- Waterloo tube station
Waterloo tube station is a
London Underground station located at Waterloo railway station. It is the second busiest station on the network and is served by the Bakerloo, Jubilee, Northern and the Waterloo & City lines. The station is inTravelcard Zone 1.History
The first underground station at Waterloo was opened on
8 August 1898 by the Waterloo & City Railway (W&CR), a subsidiary of the owners of the main line station, theLondon and South Western Railway (L&SWR).cite book |last=Rose |first=Douglas |title=The London Underground, A Diagrammatic History |year=1999 |publisher=Douglas Rose/Capital Transport |isbn=1-85414-219-4 ] The W&CR, nicknamed "the Drain",cite book |last=Wolmar |first=Christian |authorlink = Christian Wolmar |title = The Subterranean Railway: How the London Underground Was Built and How It Changed the City Forever |publisher = Atlantic Books |origyear=2004 |chapter=Deep Under London |pages=p. 146 |isbn=1-84354-023-1] achieved in a limited way the L&SWR's original plan of taking its tracks the short distance north-east into theCity of London .On
10 March 1906 , the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway (BS&WR, now the Bakerloo Line) was opened. On13 September 1926 , the extension of the Hampstead & Highgate line (as the Charing Cross branch of the Northern line was then known) was opened from Embankment to the existingCity & South London Railway station Kennington with a new station at Waterloo.As a subsidiary of the L&SWR and its successor the Southern Railway, the W&CR was not a part of the London Underground system. Following
nationalization of the main line railway companies in 1948, it became part ofBritish Railways (later British Rail). Following a period of closure during 1993 when the line was converted to use the four rail electrical system of the London Underground, the ownership of Waterloo & City line was transferred to the Underground on1 April 1994 .cite web |url=http://www.davros.org/rail/culg/waterloo.html#dates |title=Waterloo & City line, Dates |work=Clive's Underground Line Guides |accessdate=2008-07-20] Due to an Easter shut-down, the first London Underground service on the line was on5 April 1994 .On
24 September 1999 , the Jubilee line station was opened as part of theJubilee Line Extension . The station was temporarily the western terminus of the extension running from Stratford in east London, before the final section to link the extension to the original line was opened between Waterloo and Green Park on20 November 1999 . The Jubilee platforms are at the opposite end of the site from those of the Bakerloo and Northern lines, but the two ends are connected by a convert|140|m|ft|lk=on|adj=onmoving walkway link (one of only two on the Underground - the other gives access to the Waterloo & City line platform at Bank station).References
External links
* [http://photos.ltmcollection.org London Transport Museum Photographic Archive]
**ltmcollection|ph/i0000oph.jpg|Baker Street & Waterloo Railway York Road entrance, 1907
**ltmcollection|mh/i00009mh.jpg|Bakerloo line platform, 1923
**ltmcollection|zi/i0000dzi.jpg|Concourse entrance, 1957
**ltmcollection|81/9889981.jpg|York Road entrance, 1962Gallery
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