Department for Transport authorised permanent closure in a letter dated November 2002. Both the station and the line were permanently closed on 29 September 2003.[3] In 2005, the wooden platform was in a serious state of decay and was removed.[7]
Today, little of the station furniture remains and the station is almost completely overgrown. The original track is still in place, though all electrical equipment has been removed. The station gates have fallen into disrepair, and have been replaced with temporary security fencing. Steps up to platform level are still in-place with their handrails, alongside the faded Network SouthEast-red lamp posts. Access to the viaduct across the Grand Union Canal is restricted with per