London Northwestern Railway uses the route as part of its hourly long-distance semi-fast service between and. These call at all stations on the route, except which is served only by one daily northbound service.
Avanti West Coast uses the route for its long-distance and intercity services from London Euston to,,, North Wales and. These rarely call at more than one station on the route, and many services do not call at all.
History
The Trent Valley line was opened in 1847 to give a more direct route from London to the North West of England, bypassing the existing route via Birmingham built by the Grand Junction Railway and the London and Birmingham Railway a decade earlier. The contractor for the of double-track line was the London Railway Contractors Partnership of Thomas Brassey, John Stephenson and William MacKenzie. The engineers were Robert Stephenson, George Parker Bidder and Thomas Longridge Gooch and the architect was John William Livock. Construction was initially started by an independent company, the Trent Valley Railway, which was established in Manchester in April 1844. Its Act of Incorporation received Royal Assent on 21 July 1845. Construction of the line commenced in November 1845, the first sod being cut ceremonially at Tamworth by Sir Robert Peel on 13 November. In September 1845 Salford-born 26-year-old Edward Watkin was appointed Secretary, and having entered the railway world via the TVR he later went on to become one of Britain's most prominent railway barons. Whilst under construction, the TVR was bought by the London and Birmingham Railway on 15 April 1846, the L&BR itself amalgamating with other railways to form the London and North Western Railway on 16 July 1846. The largest single engineering feature of the line was the Shugborough Tunnel near Stafford. The Trent Valley line was opened to a limited service of local passenger trains and through goods trains on 15 September 1847, to local goods trains on 20 October 1847 and finally to all through traffic on 1 December 1847. It is now part of what is called the West Coast Main Line. The line was originally built with two tracks, but growing traffic meant that several stretches were widened to four tracks between 1871 and 1909.
Prior to this work being carried out, the West Coast Main Line had four tracks between London and Rugby, comprising a "fast line" and a "slow line" in each direction. Similarly, there were four tracks north of Stafford. Although parts of the Trent Valley line previously had four tracks, there was an long section of track between Tamworth and Armitage that had only ever been double track. When plans for the modernisation of the WCML were being developed in the 1990s, it was realised that these arrangements could not accommodate the faster Pendolino trains as well as slower local services. It was therefore decided to increase the number of tracks between Lichfield and Armitage to four; later it was decided to extend this from Tamworth as well, giving four tracks throughout from Nuneaton to Colwich Junction, north of Rugeley. The two outer tracks are "slow", while the "fast" lines are the two innermost tracks. Work started in 2004, and access roads were built on the eastern side of the line. Substantial earthworks were carried out and 37 bridges were replaced. A level crossing at Hademore was replaced by two road bridges in early 2007. The four-track railway between Lichfield North and Armitage was brought into use on 29 May 2008. Concurrently, Lichfield Trent Valleysignal box was closed and within a month had been demolished. On 8 September the same year, the four-track railway between Tamworth and Lichfield came into use and Tamworth signal box closed. Additionally, the line between Rugby and Brinklow, formerly three tracks, was quadrupled on 27 May 2008. The line from Brinklow to Nuneaton remains three tracks. A section north-west of Colwich Junction, which passes through the Shugborough Tunnel, remains double track. As well as the civil engineering works, the whole of the Trent Valley line has been resignalled. The work was completed in September 2008, at a cost of around £350 million.
New rolling stock
Along with the modernisation improvements, new rolling stock operates along the Trent Valley line. Class 350 Desiroelectric multiple units started operation on 11 December 2006. The Desiro trains replace the outdated passenger trains that previously ran on the line. They include more advanced features, such as running speeds; with over half now running at.
Accidents
Serious accidents to have occurred on the Trent Valley line include: