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St Paul's is a London Underground station located in the City of London financial district. The station, which takes its name from the nearby St Paul's Cathedral , is on the Central line , between Chancery Lane and Bank stations, and is in fare zone 1 .
St Paul's tube station on the London Underground; St Pauls railway station (Halifax) (closed 1960) St Paul's tram stop, Birmingham; Walsall St Pauls bus station, West Midlands; City Thameslink railway station on the Thameslink core route in London, formerly known as St. Paul's Thameslink.
Target Field station is the northern terminus for both the Green and Blue lines. [1] The elevated Lake Street/Midtown station on the Blue Line The underground Terminal 1–Lindbergh station on the Blue Line Saint Paul Union Depot, the Green Line's southern terminus
London's Underground Stations: a social and architectural study. Midas Books. ISBN 978-0-85936-124-8. OCLC 12695214. Wolmar, Christian (2004). The Subterranean Railway: How the London Underground Was Built and How It Changed the City Forever. Atlantic Books. ISBN 1-84354-023-1. OCLC 60794863.
St. Paul's station was renamed by the Southern Railway as Blackfriars on 1 February 1937. This was partly done to avoid confusion after the London Passenger Transport Board renamed Post Office tube station on the Central line to St Paul's, and partly so that the mainline and underground stations would have the same name. [24]
The Saint Paul Union Depot Company controlled 9.24 miles (14.87 km) of St. Paul trackage and terminal facilities, including the depot building. The company was operated in tandem with the Minnesota Transfer Railway Company, with effective control of both properties exercised by the same board, composed of representatives of the nine tenants.
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The station was opened by British Rail on 29 May 1990 as St. Paul's Thameslink, and was renamed as City Thameslink on 30 September 1991 [18] to avoid confusion with the St Paul's station on the London Underground Central line (which is several hundred yards to the east, to the north of St Paul's Cathedral). [19]