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St. John's Wood is a London Underground station located in St John's Wood in the City of Westminster, north-west London. It was opened in 1939 as a stop on the Bakerloo line . Today, St. John's Wood station is served by the Jubilee line , between Swiss Cottage and Baker Street stations and is in Travelcard Zone 2 . [ 7 ]
A new Bakerloo line station named St John's Wood was opened to replace Lord's station. It had been the intention of the Underground's management to close Lord's station to normal services, but retain it for temporary use during top-class cricket matches; the advent of the Second World War led this plan to be abandoned, and the station closed ...
Metropolitan & St John's Wood Railway between Baker Street and Hampstead from a Metropolitan Railway map, circa 1867 . The M&StJWR had received authorisation in July 1864 to construct a railway from the Metropolitan Railway's (MR's) station at Baker Street to a station near the London and North Western Railway's station at Finchley Road.
St John's Wood: 20 November 1939: map 13: Baker Street: 1 May 1979: Connects with Bakerloo, Circle, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan lines. map 14: Bond Street: 1 May 1979: Connects with Central line and the Elizabeth line. map 15: Green Park: 1 May 1979: Connects with Piccadilly and Victoria lines. map 16: Westminster: 22 December 1999 ...
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At Neasden Junction, the Chiltern Main Line diverges to the west, while the Aylesbury line continues north parallel to the underground lines. The line then joins the Metropolitan line tracks a few yards south of Harrow-on-the-Hill station and shares this track with the London Underground's fast Metropolitan line services to Amersham from Baker ...
Metropolitan & St John's Wood Railway between Baker Street and Hampstead from a Metropolitan Railway map, circa 1867 . The M&StJWR had received authorisation in July 1864 to construct a railway from the Metropolitan Railway's (MR's) station at Baker Street to the London and North Western Railway's station at Finchley Road (now Finchley Road and Frognal).
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