The Lost Tube Line

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
  • The loneliest, spookiest line on the Tube map. Or rather, it was.
    For more on the types of Tube line: • Sub-Surface or Deep Le...
    For more on the Northern Line: • Relics of the Northern...
    For more on the Victoria Line: • Pass Notes to Pimlico ...
    ko-fi.com/jago...
    / jagohazzard

Komentáře • 490

  • @blackhawks81H
    @blackhawks81H Před 3 lety +677

    I imagine to most Americans, talk about the underground sounds something like this "At pennywhistle station and watercress court down the old spannywaist has a pindlestiff at the brumley and Falstaff greengrocer. Tittertwat and piffle register for the jaunty morning waistcoat. Follow the balderdash and kindly mind the wainscoting!"

    • @scj7408
      @scj7408 Před 3 lety +65

      It sounds exactly like that

    • @alstorer
      @alstorer Před 3 lety +49

      I read/watch things about eg the New York Subway and get fully lost with the talk of IRT, BRT, IND, PATH

    • @jhfearon1052
      @jhfearon1052 Před 3 lety +21

      @@alstorer Speaking of the New York Subway, and in the context of this story, there is a similar abandoned line that ends at 99 Schermerhorn Street Brooklyn NY (now the site of the New York Transit Museum.) It has an interesting history. Worth a visit for any tourist visiting NYC.

    • @josephteller9715
      @josephteller9715 Před 3 lety +17

      No problem understanding the presentation really at all... but then again I'm in Boston MA area and having the oldest subway system in the country we're kind of use to weird complexities, unconnected lines, disused or missing stations etc.

    • @Quebecoisegal
      @Quebecoisegal Před 3 lety +6

      Mark and Lard's One Man and His Frog

  • @frazerguest2864
    @frazerguest2864 Před 4 lety +518

    Sometimes CZcams throws up some real gems.

    • @adrianbaker5916
      @adrianbaker5916 Před 3 lety +2

      The sort of thing that Londonist used to do.

    • @AAAyyyGGG
      @AAAyyyGGG Před 3 lety +3

      ... and sometimes CZcams just makes you throw up!! :-P

    • @295g295
      @295g295 Před 2 lety +2

      CZcamss about London Tubes

  • @AnVolcano1
    @AnVolcano1 Před 3 lety +55

    On my last visit to London a couple years ago, I stayed near the Highbury & Islington stop, and used this line quite a few times. I knew something felt "off" about it - a "National Rail" line, with full-size trains, but in a tube that looked like the Underground - and finally, this video has explained it!

    • @katbryce
      @katbryce Před 2 lety +5

      The thing is though that the Northern City Line is now doing exactly what it was originally intended to do.

  • @thedumgamer2046
    @thedumgamer2046 Před 4 lety +59

    Went on this line once when I was like 3/4, (it was run by FCC back then) and being a smol kid I now know it forever as:
    Big creepy scary line

    • @wta1518
      @wta1518 Před 3 měsíci

      Damn, I didn't know the United States Federal Communications Commission used to run trains in the UK.

  • @badbanano
    @badbanano Před 3 lety +170

    Secret waterways under train tunnels. England is a honeycomb.

  • @lewisdoherty7621
    @lewisdoherty7621 Před 4 lety +67

    I have heard of Moorgate Protection. There are timers on the tracks on the approaches to terminal stations which require three reductions in speed and if a train goes through one before it should, the brakes on the train are engaged.

    • @2760ade
      @2760ade Před 2 lety +5

      They had the technology to implement a system similar to this in the mid '70s!! They just didn't think it was necessary at Moorgate. The underground was so sloppily run in those days. I remember, as a child, it being dirty and run down!

    • @1575murray
      @1575murray Před 2 lety +6

      A similar system is in effect on all terminal tracks in the New York subway system which end in bumper blocks. It has been effective in preventing trains from coming into a station at too high a speed and striking the bumper at the end of the track.

  • @RobertMitchell-qh5jg
    @RobertMitchell-qh5jg Před 4 lety +28

    Another brilliant film !
    Talking of the Moorgate disaster an " old hand" on the tube told me a strange thing about it when I was a kid .
    Drivers used to have a regular guard , when the train came to a stop he opened the doors and wasn't concerned that the front part of the train was in the tunnel ?
    Reason ? the same driver had overshot the platform several times before .
    Also the first emergency worker on the scene was a young PC who was on duty outside the station .
    Years later he was first on the scene of the Marshoness pleasure boat disaster .

  • @henrywhite2984
    @henrywhite2984 Před 4 lety +183

    What I recall, from riding on this line as a child (late 1960s?) is how dimly lit the platforms in the tunnel stations were. I supposed, because British Railways lighting standards are based on lighting a station at night, and, the Underground's lighting standards are based on lighting a station in the daytime.

    • @Proactivebeetleondamic
      @Proactivebeetleondamic Před 4 lety +6

      That makes you 60.

    • @josephteller9715
      @josephteller9715 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Proactivebeetleondamic no could be in his 50s actually.

    • @Proactivebeetleondamic
      @Proactivebeetleondamic Před 3 lety +1

      @@josephteller9715 maybe.

    • @Sam_Green____4114
      @Sam_Green____4114 Před 2 lety +5

      And the policy of Tralee and Dingle railway in west Ireland was lighting their stations at night only when 1 ) there was NO moon 2) it was cloudy ! - By hanging a paraffin lamp on a pole on their platforms !

  • @jaekbluen3484
    @jaekbluen3484 Před 3 lety +348

    I take this train to school everyday

    • @busbahnfanmuenchen
      @busbahnfanmuenchen Před 3 lety +33

      I do not take this Train to school. Because i live in munich 😅. But sometimes i wish i live in London because i love the Bakerloo Line.

    • @Properbellend
      @Properbellend Před 3 lety +45

      Have you been stabbed?

    • @HDLDesigns
      @HDLDesigns Před 3 lety +21

      Hogwarts

    • @ad-vv3fl
      @ad-vv3fl Před 3 lety +4

      Whats ur address

    • @Joemame
      @Joemame Před 3 lety +27

      @@ad-vv3fl Hmm kinda sus.

  • @nomadMik
    @nomadMik Před 4 lety +171

    I'm only occasionally in London (I don't live in Europe) so I think I would've gotten more out of this video if the location of this line was shown on a modern Tube map.

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  Před 4 lety +108

      This is a request I’ve had a few times, so I’m going to implement it in future videos. I’m afraid I sometimes forget that not everyone is a regular Tube user.

    • @DavidJCane
      @DavidJCane Před 4 lety +17

      The line isn't shown on the tube map any more, but it is on the "London's Rail and Tube Services" map at tfl.gov.uk/maps/track.

    • @Kristine1943
      @Kristine1943 Před 4 lety +10

      It isn't on the London tube map as it isn't considered part of the tube any more. I believe it comes, if anything, under National Rail.

    • @Alan_UK
      @Alan_UK Před 3 lety +3

      See tfl.gov.uk/maps/track/national-rail It's the Great Northern Line

    • @ianmcclavin
      @ianmcclavin Před 3 lety +5

      @@Kristine1943 Oddly,, it stayed on the Tube map for many years after the transfer to the National Rail Network (then British Rail) occurred in 1975. It was finally removed in about 1992.

  • @lindatyler1784
    @lindatyler1784 Před 2 lety +2

    In 2015 I rode the tube from Tower Hill to Paddington. I do not know if we were on the Circle or District line. Because the tube was undergoing major construction, the train made what must have been an unscheduled stop and instructed anyone who was traveling to Paddington to get off the train, walk around and take the Hammersmith & City line. There were no escalators or lift. We had to walk under a huge air vent and climb a long spiral staircase, then walk through a high vaulted, dark, arched passageway where stuff was stored. There was only one dim light on the side wall. We could hardly see, but continued about 200 feet to two very large push doors to exit. We exited onto a back alley backed by a short fence and a row of low houses. The double doors had an old green light fixture over the doors. We walked to a quiet side street and turned left onto it. Across the street were several individual, tall red brick apartments in a grassy common area with a red phone booth. We walked along a large yellow brick warehouse like building 2 blocks to a main road. It was afternoon and we were terrified since no one was on either street except for one man. Across the street was a large empty field of grass and row of trees. To the left of the field was an abandoned red brick factory with a tall stack. We walked along the street past closed, Victorian, one-story brick store fronts with old painted signs in windows. No traffic, no cars, no buses, no bikes, no taxis. No modern buildings or high rises, nor people. We came upon the brightly lit rondel in this row. There was one or two turnstiles and no station attendant. The only way down to the platform was by a small elevator. No one was inside the station and we were the only ones on a small, unadorned platform with no bench, hoping to connect with Hammersmith & City line. After searching extensively, I do not find such an unpopulated neighborhood with old buildings. I want to know the name of the neighborhood and station with spiral stairs we climbed out of, and if it was an unused station with no cross over, and what is the station we entered? Thanks for any help. It's driving me crazy that I can't find it online. Eltee

  • @mr.mentesh8130
    @mr.mentesh8130 Před 3 lety +10

    I've used this line and it's true, being on that platform is eary especially with the large hulking tunnels

  • @cliveburt2638
    @cliveburt2638 Před 4 lety +166

    I used this link to Finsbury Park, on the night of the King's Cross Fire, instead of my more usual route ....

    • @nikovlad9205
      @nikovlad9205 Před 4 lety

      Sydney or 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @FunkGodPutin
      @FunkGodPutin Před 4 lety +7

      The kings cross fire was in London

    • @j2m3_raiden5
      @j2m3_raiden5 Před 4 lety +12

      @@FunkGodPutin so is finsbury park. Whats ur point?

    • @engineer6250
      @engineer6250 Před 3 lety +9

      I was on the Victoria line, travelling down from Finsbury Park to brixton for an Alexander O’Neil concert. The train stopped at kings cross but the doors did not open. We sat there long enough for me to miss the majority of the concert.

    • @cliveburt2638
      @cliveburt2638 Před 3 lety +9

      @@j2m3_raiden5 There is an area of Sydney, that is also called "Kings Cross", he was just clarifying if it was London or Sydney.

  • @Bobs2cents
    @Bobs2cents Před 4 lety +30

    Would definitely like to see more about the Mooregate and what those in the know think led up to this disaster. My sympathies and condolences to the families and friends of those lost.

  • @execelsior999
    @execelsior999 Před 4 lety +37

    I would welcome learning more of the Moorgate Underground Disaster. A friend of mine died in it.

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  Před 4 lety +21

      I made a more in-depth video titled “The Mystery of Moorgate” on the subject.

  • @georgeoshea9961
    @georgeoshea9961 Před 3 lety +3

    It really is a bizarre line. We get it to the Ally Pally and the first time you’re there the 80s decor makes you feel like you’re in a different time. Then a mainline train rolls in - it is just so jarring because it defies expectation. Great video as always.

  • @arthurreeder2474
    @arthurreeder2474 Před 3 lety +27

    I used this line in the 70s as a way of getting Arsenal from East London on a Saturday. It was always a cinderella line and wasn't there at least one station that didn't have any filling in of the tunnel rings? I seem to recall it looked unfinished?
    The trains always seemed faster than other lines but I put that down to the extra noise of the larger tunnels. I was travelling back to Charing Cross from Kent when I found out about Moorgate. I don't think anyone expected it to be as horrendous as it was? I bought the Evening Standard (the jacker's journal) to read about it. The news that night was awful knowing what was at the end of that station tunnel. All very sad.

    • @ianmcclavin
      @ianmcclavin Před 3 lety +2

      When the Victoria Line was built in the 60's, as well as temporarily curtailing the line back to Drayton Park, they also diverted the northbound Moorgate/Northern City line running tunnel into a brand new platform at Highbury & Islington (the tunnels being built to the same larger dimensions as the rest of the line to enable larger stock to use it) to provide Cross platform/same level interchange with the Victoria Line in both directions. I think this is the platform you refer to as having the "unfinished" appearance, with the tunnel rings still visible. Even today, the segments on the ceiling remain uncovered, although painted a nicer shade of beige! (The original northbound Northern City Line platform at Highbury is now the southbound Victoria Line platform).

    • @davespagnol8847
      @davespagnol8847 Před 2 lety

      Yes, I used to go to Highbury and lived with my parents off Brick Lane, close to Arnold Circus which you've done some stuff about. To get to Arsenal I'd walk to Old Street and travel to Drayton Park which was a short walk from the station, but not as crowded as Arsenal station or the other alternatives. I also used to work in Hoxton, and did visiting duties in the N1 area, so often used to go from Old Street to Essex Road or Highbury and Islington though mostly I'd get around the area by bus.

  • @cjaoshenyjc7276
    @cjaoshenyjc7276 Před 3 lety +12

    Got on at Essex Road during the first lockdown, was like something like a horror movie

    • @ianmcclavin
      @ianmcclavin Před 3 lety +1

      I've not been on the line since the first lockdown, immediately prior to that, they'd just removed all the tiling from the platform walls at Essex Road, in preparation for installing new tiles. I take it the bare walls were still there when you passed through, adding to the "horror movie" ambiance? I expect they've been retiled by now...??

    • @295g295
      @295g295 Před 2 lety

      > 3:44 < Essex Road station

  • @paulanderson7796
    @paulanderson7796 Před 3 lety +5

    Old Street and Essex Road are both utterly haunting and charming at the same time. Even midweek they're almost deserted outside of rush hour. As a teenager in the mid 1980's I always took a ride on this line when I visited London on spotting trips. It was referred to as the "Great Northern Electrics" at this time. Much of Network SouthEast livery still remains in place.

  • @robertsavage122
    @robertsavage122 Před 4 lety +69

    I remember travelling to Drayton Park several times when the line was under London Transport, and there was a distinctive smell, a sort of musty odour, and I never discovered why.

    • @LKeet6
      @LKeet6 Před 4 lety +10

      I remember that smell! Always felt to me like it was the trains? And the electrification? Maybe my imagination.

    • @alangiles2763
      @alangiles2763 Před 4 lety +17

      @@LKeet6 I remember the Moorgate accident, and the lurid descriptions in that weekends press of the stench and decay has meant that I have never been able to enter Moorgate station - even 45 years later - those descriptions were so vivid.

    • @robertsavage122
      @robertsavage122 Před 4 lety +9

      @@LKeet6 Yes, the smell was distinctive to that line. Also I have a vague recollection that the station signs were not the normal roundels, but diamond-shaped - or am I making that up?

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  Před 4 lety +16

      I seem to recall seeing a diamond-shaped Bank sign at Museum Depot.

    • @LKeet6
      @LKeet6 Před 4 lety +4

      @@robertsavage122 I think it may have changed by the time I was using it, in the mid to late 80s.

  • @sweetestperfection90
    @sweetestperfection90 Před 2 lety +4

    As a resident of Crouch End, the abandonment of the extension plans is lamentable. But at least we have Harringay station nearby... and a nice lengthy greenway passing through the area.

  • @cycloid2326
    @cycloid2326 Před 4 lety +18

    Drayton Park was my local station back when I visited London on spring break. It was pretty neat regularly using this odd piece of history.

  • @francispagan9676
    @francispagan9676 Před 3 lety +8

    Thanks Jago for old memories of the NC line. I discovered it back in 1950s when I was a schoolkid in London and a tube nerd. It was then still the rogue fragment of the Northern line called the Finsbury Park branch. The line was incredibly spooky back then it was dimly lit an almost deserted outside rush hour. Because of the large bore tunnels and the elderly tube stock used then there was this eerie echoing rumble for ages before the train arrived
    The other really weird thing I haven't seen commented on was the nameboards. In those days they had not the standard LT roundels but these odd red diamonds which I think were the old Metropolitan style. The letter set was very old looking too.
    The whole effect was quite frighteningly creepy and one could imagine some tense thriller with the goodie and the baddie trying to push each other onto the track with that rising echoing rumble of an approaching train building up to a fearful climax.

  • @KoanGrasshopperX
    @KoanGrasshopperX Před 2 lety +1

    Born in 72, London, i remember a lot of the old maps and im sure i remember this line 🙂

  • @LKeet6
    @LKeet6 Před 4 lety +6

    A line from my childhood! I went to school at Drayton park.
    Me and my dad decided to get it to the end of the line one weekend, for no reason at all, and went all the way out to welwyn garden city.

  • @NeilFLiversidge
    @NeilFLiversidge Před 4 lety +9

    Thank you for another brilliantly idiosyncratic and thoroughly enjoyable video; your knowledge is amazing.

  • @para2440
    @para2440 Před 2 lety +2

    I remember staying at a mates flat in Highbury and going to work from there to Moorgate, fortunately for me, I was two trains in front of the one that crashed, it was shortly after I reached the surface all hell broke loose as the disaster unfolded

  • @jimothyturtle3331
    @jimothyturtle3331 Před 3 lety +25

    My grave site was disturbed when this was built, i can't rest now and still float around these tunnels in limbo

  • @joc6516
    @joc6516 Před 4 lety +4

    Great video, thanks. I remember first using this station way back in the early 90s when I lived at Highbury Islington and needed to get to work at Moorgate. This was my daily commute and I was quite aware back then on its unusual significance. I was really happy a few years ago to see that it was still in operation.

  • @dgattenb
    @dgattenb Před 4 lety +6

    went there a few months before the last 313's ... went to all the stations .. weekdays.. scared the willies out of me.. but was wonderful to be a time ship back to the 80s

  • @Xgeneration28
    @Xgeneration28 Před 3 lety +14

    when i was a kid this line really did play on my mind.
    i almost resented it.
    when i was 11 i remember going on it after school, just had to.
    its very weird line.
    overhead trains underground 🤦🏾‍♂️
    rip 🙏🏾to the crash victims.
    i didn't know that.

  • @shooshoodemoo2610
    @shooshoodemoo2610 Před 4 lety +8

    This is brilliant, i have just suscribed, I never knew any about this line and me and my little brother would often travel on the tubes, and nearly every week atleast once we would past finsbury park. Thanks for the info on tubes! keep it up!

  • @iman2341
    @iman2341 Před 4 lety +10

    TfL are in talks with Great Northern on taking over the Moorgate branch to make it part of the Overground at the moment.

  • @StevenBanks123
    @StevenBanks123 Před 3 lety +60

    1:10 “Arguably it shouldn’t have been an underground line in the first place. It was never intended as such.” Explain please.

    • @saimrahman201
      @saimrahman201 Před 3 lety +6

      There was a bit of trouble while they were building so they made it underground

    • @iain3482
      @iain3482 Před 3 lety +26

      I think he means Underground rather than underground, as in it was never meant to be part of the London Underground network. It was built for the Great Northern company as a branch off their main line.

    • @someoneno-one7672
      @someoneno-one7672 Před 3 lety +5

      This might refer to the 1975 disaster. While tunnels of the line were built to accommodate a main line train, there were narrow tube trains until the transfer. If I remember correct one of the reasons why the incident happened to be so deadly was the tunnel large diameter: when the first carriage of the tube train smashed into the tunnel end, the second came right on top of it, killing more passengers than it would have been in a narrow tube tunnel.

    • @fetchstixRHD
      @fetchstixRHD Před 3 lety +2

      @@someoneno-one7672: While you’re not wrong, that isn’t really because the line was a London Underground line, rather because they used the smaller Tube stock trains. If instead they paired it with one of the subsurface lines and used subsurface stock, the issue of overriding wouldn’t have been a problem (presumably?) in the Moorgate accident.
      I’d agree with the viewpoint that the whole point of the line was to act as it does now, linking to the mainline railway at Finsbury Park.

    • @someoneno-one7672
      @someoneno-one7672 Před 3 lety +2

      @@fetchstixRHD I can't be more agree with you. In my opinion there should be a Thameslink branch connecting Finsbury Park to New Cross Gate with additional subterranean station(s) for Bank and London Bridge. This would have required extending Essex Road platforms and probably a new deeper station at Moregate but would have been extremely efficient for commuters.

  • @imsbvs
    @imsbvs Před 2 lety +2

    I was on the platform at Moorgate station a few minutes prior to the disaster, I am very lucky not to have been there to witness the tradegy in person.

  • @michaelgreen1515
    @michaelgreen1515 Před 4 lety +18

    Northern heights, plus future plans for this odd line.

    • @bryanearthloop2403
      @bryanearthloop2403 Před 3 lety

      Check out the awful tyneside metro....... based on pre- world war 2 berlin U - bahn in terms of the electric power system and rolling stock. This replaced comfortable trains you could put your cycle on =:^ o

  • @ClaudiaOfTheWorld
    @ClaudiaOfTheWorld Před 2 lety +1

    so glad i found this. i was talking to my parents about the moorgate tube disaster and my mum (born and raised in north london) said that the tube at the time was the northern line, she used it to get to work. she also said that she recently had a disagreement with her boss (from hertfordshire 🤪) about it and her boss said it wasn’t part of the northern line, it was something completely different. i tried to fact check via wikipedia and there’s nothing as detailed as this, so i just assumed my mum had misremembered. I’m happy this video has vindicated my mum.

  • @Krzyszczynski
    @Krzyszczynski Před 4 lety +2

    I travelled on the line a time or two in the mid-1970s. The main oddity I noticed about it then was that the running tunnels had lights all along them - you could stand on the platform and see them stretching a long way away into the dark.
    The Moorgate crash mightn't have been quite such a frightful mess if they hadn't been using Tube-size stock in tunnels built to main-line dimensions. It left more room for the carriages to override each other and get crushed every which way, instead of just suffering end-to-end compression.

  • @Billo99999
    @Billo99999 Před 3 lety +4

    Interesting. I used to use this line occasionally and remember being surprised on discovering it as an alternative to the underground for getting into the city. I was based for work at Finsbury Park at the time and would need to travel around from there to various locations and this line came in handy as a quick route to Moorgate, quicker than using the tube lines which involved a change. Never knew the background to this.

  • @neilrusling3438
    @neilrusling3438 Před 4 lety +8

    A while back I remember watching a vid about this line that was quite good and worth watching, at least i think it had something to do with it as i remember the station name Bushy Heath...Its called, "The Unfinished Northern Line" by Jay Foreman......Worth a watch and its not too long...

  • @RebirthRadio2023
    @RebirthRadio2023 Před 3 lety +1

    I used to use this line, quite handy as I lived on Essex Road near the station, allowing connections to the Underground at Moorgate. The weirdness is compounded by the lack of adverts that you would see at a proper Tube station, making the featureless corridors seem even longer, lonelier and more barren.

    • @martin.feuchtwanger
      @martin.feuchtwanger Před 2 lety +1

      Oddly, i think you've hit on why it seems so spooky -- no ads on the walls!

  • @vidiia
    @vidiia Před 4 lety +4

    oo! this must be the line i take sometimes to get to old street from the north. i remember being strangely excited the first time i saw those deep level tube platforms covered with national rail signage. those tunnels at old street connecting the platforms to the tube station always have been particularly grimy.

  • @tardismole
    @tardismole Před 4 lety +68

    Great video. One detail slightly incorrect is the "mystery cause". It was determined in the driver's autopsy that he died of a seizure, which exonerated him from blame for the tragedy at the hearing. The one thing learned from his death was the implementation of the Dead Man's Handle, which, if it had been installed before the crash, would have saved the passengers from injury and death.

    • @tardismole
      @tardismole Před 4 lety +5

      @I DON'T CARE I DON'T CARE I'm going my the medical and pathology report, which was in the autopsy notes. As a medical doctor, oppions are not important in my work. Just take it as is, it's a fact. Sorry, but you're wrong.

    • @banana_man_101
      @banana_man_101 Před 3 lety +2

      @@tardismole they deleted their cements lol

    • @tardismole
      @tardismole Před 3 lety +2

      @@banana_man_101 ​ So, they have. What a pity. I was going to offer to scan the autopsy report and email it to them as proof. Oh well. Maybe next time. :)

    • @mattgamble7125
      @mattgamble7125 Před 3 lety +7

      The dead man's handle had been around for years - the 1938 stock which was the type of train in the accident had it from new. What did change as a result of the Moorgate accident was the introduction of approach control to terminals so that it would not be possible to enter a dead end at speed. Hitherto the signalling system had relied on the driver's route knowledge and there was an assumption that if anything happened to the driver he would would release the dead man's handle bringing the train to a stand. The Railway Inspectorate report concluded that the driver was likely to have suffered akinesis with mutism or transient global amnesia but that there was no evidence for either. Worth reading the report.

    • @tardismole
      @tardismole Před 3 lety +4

      @@mattgamble7125 Akinese is a form of epilepsy. The 'evidence' as you put it was only discovered during the second autopsy, for which the medical expertise was not available at the time of the first. Neural receptors in the brain were tested for the chemical response for akinesis and found positive for the hormone responsible. I had not wanted to go into full medical details, which would go right over the heads of most people. I am grateful that you didn't dismiss me as a liar. That made a change. However, your point about the dead man's handle is slightly incorrect. Britain had not installed them on all trains. The underground had not implemented them as they were 'advisory' and not 'mandatory'.

  • @bertspeggly4428
    @bertspeggly4428 Před rokem +1

    As a young boy in the fifties I occasionally went on this line when it still went to Finsbury Park. It was very creepy and dark, especially that long passage at Old Street. And I seem to remember spiral staircases at Finsbury Park, if anyone can confirm.

  • @Samuelmcalister
    @Samuelmcalister Před 3 lety +4

    i use this line regularly as i live in welwyn garden city (the last stop) and it is quite weird all the underground stations, it seems abandoned in some ways

  • @Sarah-ru2pd
    @Sarah-ru2pd Před 4 lety +2

    I've been to London maybe 5 times in my 30 years of life, and Ion't have any train videos in my CZcams history. So I'm unsure how this ended up in my recommendations but I'm now going to watch ' The Mystery of Moorgate'. You've piqued a curiosity I didn't know I had!

  • @amethyst7084
    @amethyst7084 Před 3 lety +3

    That was a really interesting video. I'll have to take some time out to travel on the Northern City Line one day, hopefully soon. It's just one of those peculiarities on the tube map network that just stands out as an oddity, but which is so worth looking into. Thanks very much for this informative documentary. 👍🏾👏🏾

  • @thesalandarian3314
    @thesalandarian3314 Před 4 lety +10

    As a northern line enthusiast It would be really cool to reinstate the northern city line as part of the northern line and get tfl to review the northern heights project.

    • @SportyMabamba
      @SportyMabamba Před 3 lety

      I’m afraid the Green Belt has put paid to the Northern Heights plan. Can’t develop the land to attract passengers to build the business case, assuming you could get the Legal Powers to extend the line reinstated.

    • @DadgeCity
      @DadgeCity Před 9 měsíci

      That seems unlikely. More likely perhaps is for TfL to make it part of the Overground, which would see its use double or treble.

  • @SoiBuakhaoRoutemasterbus
    @SoiBuakhaoRoutemasterbus Před 4 lety +8

    An interesting vid. But the line was never under Northern Line control, it stayed part of the Met until the end of LT operations. The 38's had heavy maintainence carried out at Neasden and the crews at Drayton Park Depot were part of the Met Line East Section (which included New Cross and Barking Met). A friend of mine was an SM (Station manager (running), a train crew supervisor) at Barking and remembers Leslie Newson (Moorgate crash driver) well, he spent time there until transfered to Drayton Park, i believe a promotional move to Motorman. His goal was to get back to New Cross depot and be near home again as when he was a guard.

    • @neilforbes416
      @neilforbes416 Před 4 lety +1

      Barking Station, ay? I'll bet that place is a bit "ruff"! LOL

    • @SoiBuakhaoRoutemasterbus
      @SoiBuakhaoRoutemasterbus Před 4 lety +1

      @@neilforbes416 Funnily enough, that's not far from the truth these days......

  • @bk1147
    @bk1147 Před 3 lety +5

    Just come across your page
    Fascinating stuff keep up the good work!

  • @paulkirkland3263
    @paulkirkland3263 Před 3 lety +2

    The Tube never fails to fascinate. Great video.

  • @YouTube2021FM
    @YouTube2021FM Před 4 lety +21

    They really should just add it to the W+C and extend down to those platforms at bank.

    • @Jesus-rl9kd
      @Jesus-rl9kd Před 4 lety

      .

    • @stefanhaustein
      @stefanhaustein Před 4 lety +1

      I wonder if it could make sense to connect it to the DLR instead?

    • @fetchstixRHD
      @fetchstixRHD Před 3 lety

      @@stefanhaustein: Which line are you referring to? If the Waterloo and City, you run into (I think) all three issues that Daniel raised above, and if the Northern City then again you’d be either turfing out the Great Northern services (and would have to find somewhere to accommodate them, as well as ruining a great connection) or trying to weave the DLR in (and finding the space or cutting the Network Rail tracks down) to serve places as far as Stevenage (good luck with that!)

  • @IndigoJo
    @IndigoJo Před 3 lety +1

    In the 80s this line was called the Great Northern Electrics and the Tube map had the Moorgate to Finsbury Park section as a BR section (usually two thin black lines) labelled "G.N. Electrics". The signs remained well past privatisation; the name Great Northern was one of the sections of Network SouthEast (hence the station decor at Essex Road). Trains heading south were shown as going to "London Moorgate" (they may still be).

  • @stuphe1844
    @stuphe1844 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you! I often wondered why there was a mutant tube stop on Essex Road

  • @JonahRamone
    @JonahRamone Před rokem +1

    As someone who used to commute from HFN to Moorgate, I always found this section from Finsbury Park into central very strange, now I understand why. Really interesting to know this. I also enjoyed the map of the Northern line connecting up to Ally Pally.

  • @andrewmurray5542
    @andrewmurray5542 Před rokem +1

    I visited Essex Road recently. It's the bleakest station I've ever been to with no advertising and no digital boards with times of the coming trains. I was the only person in the station. To add to the spooky feeling, the train terminated on the same platform at Moorgate as the tube disaster.

  • @smileygoesfishing36
    @smileygoesfishing36 Před 4 lety +2

    the moorgate to finsbury park line was also closed alot on the weekends during the 80's/90's and also used for fire training during the 80's at essex road on the weekends -- essex road has always had a spooky feeling about the station and even the platforms at highbury have that same sort of feeling about them -- this part of the line run's under where i used to live and we could feel the trains shaking the house has they passed ( essex rd to old street ) -- it seems this line has swap hands so many times that it feels no one wants it and it has been on and off the tube maps / london connections maps over the years

    • @jeffsimon9594
      @jeffsimon9594 Před 8 měsíci

      Yes Essex Rd is an obscure underdog.. on parting to travel home folks will sometime ask me "where I have to get to" and when I say that station name they draw a blank!

  • @andrewdemetrius8090
    @andrewdemetrius8090 Před 3 lety +1

    back in the early 1980's, all stations had small sections of platform that still had posters from 1975 e.g "The Towering Inferno" movie etc.... B R were so cheap that it took them years to upgrade some of the walls and they had the old posters until around 1995!

  • @chrisblay
    @chrisblay Před 4 lety +13

    That “Network South East” sign was right out of the 1980’s.

    • @SportyMabamba
      @SportyMabamba Před 3 lety

      Still got NSE signage in the platform paving on the W&C platforms at Bank

  • @TheDreamRiver
    @TheDreamRiver Před 3 lety +2

    I discovered its platforms at Moorgate by accident, and it was such a eerie experience that I though I entered into the Matrix or some kind of parallel universes

  • @dougmorris2134
    @dougmorris2134 Před 2 lety

    I remember reading of and seeing the TV films of the Moorgate train disaster of 1975.
    In 1988 the book “Moorgate, the anatomy of a railway disaster” by Sally Holloway was published. A book that I took out from my local library and read, from cover to cover. It revealed all of, at the time, the horrific details of this tragedy, of those on the train and of the horrific conditions that the rescue services endured on the train and in the tunnel. I will never forget what I read and the pictures and the thought of that little tube type train with its passengers, running, with the power still applied to its traction motors as it passed through the station platform and into the short dead-end tunnel. 💔😢

  • @brendannaylor8118
    @brendannaylor8118 Před 4 lety +6

    I think the driver had a stroke on the the way in to the station. It can happen to relatively young people.The description of the Westinghouse braking system is wrong too. the compressed air keeps the brakes off. when the air leaks out the brakes apply automatically. That'ts why you hear a compressor pumping up the air cylinders before your train leaves the station.

    • @2Worlds_and_InBetween
      @2Worlds_and_InBetween Před 4 lety

      yeah... its called fail-safe,
      same on lorries

    • @DjAlyX1
      @DjAlyX1 Před 4 lety

      This is partially true, the original Westinghouse air system applied the brakes automatically with compressed air. Westinghouse himself switched it to as you described when they had some issues with the brakes not applying quick enough.

    • @brendannaylor8118
      @brendannaylor8118 Před 4 lety +1

      @@DjAlyX1 Sounds about right.

  • @ianmcclavin
    @ianmcclavin Před 6 měsíci

    I travelled on the line twice under LT ownership before the handover, when they were still using the 1938 Stock. They diverted the northbound line into a new tunnel and platform at Highbury & Islington, to provide same level interchange with the Victoria Line. The new tunnels for the Moorgate Line were built to the larger dimension also, so as not to pose a problem if and when larger stock was introduced. (This turned out to be about 10 years later).

  • @davidbull7210
    @davidbull7210 Před 4 lety +22

    Great video. There are plans afoot for TfL to take over this line (and indeed the Great Northern inners as a whole) before September 2022.

    • @mittfh
      @mittfh Před 4 lety +3

      TfL seem to have developed a taste for adopting national rail lines - first there was the Overground network (which of course hijacked the former Underground East London Line), TfL Rail / Crossrail / Elizabeth Line / Purple Trains are NR, then this - and given the tube map is effectively a TfL services map these days (the cable car isn't exactly underground!)...

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 4 lety +3

      @@mittfh TfL did do bids to DfT which were turned down, mainly because they did not make clear the benefits that could accrue to non-londoners. A revised plan with enhanced services , ticketing and staffing might work, but just as WW2 changed plan deliveries (and the 1940s planning laws), so Covid impact is going to set things back 30 years in capitol spending.

    • @cliveburt2638
      @cliveburt2638 Před 4 lety +2

      @@highpath4776 I think you might find they are accelerated, in a Keynesian Economic boost!

  • @weaksohyeah
    @weaksohyeah Před 3 lety +1

    Yaaay! I'm so happy, this line is my line! My station is Essex Rd. Ha solid little vid lol rad history 👏

  • @prof.hectorholbrook4692
    @prof.hectorholbrook4692 Před 4 lety +3

    Yes, vids on The Northern Heights & the 28th Feb 1975 Disaster too please. (I did a Human Factors Safety Project on the latter for LUL 15 years ago).

  • @marlonthemarvellous
    @marlonthemarvellous Před 3 lety

    I actually work for great northern railways (part of the Govia Thameslink series) at Palmers Green Station. Been there for 2 years. So this vid is relatable. Your videos are an eye opener.

  • @ThermoMan
    @ThermoMan Před 3 lety

    Your videos are really packed with information and I often have to watch them twice or more!

  • @vickielawless
    @vickielawless Před 4 měsíci

    One of my uncles was a firefighter who attended Moorgate. 12 years later he was at Kings Cross. He never talks much about either disaster, other than to say "the underground is the worst place to be called to a shout".

  • @stevepierce533
    @stevepierce533 Před 4 lety +7

    Bang on the money Jago, you don't probably (with respect) realise that those who know our geography of North London/Suburbs rather than Sat Nav dependence, instinctively appreciate the difference between the Stevenage branch lines of Oakleigh Pk vs Chase Side, each station, each location on both, firmly filed in our visual sub-conscious - it's not in your face, you either know it and appreciate, or you don't, either way it adds a deeper meaning to your videos - crack on "Bro"

    • @2H80vids
      @2H80vids Před 3 lety

      @Oswald Mosley Lost me too, somewhere after Oakleigh Park...........

  • @daisyshell8637
    @daisyshell8637 Před 4 lety +2

    Another fascinating look at London Transport history. Re your earlier item on what lies hidden underneath - there was a long article about this in The Daily Telegraph recently. It was tied in with a new exhibition "Hidden London" at the Transport Museum, starting 11 October. One to visit! There's a book, too: "Hidden London" which is a joint effort, but it's quite pricey, £25. I wasn't aware that TfL actually run guided tours of some of these places.

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  Před 4 lety +2

      Sounds worth a look! I shall investigate!

    • @ThermoMan
      @ThermoMan Před 3 lety +1

      I have a fantastic book called London under London. Probably out of print but worth a look.

    • @daisyshell8637
      @daisyshell8637 Před 3 lety

      @@ThermoMan I had that one, too, but just had a look on the shelves but no luck. Gone to the great bookshop in the sky.

  • @aliweatherup9773
    @aliweatherup9773 Před 2 lety +2

    Hello I get the Great Northern train sometimes from Finsbury Park to Moorgate and it always goes through an abandoned platform just before we get to King's Cross. I have had a look at some signage on the tunnel and it says Clerkenwell. Was there a station there that was supposed to be part of the NC line you talk about in this video?

  • @honestguy7764
    @honestguy7764 Před 3 lety +1

    I parked my car on front of that Strand station some years ago, when I went from the continent to London

  • @aires69uk
    @aires69uk Před 3 lety +1

    It looks like the line is being somewhat... maintained.

  •  Před 4 lety +5

    Is it possible to extend it southwards and across the Thames? They talk about how London could benefit from more heavy metro lines that link mainline passenger services across London like Thameslink and Crossrail, they're still planning on making the Chelsea-Hackney alignment one. Why not link this Northern & City line to some of the services that currently terminate at Waterloo? Or maybe to just give tube-starved South London another way to get to the City and interchanges.

    • @farmersteve129
      @farmersteve129 Před 4 lety

      The route south would only really replicate what Thameslink due to the alignment at Moorgate

  • @robertweissman4850
    @robertweissman4850 Před 3 lety

    Very interesting. I noticed that there was one photo of an overbridge at East Finchley station, advertising the new UndergrounD service about to take over the steam service. That was my first home, in the 1950s. I think it regrettable that the Finsbury Park - Alexandra Palace line ( part of the 1935 Northern Heights plan) was never made into a Northern Line service. It meant that a very large suburban area of north London was then left with no passenger railway.

  • @Mnrr6131
    @Mnrr6131 Před 4 lety

    Rest In Peace Port Authority bus terminals lower level platform(abandoned in the 50s and then demolished when the 7 train in the U.S was extended). Along with the old City Hall station(1904-1945 in service). Alot of stations/lines here in America were abandoned. Along my territory(Metro North’s Hudson Line), most original stations were abandoned and demolished(155th and 125th streets along the west side line were taken down)

  • @JOYOUSONEX
    @JOYOUSONEX Před 4 lety +1

    Love stories of British rail and this is one of them. New subscriber here .

  • @RJSRdg
    @RJSRdg Před 4 lety +5

    Another 'mishap' (albeit not fatal but still potentially serious) happened on the approaches to Moorgate a few years ago. A driver approaching the terminus saw water cascading from the tunnel roof. Network Rail sent some engineers to investigate who found broken auger bits lying on the track. So they went 'up top' to find out what was going on and discovered a building site where engineers drilling for foundations were wondering where their auger bits had got to....
    Apparently the engineers had asked TfL if any underground lines ran under the site, but TfL hadn't told them about the NCL as it wasn't anything to do with them any more....

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Před 4 lety +3

      The buyers of the land ( Islington? council sold it), did not legally check the title. Normally a landowner owns all land and wayleaves get added to deeds etc showing the rights granted. For this patch the land title was actually written as the land only at surface level, the Northern City railway promoters had bought the land below the surface entirely on another deed of holding. Big Fail for the Buyers' Conveyancing Solictors.

  • @MrGreatplum
    @MrGreatplum Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent stuff! It must be weird to take a full size ‘outdoor’ train into a tube line...

  • @gi8771
    @gi8771 Před 3 lety

    Love your videos. Keep up the magic!

  • @michaelminns6255
    @michaelminns6255 Před 3 lety

    I was working for London Transport in 1975 as a signals technician in the New Works division when the Morgate Disaster occurred. I am a little surprised that the cause of the disaster has not been determined yet some 45 years later

    • @nicholasalexander4743
      @nicholasalexander4743 Před 3 lety

      No mechanical problems could be found, and the driver was killed by the impact.
      Eye-witness evidence from the platform suggested that the train didn't make any attempt to stop; passengers on board reported the speed of approach as unusually high.
      Unless new evidence turns up (unlikely), the cause is liable to remain a mystery.

  • @zetectic7968
    @zetectic7968 Před 2 lety +1

    For several years I got off the Victoria line at Highbury & Islington to travel either to Essex Road or Old Street. Always found the line to be dull, dim and depressing; a necessary evil if you will & was glad to see the back of it when I found or needed another route. Walking from Liverpool St to Old Street was better than multiple changes.

  • @jermainelong1843
    @jermainelong1843 Před 4 lety +4

    I used this line this last week for the first time in years; definitely creepy and smelly😁

  • @andrewmcdonagh9699
    @andrewmcdonagh9699 Před 4 lety +9

    I do miss that’s little trains. In their last few years it did feel that it was close to falling apart. But the seating will never be missed.
    I wonder if you remember the old chocolate bar vending machines before the chilled ones.

    • @choppy249
      @choppy249 Před 4 lety +6

      Andrew McDonagh . I remember those old chocolate bar vending machines very well when I was a young kid in the late 60s travelling home with my dad . My favourite choc bar they did was called a Bar Six . Does anybody else remember them ? I think you could only get them in the vending machines but I could be mistaken . I loved them . They were such an unusual bar , called a bar six because they had six horizontal segments I think . Such a distinctive taste . I was horrified when you couldn’t get them anymore . I can’t remember if they cost thrupence or sixpence , it was so long ago . I remember that every so often an extra drawer at the bottom could be opened and you would get a free bar of something else . I should have left it there I suppose . Very naughty of me , but an extra bar of chocolate was a BIG thing in those days , much too hard to resist . Kids then were not spoilt the way today’s kids are , so any little extra treat then was a rarity. Come to think of it , maybe they stopped using those old vending machines because they were too unreliable and not cost effective enough as people could often swipe an unpaid for bar of choccy . Damn it , maybe I’m partly responsible for their downfall . I never thought of that until now .

    • @koont666
      @koont666 Před 4 lety +3

      @@choppy249 I was born in 66 And you could get bar six upto the early 80s my dad loved them so did I bit like a KitKat .

    • @choppy249
      @choppy249 Před 4 lety +4

      simon furlong . Yes that’s right , I’m so glad that somebody else remembers them . They were a bit like a Kit Kat , similar design too but with a slightly different flavour . It’s funny that my dad loved them too and I only started eating them because of him . I didn’t realise that you could still get them up to the 80s though . I used to wonder why they stopped making them but maybe it is because the Kit Kat is so popular and they couldn’t compete against them . Thanks for replying .

    • @koont666
      @koont666 Před 4 lety +3

      @@choppy249 I'll do some research because I've a sneaky feeling I've seen them more recently,I may be wrong but ,here's to nothing 👍🏼www.doyouremember.co.uk/memory/cadburys-bar-six

    • @choppy249
      @choppy249 Před 4 lety +3

      simon furlong . That would be good if they did remake the original bar with the exact same taste . I would definitely try them out although I am not supposed to eat too much chocolate these days . I did look up about them briefly and some people were saying that they make the exact same thing but rebranded with a new name now. I have forgotten the name they mentioned but it didn’t ring a bell with me so it can’t be that popular , although saying that , there are so many different varieties these days that you could easily overlook it . I think I read somewhere that they still do the original bars in Japan of all places , but I don’t think I will venture that far to try one out again . It would be nice to find out that they still make them here though .

  • @guidelineuk
    @guidelineuk Před 4 lety +1

    Nice work 😎

  • @misfit2022
    @misfit2022 Před 3 lety +1

    I used to go to The Garage only a few doors down from that station entrance

  • @paulhuntley588
    @paulhuntley588 Před 3 lety

    Northern Heights special - definitely, just up the road from me and a local fascination!

  • @capcompass9298
    @capcompass9298 Před 3 lety +1

    I was told that it's the Bank of England vaults that stop the City Northern connecting with the Waterloo-Bank line.

  • @Gary0557
    @Gary0557 Před 3 lety +1

    This was, I believe, the branch of the Northern line of the 1975 tube disaster.

  • @Steven_Rowe
    @Steven_Rowe Před 3 lety

    Ah my FAVOURITE line.
    When the line opened up it had conductor rails on both sides of the running lines and stayed that way till LTPB took over in 1933.
    I suppose it's full size tunnels were in the long run its saviour.
    The grand plans of the northern heights were canned and the line to Alley Pallet closed in July 54 anyway.
    I certainly can remember all the girders at Finsbury Park to carry the new platforms, they were still there in 72 when I left to live in the land of snakes, spiders, sharks and everything else that wants to bite yer bleedin leg off.
    The line got as sacrificed at Finsbury Park in 1964 when the platform's were pinched to accommodate the new Victoria line
    I loved the line because old standard tube stock was still in use until 1966 when they sent it on a permanent holiday to the Isle of White.
    The stations were deserted, dank and very spooky, the huge tunnels also had a very dramatic feel to them.
    Unlike normal tube trains running in big standard tube size tunnels the sound of a tube train in these bigger tunnels was different, very eerie and almost ghostly.
    You could hear the train from almost the previous station.
    I wonder if they will ever bore Southwards to bank and Waterloo and beyond.
    Perhaps another Thames link service
    You may find this interesting showing standard tube stock, this predates the Finsbury Park closure as trains can be seen heading into the tunnel for Finsbury Park
    Check this out. czcams.com/video/KZxk08n8Jag/video.html

  • @romainbluche9722
    @romainbluche9722 Před rokem

    On use to live at essex road and you can really feel the need for another tube line. Crazy traffic and crazy amount of buses. Like when a bus comes every 30sec it probably means a metro would have been better. So frustrating for it to not be part of the underground specially connected to the waterloo and city line would have been crazy useful.

  • @clickbait5714
    @clickbait5714 Před 3 lety +3

    I wasn't in a band called "The lost tube line".

  • @michaelbaker2465
    @michaelbaker2465 Před 4 lety +7

    In 2020 it's already had a new lease of life since it connects with the network line at Finsbury Park to carry on going North. And new trains as well, replacing those rather sad looking things in the video, and the stations are better lit taking away that certain atmosphere that some of them had!
    It can still be pretty lonely at weekends though, especially at Highbury and Islington. And you can hear the trains coming from quite some distance away. They are a tight fit in the tunnel.

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  Před 4 lety +3

      Michael Baker Aww, I liked the gloom.

    • @michaelbaker2465
      @michaelbaker2465 Před 4 lety +3

      @@JagoHazzard The long winding corridor to get to the platforms at H&I, which I think is pictured above, is still the same, and at weekend just as lonely.

    • @LKeet6
      @LKeet6 Před 4 lety +1

      @@michaelbaker2465 the platform is directly opposite the victoria line platform, with connecting openings all along, going one way. It may be quiet on weekends, but it's VERY busy at weekday rush hours!

    • @apuldram
      @apuldram Před 3 lety

      Those “sad looking things” are still available here on the South Coast. Awful.

  • @MsGrandunion
    @MsGrandunion Před 4 lety +1

    I don't recall the Moorgate crash being a "mystery". Pretty sure the driver collapsed, and stayed slumped on the accelerator or equivalent. I don't remember if Dead Man's Handles existed then, if they did then he collapsed onto it.

    • @LEuington6
      @LEuington6 Před 4 lety

      I think they mean the mystery as to why the driver crashed as he wasn’t slumped over, witnesses on the platform before the train hit the dead end all mentioned they saw the driver with a blank expression just facing forward as the train accelerated

  • @eattherich9215
    @eattherich9215 Před 3 lety +1

    I've ridden that line for exhibitions at Alexandra Palace. Fortunately, I have never been that lone traveller @0:29.

  • @NeilAJ100
    @NeilAJ100 Před 3 lety +1

    Jago - Your take on the Moorgate tube disaster would be of interest.

  • @chrismaton01
    @chrismaton01 Před 4 lety +2

    Having walked the Northern Heights routes on a couple of occasions where it has been converted to a Green Walk, I would be very interested in seeing any period footage of any parts of the line preferably under steam haulage. I believe this would be LNER who probably ran the various routes up to the pre-war years including Alexander Palace where the station still exists.

    • @michaelberg9656
      @michaelberg9656 Před 4 lety

      I made a simulation of the Alexandra Palace branch, see here, czcams.com/video/yYx25GY7Bvs/video.html

  • @philrabe910
    @philrabe910 Před 3 lety

    When you mentioned the Moorgate disaster I said I wonder what the big American subway dis... And then it hit me I was living in Chicago in '76 when I got my driver license so we hopped in the car and drove downtown to see the CTA el train dangling off the 10m elevated trackway and the squished train and cars below... Not as deadly at all but so much more... Bigly visible. It was one of 6 or 8 slow 90° corners in "The Loop" that trains navigate hundreds of times daily. So not a signaling error. Union said mechanical, but it could have been a medical issue with the driver.

  • @vrooom666
    @vrooom666 Před 3 lety

    brillant stuff, london has so many hidden gems, im sure there is more hidden stuff underground that public dont know.