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* In [[Anthony Horowitz]]'s ''[[Alex Rider]]'' series, the headquarters of [[Secret Intelligence Service|MI6]] is near Liverpool Street station.
* In [[Anthony Horowitz]]'s ''[[Alex Rider]]'' series, the headquarters of [[Secret Intelligence Service|MI6]] is near Liverpool Street station.
* In [[W.G. Sebald]]'s novel ''[[Austerlitz (novel)|Austerlitz]]'' Liverpool Street is mentioned in connection with The Great Eastern Hotel.
* In [[W.G. Sebald]]'s novel ''[[Austerlitz (novel)|Austerlitz]]'' Liverpool Street is mentioned in connection with The Great Eastern Hotel.
* H G Wells' 1898 novel The War of The Worlds included a chaotic rush to board trains at Liverpool Street Station as the martian machines overran military defences in the West End, and described the crushing of people under the wheels of the steam engines.


;Film
;Film

Revision as of 14:25, 24 January 2013

Liverpool Street London Underground National Rail
London Liverpool Street
Main station concourse
LocationBishopsgate / Liverpool Street
Local authorityCity of London
Managed byNetwork Rail
Station code(s)LST
Number of platforms18
AccessibleYes[1]
Fare zone1
OSIBank LU, Fenchurch Street[2]
London Underground annual entry and exit
2018Decrease 65.03 million[3]
2019Increase 67.20 million[4]
2020Decrease 16.27 million[5]
2021Increase 26.60 million[6]
2022Increase 55.84 million[7]
National Rail annual entry and exit
2004–05Increase 50.469 million[8]
2005–06Decrease 47.271 million[8]
2006–07Increase 55.266 million[8]
2007–08Increase 57.790 million[8]
2008–09Decrease 56.198 million[8]
2009–10Decrease 51.596 million[8]
2010–11Increase 55.769 million[8]
Key dates
1874 (1874)Opened
Other information
External links
London transport portal

Liverpool Street station, also known as London Liverpool Street[9][10] is a central London railway terminus and a connected London Underground station in the north-eastern corner of the City of London. Opened in 1874, it is the terminus of two main lines: the busier Great Eastern Main Line (GEML) to Norwich, and the West Anglia Main Line to Cambridge. There are also many local commuter services to parts of east London and Essex. In addition, it is the terminus of the Stansted Express, a fast link to London Stansted Airport.

With over 55 million passenger entries and exits between April 2010 and March 2011, Liverpool Street is one of the busiest railway stations in the United Kingdom and is the third busiest in London after Waterloo and Victoria.[11] Liverpool Street is one of eighteen stations directly managed by Network Rail.[12] It has exits to Bishopsgate, Liverpool Street and the Broadgate development. The Underground station connects the Central, Circle, Metropolitan, and Hammersmith & City lines on the London Underground network, and it is in Travelcard zone 1.

History

Liverpool Street station in 1896.

Liverpool Street station was opened on 2 February 1874 by Great Eastern Railway on the site of the original Bethlem Royal Hospital, the world's oldest psychiatric hospital which was also widely known as 'Bedlam'. The station was fully operational from 1 November 1875; from this date the original terminal at Bishopsgate station closed to passengers. Bishopsgate reopened as a goods station in 1881 but was destroyed by a spectacular fire on 5 December 1964. The London Fire Brigade mobilised 40 fire engines, 12 turntable ladders and over 200 firefighters to the incident but were unable to save the depot; two customs officials were killed in the blaze. The site remained derelict for over 30 years but has now been redeveloped as Shoreditch High Street station, part of the extension of London Underground's East London Line to form part of the London Overground network.

The new station was designed by the Great Eastern's chief engineer, Edward Wilson, and was built by John Mowlem & Co.[13] on a site which had been occupied by Bethlem Royal Hospital from the 13th century to the 17th century. A City of London Corporation plaque commemorating the station's construction hangs on the wall of the adjoining former Great Eastern Hotel, rebranded as the Andaz Liverpool Street in 2008,[14] which was designed by Charles Barry, Jr. (son of Sir Charles Barry) and his brother Edward Middleton Barry, and also built by Mowlem. The station was named after the street on which it stands, which in turn was named in honour of Lord Liverpool, prime minister from 1812 to 1827, having been built as part of an extension of the City towards the end of his term in office.

The construction of the station was driven by the desire of the company to have a terminal closer to the City than the one opened by the predecessor Eastern Counties Railway at Shoreditch, on 1 July 1840. This station was renamed "Bishopsgate" in 1846. The construction proved extremely expensive due to the cost of acquiring property and many people were displaced due to the large scale demolitions. The desire to link the Eastern lines to those of the sub-surface Metropolitan Railway, a link seldom used and soon abandoned, also meant that the GER's lines had to drop down to below ground level from the existing viaducts east of Bishopsgate. This means that there are considerable gradients leading out of the station. Lord Salisbury, who was chairman of Great Eastern in 1870, described the Liverpool Street extension as "one of the greatest mistakes ever committed in connection with a railway."

Liverpool Street is one of the four railway stations on the Monopoly board, first introduced in the early 20th century.

Entrance from Liverpool Street in 1955.
View of platforms 1 to 5 in 1957.

The station was the first place in London to be hit by German Gotha G.V bomber aircraft during World War I. The May 1917 bombing, when the station took a direct hit from 1,000 pounds of bombs, killed 162 people. In 1922, those employees of GER who died during the War were honoured on a large marble memorial on Liverpool Street's concourse, unveiled by Sir Henry Wilson. On his return home from the ceremony, Wilson was assassinated by two Irish Republican Army volunteers.[15][16]

The 'flapper' display board, which was modernised in 2007.

Many Jewish refugee children arrived at Liverpool Street in the late 1930s, as part of the Kindertransport. In September 2003 the sculpture Für Das Kind Kindertransport Memorial by artist Flor Kent, who conceived the project, was installed in the station. It consisted of a specialised glass case with original objects and a bronze sculpture of a girl, a direct descendant of a child rescued by Sir Nicholas Winton, who unveiled the work.[17] The objects included in the sculpture began to suffer deterioration due to weather, and in 2006 a replacement bronze memorial by Frank Meisler, depicting a group of children and a railway track, was installed.[18] The statue of the child from the Kent memorial was re-erected separately on the platform-level concourse.

The Great Eastern Railway war memorial at Liverpool Street which was unveiled by Sir Henry Wilson on 22 June 1922. While returning home from the unveiling ceremony, Wilson was assassinated by IRA gunmen.[15][16]

By the 1970s the station had become dark, dilapidated and dank, whilst evocative of another age.[19] The station was extensively modified between 1985 and 1992, including bringing all the platforms in the main shed up to the same end point and constructing a new underground booking office, but its façade, Victorian cast-iron pillars, and the memorial for Great Eastern Railway employees who died in World War I were retained. The redevelopment coincided with the closure and demolition of neighbouring Broad Street station and the construction of the Broadgate development in its place. Liverpool Street was officially re-opened by H.M. Queen Elizabeth II in 1991. At this time a giant departures board, which is suspended above the station concourse, was installed at great expense. However due to technical difficulties there was a long delay after the official opening before it became operational. It was one of the last remaining mechanical 'flapper' display boards at a British railway station and certainly the largest, but was removed from service in September 2007 and replaced by electronic boards. In 1992, an additional entrance and exit was constructed from the east side of Bishopsgate with a subway under the thoroughfare.

The 'new' station roof was built largely in the style of the Western part of the station which survived the war. The original roofing was painted brown at this time, with smoked plexiglass, while the new roofing was painted blue with clear glass so that people could differentiate between new and old. All the platforms now end in a uniform line, and can accommodate 12-carriage trains (except for platforms 16 to 18, which can only accommodate eight carriages).

The station was twinned with Amsterdam Centraal railway station in 1993, with a plaque marking this close to the main entrance to the Underground station.

National Rail destinations

Liverpool Street serves destinations in the East of England including Stansted airport, Southend airport, Cambridge, Lowestoft, Great Yarmouth, Norwich, Ipswich, Clacton-on-Sea, Chelmsford, Colchester, Braintree, Southend-on-Sea and the port of Harwich, as well as many suburban stations in north-eastern London, Essex and Hertfordshire. It is one of the busiest commuter stations in London. A daily express train to Harwich connects with the ferry from Harwich to Hoek van Holland, forming the Dutchflyer service.

Almost all passenger services from Liverpool Street are currently operated by Greater Anglia. It operates local and suburban services on the Great Eastern and West Anglia lines and express services to Colchester, Clacton-on-Sea, Ipswich and Norwich.

There are two weekday evening shuttle services to Barking, calling only at Stratford, which are operated by c2c.[20] All other c2c services depart from Fenchurch Street, although Liverpool Street is also used by c2c during engineering work.

Underground station

Liverpool Street
Entrance from Network Rail concourse
LocationBishopsgate / Liverpool Street
Local authorityCity of London
Managed byLondon Underground
Number of platforms4
Fare zone1
London Underground annual entry and exit
2009Decrease 60.908 million[21]
Key dates
1 February 1875Open (using mainline)
12 July 1875Opened (Bishopsgate)
1 November 1909Renamed (Liverpool Street)
28 July 1912Central Line opens (terminus)
4 December 1946Central Line extends (through)
Other information
London transport portal

Liverpool Street tube station is the fifth busiest station on the London Underground network with four lines passing through: three sub-surface and one deep-level. The station is served by the Central, Circle, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan lines.

The station has sub-surface platforms (opened by the Metropolitan Railway as "Bishopsgate" on 12 July 1875) on the Circle, Metropolitan and Hammersmith & City lines. The Metropolitan had served mainline platforms of the GER station from 1 February 1875, but this through-link had only a short life. The station was renamed Liverpool Street from 1 November 1909. A disused west-facing bay platform once used by terminating Metropolitan and occasional District line trains running via Template:LUL stations is still visible.

The deep-level Central line platforms opened on 28 July 1912, as the new eastern terminus of the Central London Railway. The line was extended eastwards, as part of the Second World War-delayed London Passenger Transport Board's "New Works Programme 1935–1940", on 4 December 1946. The platforms were not re-numbered after the closure of the bay platform, resulting in the station having platforms numbered 1 and 2 on the sub-surface lines, 4 and 5 on the Central line.

Only the eastbound/clockwise (Aldgate/Barking) platform of the Circle line is wheelchair accessible. Wheelchair users wishing to travel in the Hammersmith/Uxbridge direction must take a train that terminates at Aldgate or Whitechapel and stay on it as it starts its westbound journey; when coming from Aldgate/Barking, they must continue to King's Cross St. Pancras to change direction. Some stations on the eastern section of the Central line are wheelchair accessible from here by changing at Mile End.

Proposed developments

Crossrail

From 2018, Liverpool Street will be served by new underground Crossrail platforms for services running westwards to Paddington, Heathrow airport and Maidenhead via the City and the West End. Abbey Wood will be served by trains running to the east.

A new ticket hall with step-free access will be built next to the Broadgate development with a pedestrian link via the new low-level platforms to the ticket hall of Moorgate providing direct access to the Northern line, the Northern City Line and other the sub-surface lines from Liverpool Street.

The current six trains per hour that run a stopping service between Liverpool Street and Shenfield will be doubled and diverted into a tunnel between Liverpool Street and Stratford via Whitechapel.

A temporary shaft will be built in Finsbury Circus to allow for construction of the platforms; this will be removed once the station is complete.

Mainline services

The following off-peak weekday services currently call at Liverpool Street:

Operator Route Rolling stock Frequency
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Colchester - Manningtree - Ipswich - Diss - Norwich Class 90 + Mark 3 Coaching Stock 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Chelmsford - Colchester - Manningtree - Ipswich - Stowmarket - Diss - Norwich Class 90 + Mark 3 Coaching Stock 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Shenfield - Chelmsford - Hatfield Peverel - Witham - Kelvedon - Marks Tey - Colchester - Manningtree - Ipswich Class 321, Class 360 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Shenfield - Ingatestone - Chelmsford - Witham - Colchester - Wivenhoe - (Alresford) - (Great Bentley) - Thorpe-le-Soken - Clacton-on-Sea Class 321, Class 360 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Romford - Shenfield - Ingatestone - Chelmsford - Witham - Kelvedon - Marks Tey - Colchester - Colchester Town Class 321, Class 360 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Shenfield - Ingatestone - Chelmsford - Witham - White Notley - Cressing - Braintree Freeport - Braintree Class 321 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Shenfield - Billericay - Wickford - Rayleigh - Hockley - Rochford - Southend Airport - Prittlewell - Southend Victoria Class 321 2x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Romford - Shenfield - Billericay - Wickford - Rayleigh - Hockley - Rochford - Southend Airport - Prittlewell - Southend Victoria Class 321 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Stratford - Maryland - Forest Gate - Manor Park - Ilford - Seven Kings - Goodmayes - Chadwell Heath - Romford - Gidea Park - Harold Wood - Brentwood - Shenfield Class 315 6x per hour
Greater Anglia Stansted Express London Liverpool Street - Tottenham Hale - Bishops Stortford - Stansted Airport Class 317, Class 379 2x per hour
Greater Anglia Stansted Express London Liverpool Street - Tottenham Hale - Harlow Town - Stansted Airport Class 317, Class 379 2x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Tottenham Hale - Cheshunt - Broxbourne - Harlow Town - Sawbridgeworth - Bishops Stortford - Audley End - Whittlesford Parkway - Cambridge Class 317, Class 379 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Tottenham Hale - Cheshunt - Broxbourne - Roydon - Harlow Town - Harlow Mill - Sawbridgeworth - Bishops Stortford - Stansted Mountfitchet - Elsenham - Newport - Audley End - Great Chesterford - Whittlesford Parkway - Shelford - Cambridge Class 317, Class 379 1x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Hackney Downs - Tottenham Hale - Ponders End - Brimsdown - Enfield Lock - Waltham Cross - Cheshunt - Broxbourne - Rye House - St Margarets - Ware - Hertford East Class 315, Class 317 2x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Bethnal Green - Cambridge Heath - London Fields - Hackney Downs - Rectory Road - Stoke Newington - Stamford Hill - Seven Sisters - Bruce Grove - White Hart Lane - Silver Street - Edmonton Green - Southbury - Turkey Street - Theobald Grove - Cheshunt Class 315 2x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Bethnal Green - Cambridge Heath - London Fields - Hackney Downs - Rectory Road - Stoke Newington - Stamford Hill - Seven Sisters - Bruce Grove - White Hart Lane - Silver Street - Edmonton Green - Bush Hill Park - Enfield Town Class 315 2x per hour
Greater Anglia London Liverpool Street - Bethnal Green - Hackney Downs - Clapton - St James Street - Walthamstow Central - Wood Street - Highams Park - Chingford Class 315, Class 317 4x per hour
c2c London Liverpool Street- Stratford- Barking Class 357 2x per weekday
Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Greater AngliaTerminus
Greater Anglia
Greater Anglia
Greater Anglia
Greater Anglia
TerminusGreater Anglia
Greater Anglia
Greater Anglia
c2cTerminus
Dutchflyer
London-Amsterdam
Preceding station   London Underground   Following station
Template:LUL lines
Template:LUL lines
Template:LUL lines
Template:LUL lines
  Future Development  
Template:LCR lines
Disused railways
TerminusEastern Region of British Railways

Present service levels

The present Monday to Friday off-peak service sees 30 trains per hour departing and arriving.

Great Eastern Main Line Route

  • 1 train per hour to Braintree, calling at Stratford, Shenfield, Ingatestone, Chelmsford, Witham and all stations to Braintree.
  • 2 trains per hour to Norwich, of which:
    • 1 calls at Colchester, Manningtree, Ipswich, Diss and Norwich.
    • 1 calls at Stratford, Chelmsford, Colchester, Manningtree, Ipswich, Stowmarket, Diss and Norwich.
  • 6 trains per hour to Shenfield, calling at all stations.
  • 3 trains to Southend Victoria, of which:
    • 2 call at Stratford, Shenfield and all stations to Southend Victoria.
    • 1 calls at Stratford, Romford, Shenfield and all stations to Southend Victoria.
  • 1 train per hour to Colchester Town, calling at Stratford, Romford, Shenfield, Chelmsford, Witham, Kelvedon, Marks Tey, Colchester and Colchester Town.
  • 1 train per hour to Clacton-on-Sea, calling at Stratford, Shenfield, Ingatestone, Chelmsford, Witham, Colchester, Wivenhoe, Thorpe-le-Soken and Clacton-on-Sea.
  • A limited number of services to Witham, calling at Stratford, Shenfield, Ingatestone, Chelmsford and Witham.

West Anglia Main Line Route

  • 4 trains per hour to Chingford, calling at all stations except Cambridge Heath and London Fields.
  • 2 train per hour to Enfield Town calling at all stations via Seven Sisters and Edmonton
  • 4 trains per hour to Stansted Airport, of which:
    • 2 call at Tottenham Hale, Bishops Stortford and Stansted Airport.
    • 2 call at Tottenham Hale, Harlow Town and Stansted Airport.
  • 2 trains per hour to Hertford East, calling at Hackney Downs, Tottenham Hale then all stations to Hertford East.
  • 2 trains per hour to Cheshunt, calling at all stations via Seven Sisters and Turkey Street
  • 2 trains per hour to Cambridge, of which:
    • 1 calls at Tottenham Hale, Cheshunt, Broxbourne, Harlow Town, Sawbridgeworth, Bishops Stortford, Audley End, Whittlesford Parkway and Cambridge.
    • 1 calls at Tottenham Hale, Cheshunt and then all stations to Cambridge.

Local buses

The station is served by bus routes 8, 11, 23, 26, 35, 42, 47, 48, 78, 100, 133, 135, 149, 153, 205, 214, 242, 344, and 388, and night routes N8, N11, N26, N35 and N133.

Notable events

  • In April 1993, a Provisional IRA truck bomb in Bishopsgate, 200 m away, caused some damage to the station.
  • On 17 April 1997, director Roman Coppola filmed a music video for the British band Mansun's single Tax Loss using hidden cameras to capture members of the video production crew (the band did not appear in the video) throwing £25,000 in £5 notes (each with a white sticker with the word "Taxlo$$" in red) from the upper concourse onto commuters below. All this information is imparted in the finished music video which includes all the preparation for the stunt from the withdrawal of the cash through to the news reports after the event. The ensuing chaos as the crowd scrambled for the cash was intended to highlight human greed.
  • In 2000, London Underground staff reported a passenger standing on the Central line eastbound platform at 2 am on CCTV despite the station being closed. After thoroughly examining the area the passenger was nowhere to been seen.[22][23]
  • During the 7 July 2005 London bombings, a bomb was exploded on a Circle line train killing seven people as the train left Liverpool Street towards Template:LUL stations.

In fiction

Novels
  • Andy McNab's novel Dark Winter makes the station the target of a similar attack.
  • In the 1988 children's book Groosham Grange the main character is sent there from London Liverpool Street.
  • In Anthony Horowitz's Alex Rider series, the headquarters of MI6 is near Liverpool Street station.
  • In W.G. Sebald's novel Austerlitz Liverpool Street is mentioned in connection with The Great Eastern Hotel.
  • H G Wells' 1898 novel The War of The Worlds included a chaotic rush to board trains at Liverpool Street Station as the martian machines overran military defences in the West End, and described the crushing of people under the wheels of the steam engines.
Film
  • In 2009, the cast of St. Trinian's 2: The Legend of Fritton's Gold and hundreds of extras were filmed during a flash mob type scene where the girls danced in the middle of the railway station.
  • In the film Mission: Impossible a CIA safe house features above the Old Broad Street entrance to Liverpool Street tube station is features. The lead character played by Tom Cruise leaves the safe house and enters the main line concourse to use a payphone situated under the double staircase (since removed, with cash machines now at the spot).
  • In the film Stormbreaker, the lead character runs through the station to find a photo booth whereupon he is then transported to MI6.
Television
  • In 2011, an episode of BBC drama The Shadow Line included a scene in which a man was attempting to evade both the police and a criminal via the London Underground, eventually losing them by getting off at Liverpool Street.
  • London Under Attack, first shown by the BBC One Panorama programme in May 2004 included a fictional docu-drama portrayals of how a terrorist organisation might seek to attack London used Liverpool Street station as the specific target.[24] In the programme had a lorry containing chlorine gas explode at the junction of Shoreditch High Street and Commercial Street, just north of Liverpool Street station. The gas cloud hung over the station, and killed 3,000 people. The British government denounced the programme as "irresponsible and alarmist".[25] The BBC said that Liverpool Street was used because of its position on the border between the City of London and the East End of London.
  • The drama Dirty War, also produced by the BBC and first shown in October 2004 features a suicide terrorists detonate a "dirty bomb" just outside the Underground station, killing 200 people and rendering the area uninhabitable for 30 years. Since the programme aired, the spot at which the fictional bomb-carrying vehicle parked has become pedestrianised.
  • On 15 January 2009, at 11am, around 350 people took part in a staged three minute guerrilla-style dance for the new T-Mobile advert.

References

  1. ^ "London and South East" (PDF). National Rail. September 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 March 2009.
  2. ^ "Out of Station Interchanges" (XLSX). Transport for London. 16 June 2020. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Station Usage Data" (CSV). Usage Statistics for London Stations, 2018. Transport for London. 23 September 2020. Archived from the original on 14 January 2023. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  4. ^ "Station Usage Data" (XLSX). Usage Statistics for London Stations, 2019. Transport for London. 23 September 2020. Archived from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Station Usage Data" (XLSX). Usage Statistics for London Stations, 2020. Transport for London. 16 April 2021. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
  6. ^ "Station Usage Data" (XLSX). Usage Statistics for London Stations, 2021. Transport for London. 12 July 2022. Retrieved 7 September 2022.
  7. ^ "Station Usage Data" (XLSX). Usage Statistics for London Stations, 2022. Transport for London. 4 October 2023. Retrieved 10 October 2023.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g "Estimates of station usage". Rail statistics. Office of Rail Regulation. Please note: Some methodology may vary year on year.
  9. ^ "Stations Run by Network Rail". Network Rail. Retrieved 23 August 2009.
  10. ^ "Station Codes". National Rail. Retrieved 23 August 2009.
  11. ^ Pigott, Nick, ed. (2012). "Waterloo still London's busiest station". The Railway Magazine. Vol. 158, no. 1334. Horncastle, Lincs: Mortons Media Group. p. 6. {{cite magazine}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  12. ^ "Commercial information" (PDF). Complete National Rail Timetable. London: Network Rail. 2011. p. 41. Retrieved 9 January 2012. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Mowlem 1822 - 1972, p.4 [full citation needed]
  14. ^ "Andaz London Hotel". {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help)
  15. ^ a b "Sir H. Wilson murdered. Shot on his doorstep. Two Irishmen captured. Running fight in London". The Times. London. 23 June 1922. p. 10.
  16. ^ a b Winn, Christopher (2007). I Never Knew That About London. Ebury Press. ISBN 978-0-09-191857-6.
  17. ^ Rothenberg, Ruth (19 September 2003). "Kindertransport statue unveiled". The Jewish Chronicle. London. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  18. ^ Frank Meisler, personal website. Retrieved 23 May 2011
  19. ^ http://openbuildings.com/buildings/liverpool-street-station-profile-10990
  20. ^ c2c – Changes to late evening and Liverpool Street services
  21. ^ "Multi-year station entry-and-exit figures (2007–2017)". London Underground station passenger usage data. Transport for London. January 2018. Archived from the original (XLSX) on 31 July 2018. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
  22. ^ "Mike Heffernan - Ghosts of the London Underground". Unexplained Mysteries. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  23. ^ "Liverpool Street Underground Railway Station | Mysterious Britain & Ireland". Mysteriousbritain.co.uk. 31 October 1994. Retrieved 13 August 2012.
  24. ^ "London under attack". BBC News Online. London. 6 May 2004. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  25. ^ "Terror programme 'irresponsible'". BBC News Online. London. 15 May 2004. Retrieved 16 June 2007. 'We are disappointed to learn that the BBC appears to have adopted an irresponsible and alarmist approach over what is understandably an emotive and frightening subject for the public,' a Home Office spokesman told BBC News Online. He said the programme depicted a situation that was 'simply not realistic'.
  • David Stevenson (2004). 1914-1918 The History of the First World War. Allen Lane. ISBN 0-7139-9208-5.
  • Alan A Jackson (1969). London's Termini. David & Charles. ISBN 0-330-02747-6.