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#21
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In message , at 17:28:34 on
Wed, 29 Sep 2004, Peter Lawrence remarked: But there was a plan to link the two St Paul's's tricky one... "two St Paul's" as a contraction of "two St Paul's stations"? Where's Lynne Truss when you need her :-) at one stage which would have made the names sensible. Someone recently speculated about the possibility of linking the northern end of City Thameslink with a new station under Holborn Viaduct (the street east of the bridge itself). Isn't it rather a long way otherwise? -- Roland Perry |
#22
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On Wed, 29 Sep 2004, Paul Terry wrote:
In message , Tom Anderson writes Why were there two Holborn Viaduct stations, then? AIUI, the low level station was the first to be built, The high level terminus was opened on 2 March 1874; the low level through station (Snow Hill) was opened 1 August 1874. Basically they were planned as a complementary pair of stations. Ah, i see. So, in a way, they're really just two sets of platforms in one station. tom -- roger and kay payne, symmetry, piercing, archaeology, position, in ,, |
#23
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Paul Terry writes:
In fact, the original St Paul's station was what is now Blackfriars (Thameslink) - the name was changed in 1937 when LT renamed "Post Office" on the Central Line as "St Paul's". And the original Blackfriars station was a terminal station on the south bank of the river. The line was opened from Herne Hill to Elephant & Castle in 1862, then extended to the original Blackfriars in 1864. Later the same year a short branch was made from just before this station, crossing the river to Ludgate Hill. This was originally a temporary terminus, replaced in 1865 with a permanent station, which became a through station when the Snow Hill Tunnel and the link to the Metropolitan Railway at Farringdon were opened in 1866. In 1874 the branch off this route to Holborn Viaduct was opened, and the same year Snow Hill station was added to the through route, so now there were four stations in the area, two through and two terminal. In 1886 the branch to the original Blackfriars was closed, and yet another short new branch crossed the Thames on a new bridge to reach the new terminus of St. Paul's -- now Blackfriars. In 1910 this was converted to a through station, allowing trains to continue from it to Farringdon as they do now. Snow Hill station, renamed Holborn Viaduct Low Level, closed in 1916 along with the through passenger services, which reappeared in 1988 as Thameslink. With the closure, Ludgate Hill became a terminus again, and it closed in 1929. In 1990 Holborn Viaduct closed and St. Paul's Thameslink, now City Thameslink, opened on more or less the site of Ludgate Hill station. -- Mark Brader | lying Toronto | abort reply. | -- random words at end of a spam message My text in this article is in the public domain. |
#24
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#26
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Richard J. writes:
It was Blackfriars according to H.P. White, my source of London railway history. His dates agree with those in Mark's post... Well, that would be because most of what I posted came from H.P. White; some details were from the Oxford Companion to British Railway History. It's not an independent confirmation that I was right. However, checking the Oxford Companion, I see that it confirms the name Blackfiars for the south bank station, but gives 1885 for its closure date. Anyone have a copy of "London's Termini"? That'd be the best source I know of for this sort of thing, but I've only seen library copies. -- Mark Brader, Toronto | "Mark is probably right about something, | but I forget what" -- Rayan Zachariassen My text in this article is in the public domain. |
#27
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In message , Mark Brader
writes Richard J. writes: It was Blackfriars according to H.P. White, my source of London railway history. His dates agree with those in Mark's post... Well, that would be because most of what I posted came from H.P. White; some details were from the Oxford Companion to British Railway History. It's not an independent confirmation that I was right. However, checking the Oxford Companion, I see that it confirms the name Blackfiars for the south bank station, but gives 1885 for its closure date. Anyone have a copy of "London's Termini"? That'd be the best source I know of for this sort of thing, but I've only seen library copies. London's Termini gives the closing date (for passenger services) as 30th September 1885. -- Paul Terry |
#28
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#29
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In message , Peter
Beale writes "A Southern Region Chronology and Record 1803-1965", R.H.Clark, Oakwood Press, 1964 (sic - must have had prophetic powers for 1965!), p66. Also for SER Blackfriars. Whether he or White is right I do not know; but Blackfriars Bridge does seem a more appropriate name for a station south of the Thames, when Blackfriars proper is north. Clark does seem to be correct - I suddenly remembered that I have a LCDR route map from 1870, showing the city line complete to Ludgate Hill (and under construction north thereof). This clearly marks the south-bank station as Blackfriars Bridge. See also the contemporary quote from Cruchley at: http://www.victorianlondon.org/thame...ndrabridge.htm And finally, while Jackson's "London Termini" calls the station "Blackfriars" on pages 155, 191 and 193, on page 192 he refers to "This Blackfriars Bridge station". -- Paul Terry |
#30
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Paul Terry wrote:
In message , Peter Beale writes "A Southern Region Chronology and Record 1803-1965", R.H.Clark, Oakwood Press, 1964 (sic - must have had prophetic powers for 1965!), p66. Also for SER Blackfriars. Whether he or White is right I do not know; but Blackfriars Bridge does seem a more appropriate name for a station south of the Thames, when Blackfriars proper is north. Clark does seem to be correct - I suddenly remembered that I have a LCDR route map from 1870, showing the city line complete to Ludgate Hill (and under construction north thereof). This clearly marks the south-bank station as Blackfriars Bridge. See also the contemporary quote from Cruchley at: http://www.victorianlondon.org/thame...ndrabridge.htm He calls the first Blackfriars railway bridge Alexandra Bridge. But several other websites say that Alexandra Bridge was the one built by the SER in 1863-66 to serve Cannon Street Station. And finally, while Jackson's "London Termini" calls the station "Blackfriars" on pages 155, 191 and 193, on page 192 he refers to "This Blackfriars Bridge station". I would have expected the LCDR to call it Blackfriars originally, in the way that railway companies named stations after whatever place they were expecting the traffic to serve, however far away it actually was. Perhaps they changed it to Blackfriars Bridge after Ludgate Hill opened. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
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