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DLR Station Names Orgins?
Does anyone know the origins of Docklands Light Railway Station Names?
-- Many Thanks Gunjani A criminal is a person with predatory instincts without sufficient capital to form a corporation. -- Howard Scott |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
Gunjani wrote:
Does anyone know the origins of Docklands Light Railway Station Names? Most of them are obvious (Stratford or Crossharbour for instance). Of the more esoteric ones Mudchute is the one most people ask about. It's near a raised public park that resulted from the earth from the digging out of the docks on the Isle of Dogs being dumped (*chuted*) in one area. Pudding Mill Lane gets it's name from an old water mill on the Bow Back River. All Saints from the nearby Hawksmoor church. Westferry from Westferry road named from the old ferry that crossed the Thames from the IoD to Surrey Quays - the East Ferry worked from further round the Island. The Quays' names all refer to various quays within the India Docks (west & east) and Millwall Docks - Millwall from the numerous windmills that used to be along the river on the west side of the Isle of Dogs. It's still a wind-trap today - try walking on The Quarterdeck pedestrian shopping area on the Barkantine Estate on a calm day - it's like a wind tunnel! Island Gardens is a nice little park on the river opposite Greenwich with fantastic views. Cutty Sark from the ship of the same name preserved at Greenwich. Limehouse from the lime kilns that used to be there. Royal Victoria from the old Royal Docks. Cyprus from the name of the local area (may be a corruption of cypress, as in the tree - like Poplar). Gallions Reach from a stretch (or reach) of the river nearby (I don't know why Gallion instead of Galleon) Sorry about the long reply, but hope it helps. -- Phil ,,,^.".^,,, --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.506 / Virus Database: 303 - Release Date: 01/08/03 |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
On Mon, 4 Aug 2003 20:18:02 +0100, "Redonda"
wrote: Gunjani wrote: Does anyone know the origins of Docklands Light Railway Station Names? Most of them are obvious (Stratford or Crossharbour for instance). Of the more esoteric ones Mudchute is the one most people ask about. It's near a raised public park that resulted from the earth from the digging out of the docks on the Isle of Dogs being dumped (*chuted*) Original plan was to call Mudchute Millwall Dock. The residents feared that Millwall fans would turn up, and unable to find the football ground turn nasty! Rob. -- rob at robertwoolley dot co dot uk |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
Robert Woolley wrote:
On Mon, 4 Aug 2003 20:18:02 +0100, "Redonda" wrote: Gunjani wrote: Does anyone know the origins of Docklands Light Railway Station Names? Most of them are obvious (Stratford or Crossharbour for instance). Of the more esoteric ones Mudchute is the one most people ask about. It's near a raised public park that resulted from the earth from the digging out of the docks on the Isle of Dogs being dumped (*chuted*) Original plan was to call Mudchute Millwall Dock. The residents feared that Millwall fans would turn up, and unable to find the football ground turn nasty! Rob. Never heard that one - but as a local resident I applaud the consideration. South of the river is still too close for comfort with *that* unruly mob :-( -- Phil ,,,^.".^,,, --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.506 / Virus Database: 303 - Release Date: 01/08/03 |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
"Robert Woolley" wrote in message ... The residents feared that Millwall fans would turn up, and unable to find the football ground turn nasty! What do you mean, *turn* nasty? ;-) |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
"Redonda" wrote in message ... .... Gallions Reach from a stretch (or reach) of the river nearby (I don't know why Gallion instead of Galleon) Because standardised spelling is a relatively modern phenomenon. Galion, gallion and galleon were all accepted spellings a couple of hundred years or so ago. Colin Bignell |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
"Huge" wrote in message ... "Redonda" writes: Gunjani wrote: Does anyone know the origins of Docklands Light Railway Station Names? [37 lines snipped] Sorry about the long reply, but hope it helps. Fascinating. Thank you. Many years ago (pre-DLR) I had a slim volume which gave the historical origins of every station on LU. Not sure if it's still available. |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
In article , Redonda
writes Does anyone know the origins of Docklands Light Railway Station Names? Most of them are obvious (Stratford or Crossharbour for instance). Beckton is Beck's Town. Mr Beck was chairman of the gas company. -- Clive D.W. Feather, writing for himself | Home: Tel: +44 20 8371 1138 (work) | Web: http://www.davros.org Fax: +44 870 051 9937 | Work: Written on my laptop; please observe the Reply-To address |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
nightjar wrote:
"Redonda" wrote in message ... ... Gallions Reach from a stretch (or reach) of the river nearby (I don't know why Gallion instead of Galleon) Because standardised spelling is a relatively modern phenomenon. Galion, gallion and galleon were all accepted spellings a couple of hundred years or so ago. Colin Bignell Thanks Colin :-) -- Phil ,,,^.".^,,, --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.507 / Virus Database: 304 - Release Date: 04/08/03 |
DLR Station Names Orgins?
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