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Stanmore station was opened on 10 December 1932 by the Metropolitan Railway (now the Metropolitan line). [8] The station building and those on the branch were designed by the Metropolitan Railway's architect, Charles W. Clark, in the suburban style used on the company's other post-First World War stations such as those on the Watford branch.
Stanmore: 10 December 1932: map 1: Canons Park: 10 December 1932: Opened as Canons Park (Edgware); renamed 1933. map 2: Queensbury: 16 December 1934: map 3: Kingsbury: 10 December 1932: map 4: Wembley Park [a] 14 October 1893: Connects with Metropolitan line. map 5: Neasden [b] 2 August 1880: map 6: Dollis Hill [b] 1 October 1909: map 7 ...
Stanmore and Canons Park Synagogue; Stanmore tube station; Stanmore Village railway station This page was last edited on 8 October 2023, at 14:17 (UTC). Text ...
Stanmore station could refer to either: Stanmore tube station, London; Stanmore Village railway station, England (now closed) Stanmore railway station, Sydney
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Stanmore Village railway station was a station in Stanmore, Middlesex in the south of England (now in Greater London).Originally called simply Stanmore, it was opened on 18 December 1890 by the Harrow and Stanmore Railway, a company owned by the hotel millionaire Frederick Gordon, as the terminus of the Stanmore branch line, a short branch line running north from Harrow & Wealdstone.
Belmont was a station in Belmont, north-west London on the Stanmore branch line.It was opened on 12 September 1932 by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway [1] as the only intermediate station on a short branch line (opened in 1890) running north from Harrow & Wealdstone to Stanmore, in anticipation of the Metropolitan Railway opening its own branch line to a new Stanmore station (now ...
Belmont is a suburban residential district and was formerly served by Belmont station, on a railway single-line branch running from Harrow & Wealdstone station to Stanmore Village railway station. The line was known locally as The Rattler, a term first coined by Pete Knobbler. The site of the station is now a car park.