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#1
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On Jan 28, 6:50*am, Mizter T wrote:
On 28 Jan, 13:22, Graeme Wall wrote: In message * * * * * Stephen Furley wrote: On 28 Jan, 12:35, Brian Robertson wrote: What is the history of the totem station name signs? Were they purely a BR design? Were they first introduced straight after nationalisation? Were they an adaptation of an existing design (As in the LNER brakevan becoming the BR standard). The shape was pure BR, but the idea of the name on a bar passing through some sort of shape was used previously by a number of railways, the SR targets are probably the closest to the BR totems, but there are also the LT roundel signs, and at least one railway had diamond shaped ones, but I cannot remember who. LT again, before the roundels. *Actually, strictly speaking I think it was only the Metropolitan, not LT as a whole. *The roundel was adopted about 1908. There was no LT before the roundel. The roundel first appeared in 1908, when the various underground railway companies agreed to use the term Underground, the 'UndergrounD' logotype and also use a bar and circle device for station name boards. That's all the underground railway companies apart from the Metropolitan Railway, who decided to go their own way in 1914 with the diamond device. The LT Museum has a section that deals with the history of the roundel he http://www.ltmcollection.org/roundel/about/detailedhistory.html Note that the London General Omnibus Company (LGOC) had introduced a 'winged wheel' device as their logo in 1905. In 1912 the Underground Electric Railways Company of London Limited (UERL) - also known as the Underground Group - purchased LGOC. The roundel in use on the Underground was developed further in the 1910s, resulting in the familiar roundel incorporating the UndergrounD logotype in the centre bar. This design of roundel then started to appear on publicity, station nameboards and the exterior of stations. Separate versions of the roundel were then developed for other constituent companies in the Underground Group - of particular note is the LGOC roundel, with the 'GeneraL' logotype in the centre bar. In a senase this was mirrored by what happened in 2003 when TfL had a big graphic redesign and started using different roundel designs for all its constituent parts - Streets, DLR, London Rail etc. AIUI the separate diamond device as used on the Metropolitan was phased out when the Metropolitan Railway - along with the Underground Group and other bus companies and tram operations in the London area - became part of the new London Passenger Transport Board, which quickly adopted the trading name of 'London Transport'. Anyway the section on the LT Museum website is well worth a look, it goes into it all in a lot more detail. Thank you. I think I have read all this before. One has never seen it put so succinctly. You have summarized the roundel's history very well. I am cross posting this to enable it to reach a wider audience. |
#2
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#3
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Jim Brittin wrote:
Just for the record the Metropolitan diamond device was also in use on the Northern City Line [which once was once part of the Metropolitan system] and a green version on the East London Line. These were still in use in the 50's. What was the removed logo above the roundel at East Finchley? http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...n_building.JPG |
#4
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![]() On 28 Jan, 20:25, "John Rowland" wrote: Jim Brittin wrote: Just for the record the Metropolitan diamond device was also in use on the Northern City Line [which once was once part of the Metropolitan system] and a green version on the East London Line. *These were still in use in the 50's. What was the removed logo above the roundel at East Finchley? http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...a/East_Finchle... LNER - this is in connection with the abandoned Northern Heights extension of the Northern line over LNER lines. I must admit I can't remember whether any LNER trains would have actually served East Finchley should the project have been completed. You can see photos of this in the LT Museum photographic collection, which is searchable online he http://www.ltmcollection.org/photos/index.html The resultant URLs are somewhat epic in length so I haven't posted any direct links here. One can link directly to the image itself, but then you're lacking the surrounding explanatory text. |
#5
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In message
"John Rowland" wrote: Jim Brittin wrote: Just for the record the Metropolitan diamond device was also in use on the Northern City Line [which once was once part of the Metropolitan system] and a green version on the East London Line. These were still in use in the 50's. What was the removed logo above the roundel at East Finchley? http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...n_building.JPG I can't see a removed logo... -- Graeme Wall This address is not read, substitute trains for rail. Transport Miscellany at http://www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail/index.html |
#6
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![]() "Mizter T" wrote LNER - this is in connection with the abandoned Northern Heights extension of the Northern line over LNER lines. I must admit I can't remember whether any LNER trains would have actually served East Finchley should the project have been completed. Between July and September 1939 East Finchley was served by Northern Line trains to High Barnet and LNER steam trains to Edgware. From then until March 1941 steam trains continued to run to East Finchley, but the service to Edgware was withdrawn to facilitate doubling and electrification. From May 1941 Northern Line trains began to run to Mill Hill East, but further work on the Northern Heights scheme was suspended for the duration, and never resumed. AIUI the eventual intention was for the whole passenger service to be part of the Northern Line, with services from Morden via Charing Cross and Bank to Edgware via Golders Green and to High Barnet, and from Moorgate via Finsbury Park to Edgware via Mill Hill East and to Alexandra Palace (the original branch line station, not the current one which used to be named Wood Green). The LNER would have continued to operate freight services to High Barnet and Edgware (as indeed BR did until the 1960s). Peter |
#7
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On 28 Jan, 22:16, Graeme Wall wrote:
I can't see a removed logo... That sort of 'eye' shaped thing used to contain the LNER logo. I can't seem to find a photo of it at the moment. |
#8
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Peter Masson wrote:
"Mizter T" wrote LNER - this is in connection with the abandoned Northern Heights extension of the Northern line over LNER lines. I must admit I can't remember whether any LNER trains would have actually served East Finchley should the project have been completed. Between July and September 1939 East Finchley was served by Northern Line trains to High Barnet and LNER steam trains to Edgware. From then until March 1941 steam trains continued to run to East Finchley, but the service to Edgware was withdrawn to facilitate doubling and electrification. From May 1941 Northern Line trains began to run to Mill Hill East, but further work on the Northern Heights scheme was suspended for the duration, and never resumed. AIUI the eventual intention was for the whole passenger service to be part of the Northern Line, with services from Morden via Charing Cross and Bank to Edgware via Golders Green and to High Barnet, and from Moorgate via Finsbury Park to Edgware via Mill Hill East and to Alexandra Palace (the original branch line station, not the current one which used to be named Wood Green). The LNER would have continued to operate freight services to High Barnet and Edgware (as indeed BR did until the 1960s). So if there was no long term intention for LNER to serve the station, I'm surprised that the 1930s rebuild included an LNER logo built into the structure. |
#9
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On 28 Jan, 23:00, Stephen Furley wrote:
On 28 Jan, 22:16, Graeme Wall wrote: I can't see a removed logo... That sort of 'eye' shaped thing used to contain the LNER logo. *I can't seem to find a photo of it at the moment. Found a picture of one elsewhere. At first I thought it was a Photoshop job, but maybe it is genuine; The Great Central Line became LNER, so they would have served Harrow on the Hill. I didn't know there had ever been a LNER logo at that station though. |
#10
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On 28 Jan, 23:19, Stephen Furley wrote:
On 28 Jan, 23:00, Stephen Furley wrote: On 28 Jan, 22:16, Graeme Wall wrote: I can't see a removed logo... That sort of 'eye' shaped thing used to contain the LNER logo. *I can't seem to find a photo of it at the moment. Found a picture of one elsewhere. *At first I thought it was a Photoshop job, but maybe it is genuine; The Great Central Line became LNER, so they would have served Harrow on the Hill. *I didn't know there had ever been a LNER logo at that station though. It's not my day is it; I forgot the link. http://www.lner.info/forums/new-logo-t1045.html |
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