![]() |
Which train/subway station sold photo ID cards in 1989
I was in London, UK in 1989 and our student group visited a large tube
or train station to get our photo ID cards. I seem to recall a very large, open, grey space, like an empty train station. Very long stairs at some point too and more than a few steps. This place would have been the general area of the Russell Square station. Do you have idea where this might have been? I assume ID cards were only produced at a handful of places in London. - Thumper |
Which train/subway station sold photo ID cards in 1989
Thumper wrote:
I was in London, UK in 1989 and our student group visited a large tube or train station to get our photo ID cards. I seem to recall a very large, open, grey space, like an empty train station. Very long stairs at some point too and more than a few steps. This place would have been the general area of the Russell Square station. Do you have idea where this might have been? I assume ID cards were only produced at a handful of places in London. - Thumper Sounds like Euston Station. |
Which train/subway station sold photo ID cards in 1989
On 19/04/2010 22:27, redcat wrote:
Thumper wrote: I was in London, UK in 1989 and our student group visited a large tube or train station to get our photo ID cards. I seem to recall a very large, open, grey space, like an empty train station. Very long stairs at some point too and more than a few steps. This place would have been the general area of the Russell Square station. Do you have idea where this might have been? I assume ID cards were only produced at a handful of places in London. - Thumper Sounds like Euston Station. Euston - empty? Sounds more like (old) St Pancras to me. |
Which train/subway station sold photo ID cards in 1989
On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 02:21:49PM -0700, Thumper wrote:
I was in London, UK in 1989 and our student group visited a large tube or train station to get our photo ID cards. I seem to recall a very large, open, grey space, like an empty train station. Very long stairs at some point too and more than a few steps. This place would have been the general area of the Russell Square station. Do you have idea where this might have been? I assume ID cards were only produced at a handful of places in London. AFAIR back when I got my photocard, every staffed BR could make one for you. I would have assumed that the same would apply to LU stations. -- David Cantrell | even more awesome than a panda-fur coat The children now love luxury; they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise. Children are now tyrants, not the servants of their households. They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up dainties at the table, cross their legs, and tyrannize their teachers. -- attributed by Plato to Socrates |
Which train/subway station sold photo ID cards in 1989
On 20 Apr, 12:02, David Cantrell wrote:
AFAIR back when I got my photocard, every staffed BR could make one for you. *I would have assumed that the same would apply to LU stations. I think that's right - basically they were card blanks with serial numbers, on which they wrote the name of the person, stuck the passport photo on, then covered it with clear sticky film. |
Which train/subway station sold photo ID cards in 1989
On 20 Apr, 12:55, Brian A60K wrote:
On 20 Apr, 12:02, David Cantrell wrote: AFAIR back when I got my photocard, every staffed BR could make one for you. *I would have assumed that the same would apply to LU stations. I think that's right - basically they were card blanks with serial numbers, on which they wrote the name of the person, stuck the passport photo on, then covered it with clear sticky film. I worked at Kings Cross (mainline) in 1983/4/5/ and issued many in the way that you state. What is of (slight) concern is that the OP states that he was "sold" them or is he talking about a Railcard or something ? There were some enterprising staff around in the 80s, but I don't know any who sold ID cards ! Left luggage offices were always renown for the "one ticket for a group" scam. Especially when you had made sure the group would be back before you went home ! Richard |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:10 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 LondonBanter.co.uk