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Cannon Street station

Cannon Street station, also known as London Cannon Street,[3] is a central London railway terminus and connected London Underground station in Travelcard zone 1 located on Cannon Street in the City of London and managed by Network Rail. It is one of two London termini of the South Eastern Main Line, the other being Charing Cross, while the Underground station is on the Circle and District lines, between Monument and Mansion House. The station runs services by Southeastern, mostly catering for commuters in southeast London and Kent, with occasional services further into the latter.

Cannon Street
London Cannon Street
Main entrance
Cannon Street
Location of Cannon Street in Central London
LocationCannon Street
Local authorityCity of London
Grid referenceTQ326808
Managed byNetwork Rail
Station codeCST
DfT categoryA
Number of platforms7
AccessibleYes
Fare zone1
OSIBank [1]
National Rail annual entry and exit
2017–18 23.447 million[2]
2018–19 20.615 million[2]
2019–20 18.513 million[2]
2020–21 2.684 million[2]
2021–22 7.024 million[2]
Railway companies
Original companySouth Eastern Railway
Pre-groupingSouth Eastern and Chatham Railway
Post-groupingSouthern Railway
Key dates
1 September 1866Opened
5 June 1926Closed
28 June 1926Reopened
5 August 1974Closed
9 September 1974Reopened
Other information
External links
  • Departures
  • Layout
  • Facilities
  • Buses
WGS8451°30′37″N 0°05′27″W / 51.5104°N 0.0907°W / 51.5104; -0.0907Coordinates: 51°30′37″N 0°05′27″W / 51.5104°N 0.0907°W / 51.5104; -0.0907
 London transport portal

The station was built on a site of the medieval steelyard, the trading base in England of the Hanseatic League. It was built by the South Eastern Railway in order to have a railway terminal in the City and compete with the rival London, Chatham and Dover Railway. This required a new bridge across the River Thames, which was constructed between 1863 and 1866. The station was initially a stop for continental services from Charing Cross, and that route was convenient for travel between the City and the West End, until the construction of the District Railway. It remained popular with commuters, though its off-peak services were discontinued in the early 20th century, leading to it being closed on Sundays for almost 100 years. The original hotel on the station was unsuccessful, and eventually closed. The station was controversially renovated in the late 1950s by John Poulson, while further construction on top of the station building occurred during the City's 1980s property boom. The Poulson building was replaced in 2007 as part of a general renovation of the station to make it more accessible. As part of the Thameslink Programme development in the 2010s, it was re-opened on Sundays and began to offer more long-distance services in place of Charing Cross.

Location

 
Cannon Street Railway Bridge, 2005

Cannon Street is a terminal station, approached across the River Thames by the Cannon Street Railway Bridge. Its approach by rail is through a triangular connection to both London Bridge and Charing Cross. It is one of eighteen stations in the country that are managed by Network Rail.[4]

There were originally eight platforms; a refurbishment in the late 1990s removed the original platform 1.[5] It has entrances on Cannon Street itself and Dowgate Hill. It is located near London Stone (to the north of the station).

London Buses routes 15, 17, 21, 35, 43, 47, 133, 141, 149, 344, 388, 521 and night routes N8, N11, N15, N21, N25, N26, N133, N199, N242, N550 and N551 serve the station.[6][7]

History

Original structure

 
Front of original station building, c. 1910

Cannon Street station was built on a site where the Hanseatic merchants' steelyard had been based from the 10th century until 1598.[8] The site was proposed in 1860 by the South Eastern Railway (SER) in response to its rival, the London, Chatham & Dover Railway (LC&DR), extending a line into the City of London as far north as Ludgate Hill. The SER had already made plans to extend its line towards Charing Cross, but decided that it should complement this with a terminus in the City.[9]

In 1861, the company obtained an act for a station in Cannon Street, a short distance from Mansion House and the Bank of England.[9] In addition to taking traffic from the LC&DR, the new station would provide a direct railway link between the City and the West End, over which a journey could be made in a fraction of the time taken travelling by road.[10] The approach was a 60-chain (4,000 ft; 1,200 m) branch of the line to Charing Cross, west of London Bridge. Work started on the station and its approach in July 1863.[11] The construction work was undertaken by Lucas Brothers.[12]

The station was opened on 1 September 1866[11] at a cost of £4 million (now £394 million).[13] The original building was designed by Sir John Hawkshaw and John Wolfe-Barry and was characterised by its two Christopher Wren-style towers, 23 ft (7.0 m) square and 135 ft (41 m) high, which faced on to the River Thames. The towers supported an iron train shed, 700 ft (210 m) long and crowned by a high single arch, almost semicircular, of glass and iron. The station is carried over Upper Thames Street on a brick viaduct, 700 ft (210 m) long and containing 27 million bricks.[14] Below this viaduct exist the remains of a number of Roman buildings, which form a scheduled monument.[15] The bridge was open to pedestrians between 1872 and 1877; they paid a toll of ½d.[11]

 
Original station viewed from the railway bridge, c. 1910

The five-storey City Terminus Hotel, which fronted the station, was opened in May 1867. It was an Italianate style hotel and forecourt, designed by E. M. Barry, and it provided many of the station's passenger facilities, as well as an appropriate architectural frontispiece to the street. This arrangement was very similar to that put in place at Charing Cross.[16] The hotel was also built by Lucas Brothers.[12] The hotel was not profitable, and was over £47,000 (now £4,784,000) in debt by 1870.[17] The City Terminus Hotel was renamed the Cannon Street Hotel in 1879.[5] In July 1920, the hotel was the venue for the Foundation Congress of the Communist Party of Great Britain. Most of the hotel was closed in 1931, but the public rooms were kept open for meetings. The rest were converted into offices and renamed Southern House.[16] The hotel is referred to in The Fire Sermon section of T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land.[18]

Upon its opening Cannon Street station was a stopping point for all services to and from Charing Cross, including boat trains to Continental Europe. A shuttle service between the two stations ran every 20 minutes and became a popular way of travelling between the City and the West End.[16] However, the opening of the District Railway as far as Blackfriars caused traffic to decline, and its extension to Mansion House the following year reduced it further. The SER's route could not compete with the Underground, which was more direct and reliable,[19] but suburban traffic to Cannon Street remained popular, and the bridge was widened to 120 feet (37 m) in the late 1880s, allowing ten tracks with sidings. The rebuilt bridge was opened on 13 February 1892.[20] The signal boxes outside the station were upgraded the following year.[21]

The SER merged with the LC&DR in 1899 to form the South Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR). The following year, the station was earmarked for part-time closures as it relied primarily on business travel, but this was rejected. A further proposal was a monorail running between London Bridge and Cannon Street, at an estimated cost of £100,000; this was also abandoned.[22] The London and Southwestern Railway (LSWR) became interested in using Cannon Street as a terminus, as it would allow a connection between Waterloo and the City.[23]

War years

Work on strengthening the bridge, by the addition of six new 443-foot (135 m) girders in between the existing ones, was completed in 1913.[20]

Most Cannon Street train services ceased during World War I. Continental boat trains were stopped on 15 November 1914 and rerouted to Victoria. The station stopped being served by through services from Charing Cross on 31 December 1916, and was closed on Sundays. Services were reduced further on 1 May 1918, when it was closed after 3 p.m. on Saturdays and between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. Mondays to Fridays. This allowed Cannon Street to be used as a goods depot for war supplies.[24]

 
The station in 1923, in an etching by Ian Strang

Between 5 and 28 June 1926, the station was closed to allow the Southern Railway to carry out various works, including the rebuilding of the platforms, relaying of the tracks and installation of a new system of electrical signalling – the four-aspect colour light scheme. The station was also renovated and the glass roof cleaned. The number of platforms was reduced from nine to eight, with five set aside for the new electric trains. The signal box spanning the width of the railway bridge was removed.[25] In July 1939, Cannon Street was closed for a week following a fire in Borough Market which prevented any trains accessing it.[26]

The station, which had been subject to structural neglect prior to World War II, suffered extensive bomb damage and was hit by several incendiary devices which damaged the roof. A high explosive also hit platform 8.[27] The original glass roof had been removed before the war, in an attempt to save it; however, the factory in which the roof was stored was itself badly bombed, destroying the roof.[5]

Redevelopment

 
Cannon Street station in 1969, showing the easterly of the twin towers

Following nationalisation of the railways in 1948, the station was managed by the Southern Region of British Railways. The station's prime location coupled with the property boom of the 1950s and the need for British Rail to seek alternative revenue streams made war-damaged Cannon Street a key target for property developers.[28] Steam trains stopped running from Cannon Street in 1961 [29]

Various plans were mooted for the reconstruction of the station, from the installation of a new ticket hall and concourse under Southern House in 1955 as part of British Rail's Modernisation Plan to the construction of a car park estimated to cost £125,000 (now £3,489,000)[28] and even a helipad.[a][30] In 1962, the British Transport Commission entered into an agreement with Town & Country Properties for the construction of a multi-storey office building above the station with 154,000 sq ft (14,300 m2) of floor space. The cost of the development was £2.35 million (now £48 million) and it was scheduled for completion by June 1965.[31]

In preparation for redevelopment, the remains of the train shed roof had been demolished in 1958, and Barry's hotel (which had been used as offices since 1931) soon followed in 1960.[32] The architect selected to design the new building was John Poulson who was good friends with Graham Tunbridge, a British Rail surveyor whom he had met during the war. Poulson took advantage of this friendship to win contracts for the redevelopment of various British Rail termini. He paid Tunbridge a weekly income of £25 and received in return building contracts, including the rebuilding of Waterloo and East Croydon stations. At his trial in 1974, Poulson admitted that, shortly before receiving the Cannon Street building contract, he had given Tunbridge a cheque for £200 and a suit worth £80.[33] Poulson was later found guilty of corruption charges and given a seven-year concurrent sentence; Tunbridge received a 15-month suspended sentence and a £4,000 fine for his role in the affair.[34]

All that now remains of the original station architecture are the twin 120 ft (37 m) yellow brick towers at the country-end and parts of the low flanking walls.[5]

Modern era

 
John Poulson's office block in 2007 prior to redevelopment

The station's twin brick towers were listed Grade II in 1972.[35][36] In 1974, the station was closed for five weeks from 2 August to 9 September to enable alterations to be made to the track and the approaches to London Bridge to be resignalled. Traffic was diverted to London Bridge, Charing Cross and Blackfriars.[37] On 4 March 1976, a Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) bomb of about 10 lb (4.5 kg) exploded on an empty commuter train leaving Cannon Street, injuring eight people on another train travelling alongside.[b][38]

On 15 February 1984, it was reported in The Times that Cannon Street was to close. At the time, the station had been closed for weekends and evenings, and the publication of British Rail's new timetable for 1984–1985 revealed that it would lose all its direct off-peak services to the south-east. Services from Sevenoaks, Orpington, Hayes, Dartford, Sidcup, Bexleyheath, Woolwich, Lewisham and Greenwich would instead terminate at London Bridge except during peak hours.[39] This was denied by British Rail (Southern)'s manager David Kirby, who pointed out that it had invested £10 million in redecking the railway bridge, and that passengers travelling from the south-east during off-peak hours would most likely be visiting the West End and not the City.[40]

In 1986, the twin towers were restored in a project costing £242,000 (now £3,397,000). The works revealed that the east tower still contained a large water tank which was used during the days of steam traction to replenish locomotives and to power the station's hydraulic systems. The brickwork was repaired, cleaned and repointed, and the weather vanes gilded to complement the dome of nearby St Paul's Cathedral. This work was one of the Railway Heritage Trust's first projects and coincided with an exhibition held in the station in August of the same year to mark its 150th anniversary.[41]

 
The Plumber's Apprentice by Martin Jennings, unveiled in 2011 to mark the 400th anniversary of the Worshipful Company of Plumbers whose Guild Hall was demolished to make way for the station.[42]

In the 1980s, there was another property boom and British Rail again began looking into further commercial uses of the Cannon Street landspace, including 500,000 square feet (46,000 m2) of office space.[43] The air rights over the platforms to the rear of Poulson's office were sold to Speyhawk which appointed Bovis Construction to build a free-standing structure comprising two office blocks on a 6,000 tonne steel deck constructed over the station's eight platforms.[5] The Cannons Club, a sports club, was founded beneath the station's arches around this time, and quickly became one of the most prestigious squash clubs in the country. InterCity, the high-speed arm of British Rail, subsequently sponsored the National Squash Championships and National Squash Challenge.[44]

The larger office block, the "Atrium building", provides 190,000 sq ft (18,000 m2) of office space on six floors and is linked to the smaller building, the "River building", via a glazed link raised through a central glazed atrium. The River building, which has two storeys, is built on the steel deck and contained within the station's two flank walls, which were rebuilt, providing 95,000 sq ft (8,800 m2) of office space. This building projects slightly beyond the restored twin towers which form the riverside boundary to the development.[45] The Atrium building was later let to the London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange (Liffe). The River building has a 1 acre (0.40 ha) roof garden. The project cost around £500,000 and was laid to comply with planning restrictions which required the building to be low and flat to maintain the sight lines from St Paul's to Tower Bridge.[46]

 
Cannon Street station seen from The Shard, showing roof garden and twin towers

Planning permission was granted in March 2007 to replace the Poulson building, with a new air rights building designed by Foggo Associates.[47] Hines, the US developer, led a £360 million project involving the demolition of Poulson's office block, replacing it with a mixed-use development containing more than 400,000 sq ft (37,000 m2) of office space alongside 17,000 sq ft (1,600 m2) of station retail space.[15] The redevelopment was part of a larger regeneration programme undertaken by Network Rail to modernise and "unlock the commercial potential" of the main London termini; Euston and London Bridge were also redeveloped. Network Rail's director of commercial property said that the finished station would be "less congested and more accessible for passengers."[48] Cannon Street won the award for "Major Station of the Year" at the 2013 National Rail Awards.[49]

In January 2015, the station's opening hours were extended to 0500–0100 Monday to Sunday (prior to this, the station had been closed on Sundays and during the evenings), and several services which previously terminated at Charing Cross were diverted to Cannon Street as a result of Thameslink Programme works. Some of these services will revert to terminating at Charing Cross following the completion of the works, while services from the Greenwich line and from New Cross and St Johns will permanently run to Cannon Street due to the removal of the Spa Road Junction.[50][51]

National Rail

 
The station viewed from the south bank of the Thames, 2020

The station connects the south side of the City to south and south-east London via London Bridge station. Some services run directly into Cannon Street from Kent and East Sussex, but only during rush hours. Occasionally during the weekends when track maintenance is in progress, the station serves as an intermediate station between London Bridge and Charing Cross. Either trains reverse at the station or rail passengers change trains here. From 1918 to 2015, the station was closed on Sundays; this changed with Southeastern's introduction of a new timetable from January 2015 which resulted in the station's opening hours being extended over the entire week,[52] except when engineering works require its closure and services are diverted to Charing Cross.[53]

Services

All services at London Cannon Street are operated by Southeastern using Class 375, 376, 465, 466 and 707 EMUs.

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[54]

During peak hours, there are also services to Barnehurst via Bexleyheath as well as long distance services to Ashford International, Tunbridge Wells, Hastings and Ore, and to Ramsgate and Dover Priory via Chatham.[55]

Preceding station   National Rail Following station
TerminusSoutheastern

Accidents and incidents

  • On 26 December 1867, seven passengers and three train crew members were injured when, "during a very thick fog", a train arriving at Cannon Street from Greenwich collided with another from Waterloo due to a signaller's error.[56]
  • On 27 June 1914, one person was killed and 20 were injured in a collision and subsequent derailment at Cannon Street. A train departing for Hastings was in a side-long collision with a train arriving, across its path, from Plumstead and, although the collision occurred at low speed, part of the Plumstead service was derailed and one of its carriages overturned. The driver of the Plumstead service was blamed for a failure to observe, and a misreading of, signals which took his train into the path of the Hastings-bound service. An investigation found the man who died was likely leaning out of the window at the moment his carriage overturned, and he might have avoided serious injury had he been seated.[57]
  • On 16 July 1919, 75 people were injured or left shaken when a train arriving from Dartford hit the buffers at the end of Cannon Street's platform seven. Twelve of the injured required hospital treatment. A Board of Trade report into the incident blamed "an error of judgment" on the driver's part while he was braking on his approach to the platform end.[58]
  • On 11 May 1941, the station was bombed in a Luftwaffe air raid. At least one locomotive was severely damaged.[59]
  • On 20 March 1951, a diesel electric multiple unit and an electric multiple unit were in a side-long collision when the driver of the latter misread signals.[60]
  • On 5 April 1957, the signal box was destroyed by a fire due to an electrical fault. The station was consequently put out of action. Using hand signals, a skeleton service was put in place on 8 April. A temporary signal box was erected which came into operation on 5 May. Steam locomotives were temporarily banned from using the station, with Hastings Units being introduced into service earlier than planned. A full service was resumed from 6 May. Construction of a new signal box began on 19 April and it came into service on 16 December.[61]
  • On 20 March 1961, a side-long collision and partial derailment resulted in injury to 12 people aboard an arriving service whose driver inadvertently passed a red signal and ran into an empty train as it left Cannon Street.[62]
  • On 4 March 1976, a bomb exploded on an empty electric multiple unit at the station. Eight people in an adjacent train were injured.[63]
  • On 20 August 1989, the Marchioness pleasure boat sank close to Cannon Street Railway Bridge, killing 51 people.[64]
  • On 8 January 1991, two people were killed and hundreds were injured when an electric multiple unit failed to stop on a dead-end platform and collided with the buffers.[65]

London Underground

Cannon Street  
 
Entrance from Dowgate Hill
LocationCannon Street
Local authorityCity of London
Managed byLondon Underground
Number of platforms2
AccessibleYes(Westbound only)[66]
Fare zone1
London Underground annual entry and exit
2017  9.39 million[67]
2018  7.43 million[68]
2019  7.11 million[69]
2020  1.56 million[70]
2021  2.15 million[71]
Key dates
1884Opened (MICCR)
Other information
External links
  • TfL station info page
  London transport portal

The London Underground station is sub-surface, situated immediately below the main line station. It is served by the District and Circle lines.[72] Entrances are located on Cannon Street, Dowgate Hill, and on the main line concourse upstairs at the National Rail station, providing an interconnection for commuters.[73] An out of station interchange with Bank station has been running since 2018.[74]

History

By 1876, the Metropolitan Railway (MR) and District Railway (DR) had constructed the majority of the Inner Circle (now the Circle line), reaching Aldgate and Mansion House respectively.[75] The companies were in dispute over the completion of the route as the DR was struggling financially and the MR was concerned that completion would affect its revenues through increased competition from the DR in the City area. In 1874, city financiers who were keen to see the line completed established the Metropolitan Inner Circle Completion Railway (MICCR) to link Mansion House to Aldgate.[76][77] Forced into action, the MR bought out the company, and it and the DR began construction of the final section of the Inner Circle in 1879.[76]

On 6 October 1884, the final section of the Inner Circle was opened, along with Cannon Street station.[78] Initially, the station was served by trains of both companies as part of the circular Inner Circle service, but various operational patterns have been used during the station's life.[79] The Inner Circle service achieved a separate identity as the Circle line in 1949, although its trains were still provided by the District or Metropolitan lines.[80]

A station here was part of the abandoned phase two expansion of the Fleet line (now Jubilee line). It had originally been planned in 1943, and was revived as a major transport plan in 1965.[81] London Transport spent £10m (now £140m) in 1972 safeguarding the route underneath Cannon Street and building reinforcements for laying a tube in the water-bearing ground around the station. The plan was abandoned in the early 1980s in favour of the current extension further south.[82]

The Underground station underwent major reconstruction at the same time as the main line station, with the work being completed in 2012. From 14 December 2014, the station's opening hours changed significantly, with the station opening on Sundays and no longer closing early in the evenings.[83] The station previously had restricted opening hours because it primarily served the local financial services sector, so there was low demand for services outside office hours. However, with the main line station's opening hours being extended due to the Thameslink Programme, the Underground station's opening hours were changed to accommodate the additional passengers.[citation needed]

Preceding station   London Underground Following station
Mansion House
towards Edgware Road via Victoria
Circle line
Monument
Mansion House District line
Monument
towards Upminster
Abandoned plans
Preceding station   London Underground Following station
Ludgate Circus
towards Stanmore
Jubilee line
Phase 2 (never constructed)
Fenchurch Street

References

Notes

  1. ^ The preferred site was the old Nine Elms goods yard in Battersea
  2. ^ Had the bomb exploded 13 minutes earlier it would have caused widespread carnage as the train had been carrying hundreds of commuters on a service from Sevenoaks.[38]

Citations

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  2. ^ a b c d e "Estimates of station usage". Rail statistics. Office of Rail Regulation. Please note: Some methodology may vary year on year.
  3. ^ "Station facilities for London Cannon Street". National Rail Enquiries. from the original on 12 June 2013. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  4. ^ "Our stations". NetworkRail. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e Christopher 2015, p. 123.
  6. ^ "Buses from Monument and Cannon Street" (PDF). TfL. 30 November 2019. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
  7. ^ "Night buses from City of London" (PDF). TfL. 30 November 2019. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  8. ^ Weinreb et al. 2008, p. 127.
  9. ^ a b Jackson 1984, p. 172.
  10. ^ Gray 1990, p. 114.
  11. ^ a b c Jackson 1984, p. 173.
  12. ^ a b "Obituary: Charles Thomas Lucas 1820-1895". Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. Institution of Civil Engineers. 124 (1896): 440. 1896. doi:10.1680/imotp.1896.19616. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  13. ^ Ball & Sunderland 2002, p. 214.
  14. ^ McCarthy & McCarthy 2009, p. 69.
  15. ^ a b Allinson & Thornton 2014, p. 58.
  16. ^ a b c Jackson 1984, p. 175.
  17. ^ Gray 1990, p. 120.
  18. ^ Foundation, Poetry (15 May 2019). "The Waste Land by T. S. Eliot". Poetry Foundation.
  19. ^ Jackson 1984, p. 176.
  20. ^ a b Jackson 1984, p. 177.
  21. ^ Gray 1990, p. 124.
  22. ^ Gray 1998, p. 41.
  23. ^ Gray 1990, p. 119.
  24. ^ Jackson 1984, pp. 177–178.
  25. ^ "Cannon Street Station Reopened". The Times. 29 June 1926. p. 8.
  26. ^ "Cannon Street Station Reopened". The Times. 25 July 1939. p. 9.
  27. ^ "London Termini Bomb Damage". The Times. 19 November 1943. p. 8.
  28. ^ a b "Rebuilding of Cannon Street Station". The Times. 17 November 1955. p. 15.
  29. ^ Davies & Grant 1983, p. 47.
  30. ^ "First Choice for Helicopter Site". The Times. 3 March 1962. p. 6.
  31. ^ "Big New Buildings Over Two London Termini". The Times. 22 March 1962. p. 12.
  32. ^ Weinreb et al. 2008, p. 128.
  33. ^ "John Poulson tells of gifts to rail man". The Times. 15 January 1974. p. 4.
  34. ^ "Seven-year concurrent sentence on Mr Poulson". The Times. 16 March 1974. p. 3.
  35. ^ Historic England. "Pair of Towers at Cannon Street Station: Western Tower to Cannon Street Station (Grade II) (1192326)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
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  37. ^ "Cannon Street station closing for five weeks". The Times. 29 July 1974. p. 3.
  38. ^ a b "Thirteen minutes saved hundreds on the 7.49 from Sevenoaks". The Times. 5 March 1976. p. 2.
  39. ^ "Cannon Street rail station 'near to closure'". The Times. 15 February 1984. p. 2.
  40. ^ Kirby, David (22 February 1984). "Cannon Street Station". The Times. p. 15.
  41. ^ "Restoration at Cannon Street". The Times. 2 December 1985. p. 2.
  42. ^ "Statue: Plumber's Apprentice statue". London Remembers. from the original on 8 April 2016. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  43. ^ Hutley, Judith (17 March 1986). "BR names Cannon St shortlist". The Times. p. 20.
  44. ^ McQuillan, Colin (17 September 1986). "Branching out with more support". The Times. p. 37. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  45. ^ "Construction Contracts: Building Over Busy Station". Financial Times. 6 March 1989.
  46. ^ "City garden feels the frost". The Times. 27 November 1991. p. 40.
  47. ^ "Foggo Wins Green Light for Cannon Street Station Redesign". Architects Journal. 21 March 2007. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  48. ^ "Cannon Street to lead revamp of stations". The Times. 6 April 2007. p. 55.
  49. ^ Prentice, Paul (27 November 2013). "Boom time for Cannon Street station". RAIL. No. 736. pp. 48–53. ISSN 0953-4563.
  50. ^ . Southern Railway. January 2015. Archived from the original on 20 April 2015. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
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  54. ^ Table 199, 200, 201, 203, 204, 206, 207, 212 National Rail timetable, December 2021
  55. ^ "Timetables for London Cannon Street". Southeastern. Select an individual timetable to verify the service information. from the original on 19 July 2017. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
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  57. ^ "Accident at Cannon Street on 27th June 1914 :: The Railways Archive". www.railwaysarchive.co.uk.
  58. ^ "Accident Returns: Extract for the Accident at Cannon Street on 16th July 1919 :: The Railways Archive". www.railwaysarchive.co.uk.
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  63. ^ Moody, G. T. (1979) [1957]. Southern Electric 1909–1979 (Fifth ed.). Shepperton: Ian Allan Ltd. p. 231. ISBN 0-7110-0924-4.
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  72. ^ "Standard Tube Map" (PDF). Transport for London. (PDF) from the original on 25 June 2017. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
  73. ^ "Cannon Street Underground Station". Google Maps. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
  74. ^ "London's Tube Map needs to rethink how it shows Bank / Monument interchange". City Metric. 11 January 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  75. ^ Day & Reed 2008, pp. 255–256.
  76. ^ a b Brandon 2013, p. 58.
  77. ^ Martin 2012, p. 64.
  78. ^ Lee 1956, p. 47.
  79. ^ Martin 2012, p. 65.
  80. ^ Martin 2012, p. 66.
  81. ^ Mitchell 2003, p. 1.
  82. ^ Mitchell 2003, p. 3-4.
  83. ^ . Northbank News. Archived from the original on 4 April 2015. Retrieved 19 July 2017.

Sources

  • Allinson, Ken; Thornton, Victoria (2014). London's Contemporary Architecture: An Explorer's Guide. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-69046-7.
  • Ball, Michael; Sunderland, David (2002). An Economic History of London 1800–1914. ISBN 978-1-134-54030-3.
  • Brandon, David (2013). London And The Victorian Railway. Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-445-62926-1.
  • Christopher, John (2015). London's Historic Railway Stations Through Time. Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-445-65111-8.
  • Day, John R.; Reed, John (2008) [1963]. The Story of London's Underground (10th ed.). Capital Transport. ISBN 978-1-85414-316-7.
  • Davies, R.; Grant, M.D. (1983). London and its Railways. David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-8107-5.
  • Gray, Adrian (1990). South Eastern Railway. Middleton Press. ISBN 978-0-906520-85-7.
  • Gray, Adrian (1998). South Eastern and Chatham Railways. Middleton Press. ISBN 1-901706-08-7.
  • Jackson, Alan (1984) [1969]. London's Termini (New Revised ed.). London: David & Charles. ISBN 0-330-02747-6.
  • Lee, Charles Edward (1956). The Metropolitan District Railway. Oakwood Press.
  • Martin, Andrew (2012). Underground, Overground: A Passenger's History of the Tube. Profile Books. ISBN 978-1-847-65807-4.
  • McCarthy, Colin; McCarthy, David (2009). Railways of Britain – London North of the Thames. Hersham, Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7110-3346-7.
  • Mitchell, Bob (2003). Jubilee Line Extension: From Concept to Completion. Thomas Telford. ISBN 978-0-727-73028-2.
  • Weinreb, Ben; Hibbert, Christopher; Keay, Julia; Keay, John (2008). The London Encyclopedia. Pan MacMillan. ISBN 978-1-4050-4924-5.

Further reading

  • Lee, Charles E. (August 1966). "Cannon Street Station, 1866–1966, part one". Railway Magazine. No. 784. pp. 431–436.
  • Lee, Charles E. (September 1966). "Cannon Street Station, 1866-1966, part two". Railway Magazine. No. 785. pp. 500–505.

External links

  • London Transport Museum Photographic Archive
    • Underground station, 1896
    • Underground station and Cannon Street Hotel, 1916
    • Booking hall, 1928
    • Underground station entrance, 1939
    • Main line and Underground station entrances, 1974
  • Station information on Cannon Street railway station from Network Rail

cannon, street, station, other, stations, with, same, name, disambiguation, also, known, london, cannon, street, central, london, railway, terminus, connected, london, underground, station, travelcard, zone, located, cannon, street, city, london, managed, netw. For other stations with the same name see Cannon Street station disambiguation Cannon Street station also known as London Cannon Street 3 is a central London railway terminus and connected London Underground station in Travelcard zone 1 located on Cannon Street in the City of London and managed by Network Rail It is one of two London termini of the South Eastern Main Line the other being Charing Cross while the Underground station is on the Circle and District lines between Monument and Mansion House The station runs services by Southeastern mostly catering for commuters in southeast London and Kent with occasional services further into the latter Cannon StreetLondon Cannon StreetMain entranceCannon StreetLocation of Cannon Street in Central LondonLocationCannon StreetLocal authorityCity of LondonGrid referenceTQ326808Managed byNetwork RailStation codeCSTDfT categoryANumber of platforms7AccessibleYesFare zone1OSIBank 1 National Rail annual entry and exit2017 1823 447 million 2 2018 1920 615 million 2 2019 2018 513 million 2 2020 212 684 million 2 2021 227 024 million 2 Railway companiesOriginal companySouth Eastern RailwayPre groupingSouth Eastern and Chatham RailwayPost groupingSouthern RailwayKey dates1 September 1866Opened5 June 1926Closed28 June 1926Reopened5 August 1974Closed9 September 1974ReopenedOther informationExternal linksDepartures Layout Facilities BusesWGS8451 30 37 N 0 05 27 W 51 5104 N 0 0907 W 51 5104 0 0907 Coordinates 51 30 37 N 0 05 27 W 51 5104 N 0 0907 W 51 5104 0 0907 London transport portalThe station was built on a site of the medieval steelyard the trading base in England of the Hanseatic League It was built by the South Eastern Railway in order to have a railway terminal in the City and compete with the rival London Chatham and Dover Railway This required a new bridge across the River Thames which was constructed between 1863 and 1866 The station was initially a stop for continental services from Charing Cross and that route was convenient for travel between the City and the West End until the construction of the District Railway It remained popular with commuters though its off peak services were discontinued in the early 20th century leading to it being closed on Sundays for almost 100 years The original hotel on the station was unsuccessful and eventually closed The station was controversially renovated in the late 1950s by John Poulson while further construction on top of the station building occurred during the City s 1980s property boom The Poulson building was replaced in 2007 as part of a general renovation of the station to make it more accessible As part of the Thameslink Programme development in the 2010s it was re opened on Sundays and began to offer more long distance services in place of Charing Cross Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 Original structure 2 2 War years 2 3 Redevelopment 2 4 Modern era 3 National Rail 3 1 Services 3 2 Accidents and incidents 4 London Underground 4 1 History 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLocation Edit Cannon Street Railway Bridge 2005 Cannon Street is a terminal station approached across the River Thames by the Cannon Street Railway Bridge Its approach by rail is through a triangular connection to both London Bridge and Charing Cross It is one of eighteen stations in the country that are managed by Network Rail 4 There were originally eight platforms a refurbishment in the late 1990s removed the original platform 1 5 It has entrances on Cannon Street itself and Dowgate Hill It is located near London Stone to the north of the station London Buses routes 15 17 21 35 43 47 133 141 149 344 388 521 and night routes N8 N11 N15 N21 N25 N26 N133 N199 N242 N550 and N551 serve the station 6 7 History EditOriginal structure Edit Front of original station building c 1910 Cannon Street station was built on a site where the Hanseatic merchants steelyard had been based from the 10th century until 1598 8 The site was proposed in 1860 by the South Eastern Railway SER in response to its rival the London Chatham amp Dover Railway LC amp DR extending a line into the City of London as far north as Ludgate Hill The SER had already made plans to extend its line towards Charing Cross but decided that it should complement this with a terminus in the City 9 In 1861 the company obtained an act for a station in Cannon Street a short distance from Mansion House and the Bank of England 9 In addition to taking traffic from the LC amp DR the new station would provide a direct railway link between the City and the West End over which a journey could be made in a fraction of the time taken travelling by road 10 The approach was a 60 chain 4 000 ft 1 200 m branch of the line to Charing Cross west of London Bridge Work started on the station and its approach in July 1863 11 The construction work was undertaken by Lucas Brothers 12 The station was opened on 1 September 1866 11 at a cost of 4 million now 394 million 13 The original building was designed by Sir John Hawkshaw and John Wolfe Barry and was characterised by its two Christopher Wren style towers 23 ft 7 0 m square and 135 ft 41 m high which faced on to the River Thames The towers supported an iron train shed 700 ft 210 m long and crowned by a high single arch almost semicircular of glass and iron The station is carried over Upper Thames Street on a brick viaduct 700 ft 210 m long and containing 27 million bricks 14 Below this viaduct exist the remains of a number of Roman buildings which form a scheduled monument 15 The bridge was open to pedestrians between 1872 and 1877 they paid a toll of d 11 Original station viewed from the railway bridge c 1910 The five storey City Terminus Hotel which fronted the station was opened in May 1867 It was an Italianate style hotel and forecourt designed by E M Barry and it provided many of the station s passenger facilities as well as an appropriate architectural frontispiece to the street This arrangement was very similar to that put in place at Charing Cross 16 The hotel was also built by Lucas Brothers 12 The hotel was not profitable and was over 47 000 now 4 784 000 in debt by 1870 17 The City Terminus Hotel was renamed the Cannon Street Hotel in 1879 5 In July 1920 the hotel was the venue for the Foundation Congress of the Communist Party of Great Britain Most of the hotel was closed in 1931 but the public rooms were kept open for meetings The rest were converted into offices and renamed Southern House 16 The hotel is referred to in The Fire Sermon section of T S Eliot s The Waste Land 18 Upon its opening Cannon Street station was a stopping point for all services to and from Charing Cross including boat trains to Continental Europe A shuttle service between the two stations ran every 20 minutes and became a popular way of travelling between the City and the West End 16 However the opening of the District Railway as far as Blackfriars caused traffic to decline and its extension to Mansion House the following year reduced it further The SER s route could not compete with the Underground which was more direct and reliable 19 but suburban traffic to Cannon Street remained popular and the bridge was widened to 120 feet 37 m in the late 1880s allowing ten tracks with sidings The rebuilt bridge was opened on 13 February 1892 20 The signal boxes outside the station were upgraded the following year 21 The SER merged with the LC amp DR in 1899 to form the South Eastern and Chatham Railway SECR The following year the station was earmarked for part time closures as it relied primarily on business travel but this was rejected A further proposal was a monorail running between London Bridge and Cannon Street at an estimated cost of 100 000 this was also abandoned 22 The London and Southwestern Railway LSWR became interested in using Cannon Street as a terminus as it would allow a connection between Waterloo and the City 23 War years Edit Work on strengthening the bridge by the addition of six new 443 foot 135 m girders in between the existing ones was completed in 1913 20 Most Cannon Street train services ceased during World War I Continental boat trains were stopped on 15 November 1914 and rerouted to Victoria The station stopped being served by through services from Charing Cross on 31 December 1916 and was closed on Sundays Services were reduced further on 1 May 1918 when it was closed after 3 p m on Saturdays and between 11 a m and 4 p m Mondays to Fridays This allowed Cannon Street to be used as a goods depot for war supplies 24 The station in 1923 in an etching by Ian Strang Between 5 and 28 June 1926 the station was closed to allow the Southern Railway to carry out various works including the rebuilding of the platforms relaying of the tracks and installation of a new system of electrical signalling the four aspect colour light scheme The station was also renovated and the glass roof cleaned The number of platforms was reduced from nine to eight with five set aside for the new electric trains The signal box spanning the width of the railway bridge was removed 25 In July 1939 Cannon Street was closed for a week following a fire in Borough Market which prevented any trains accessing it 26 The station which had been subject to structural neglect prior to World War II suffered extensive bomb damage and was hit by several incendiary devices which damaged the roof A high explosive also hit platform 8 27 The original glass roof had been removed before the war in an attempt to save it however the factory in which the roof was stored was itself badly bombed destroying the roof 5 Redevelopment Edit Cannon Street station in 1969 showing the easterly of the twin towers Following nationalisation of the railways in 1948 the station was managed by the Southern Region of British Railways The station s prime location coupled with the property boom of the 1950s and the need for British Rail to seek alternative revenue streams made war damaged Cannon Street a key target for property developers 28 Steam trains stopped running from Cannon Street in 1961 29 Various plans were mooted for the reconstruction of the station from the installation of a new ticket hall and concourse under Southern House in 1955 as part of British Rail s Modernisation Plan to the construction of a car park estimated to cost 125 000 now 3 489 000 28 and even a helipad a 30 In 1962 the British Transport Commission entered into an agreement with Town amp Country Properties for the construction of a multi storey office building above the station with 154 000 sq ft 14 300 m2 of floor space The cost of the development was 2 35 million now 48 million and it was scheduled for completion by June 1965 31 In preparation for redevelopment the remains of the train shed roof had been demolished in 1958 and Barry s hotel which had been used as offices since 1931 soon followed in 1960 32 The architect selected to design the new building was John Poulson who was good friends with Graham Tunbridge a British Rail surveyor whom he had met during the war Poulson took advantage of this friendship to win contracts for the redevelopment of various British Rail termini He paid Tunbridge a weekly income of 25 and received in return building contracts including the rebuilding of Waterloo and East Croydon stations At his trial in 1974 Poulson admitted that shortly before receiving the Cannon Street building contract he had given Tunbridge a cheque for 200 and a suit worth 80 33 Poulson was later found guilty of corruption charges and given a seven year concurrent sentence Tunbridge received a 15 month suspended sentence and a 4 000 fine for his role in the affair 34 All that now remains of the original station architecture are the twin 120 ft 37 m yellow brick towers at the country end and parts of the low flanking walls 5 Modern era Edit John Poulson s office block in 2007 prior to redevelopment The station s twin brick towers were listed Grade II in 1972 35 36 In 1974 the station was closed for five weeks from 2 August to 9 September to enable alterations to be made to the track and the approaches to London Bridge to be resignalled Traffic was diverted to London Bridge Charing Cross and Blackfriars 37 On 4 March 1976 a Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA bomb of about 10 lb 4 5 kg exploded on an empty commuter train leaving Cannon Street injuring eight people on another train travelling alongside b 38 On 15 February 1984 it was reported in The Times that Cannon Street was to close At the time the station had been closed for weekends and evenings and the publication of British Rail s new timetable for 1984 1985 revealed that it would lose all its direct off peak services to the south east Services from Sevenoaks Orpington Hayes Dartford Sidcup Bexleyheath Woolwich Lewisham and Greenwich would instead terminate at London Bridge except during peak hours 39 This was denied by British Rail Southern s manager David Kirby who pointed out that it had invested 10 million in redecking the railway bridge and that passengers travelling from the south east during off peak hours would most likely be visiting the West End and not the City 40 In 1986 the twin towers were restored in a project costing 242 000 now 3 397 000 The works revealed that the east tower still contained a large water tank which was used during the days of steam traction to replenish locomotives and to power the station s hydraulic systems The brickwork was repaired cleaned and repointed and the weather vanes gilded to complement the dome of nearby St Paul s Cathedral This work was one of the Railway Heritage Trust s first projects and coincided with an exhibition held in the station in August of the same year to mark its 150th anniversary 41 The Plumber s Apprentice by Martin Jennings unveiled in 2011 to mark the 400th anniversary of the Worshipful Company of Plumbers whose Guild Hall was demolished to make way for the station 42 In the 1980s there was another property boom and British Rail again began looking into further commercial uses of the Cannon Street landspace including 500 000 square feet 46 000 m2 of office space 43 The air rights over the platforms to the rear of Poulson s office were sold to Speyhawk which appointed Bovis Construction to build a free standing structure comprising two office blocks on a 6 000 tonne steel deck constructed over the station s eight platforms 5 The Cannons Club a sports club was founded beneath the station s arches around this time and quickly became one of the most prestigious squash clubs in the country InterCity the high speed arm of British Rail subsequently sponsored the National Squash Championships and National Squash Challenge 44 The larger office block the Atrium building provides 190 000 sq ft 18 000 m2 of office space on six floors and is linked to the smaller building the River building via a glazed link raised through a central glazed atrium The River building which has two storeys is built on the steel deck and contained within the station s two flank walls which were rebuilt providing 95 000 sq ft 8 800 m2 of office space This building projects slightly beyond the restored twin towers which form the riverside boundary to the development 45 The Atrium building was later let to the London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange Liffe The River building has a 1 acre 0 40 ha roof garden The project cost around 500 000 and was laid to comply with planning restrictions which required the building to be low and flat to maintain the sight lines from St Paul s to Tower Bridge 46 Cannon Street station seen from The Shard showing roof garden and twin towers Planning permission was granted in March 2007 to replace the Poulson building with a new air rights building designed by Foggo Associates 47 Hines the US developer led a 360 million project involving the demolition of Poulson s office block replacing it with a mixed use development containing more than 400 000 sq ft 37 000 m2 of office space alongside 17 000 sq ft 1 600 m2 of station retail space 15 The redevelopment was part of a larger regeneration programme undertaken by Network Rail to modernise and unlock the commercial potential of the main London termini Euston and London Bridge were also redeveloped Network Rail s director of commercial property said that the finished station would be less congested and more accessible for passengers 48 Cannon Street won the award for Major Station of the Year at the 2013 National Rail Awards 49 In January 2015 the station s opening hours were extended to 0500 0100 Monday to Sunday prior to this the station had been closed on Sundays and during the evenings and several services which previously terminated at Charing Cross were diverted to Cannon Street as a result of Thameslink Programme works Some of these services will revert to terminating at Charing Cross following the completion of the works while services from the Greenwich line and from New Cross and St Johns will permanently run to Cannon Street due to the removal of the Spa Road Junction 50 51 National Rail Edit The station viewed from the south bank of the Thames 2020 The station connects the south side of the City to south and south east London via London Bridge station Some services run directly into Cannon Street from Kent and East Sussex but only during rush hours Occasionally during the weekends when track maintenance is in progress the station serves as an intermediate station between London Bridge and Charing Cross Either trains reverse at the station or rail passengers change trains here From 1918 to 2015 the station was closed on Sundays this changed with Southeastern s introduction of a new timetable from January 2015 which resulted in the station s opening hours being extended over the entire week 52 except when engineering works require its closure and services are diverted to Charing Cross 53 Services Edit All services at London Cannon Street are operated by Southeastern using Class 375 376 465 466 and 707 EMUs The typical off peak service in trains per hour is 54 2 tph to Orpington via Grove Park 2 tph to Hayes via Catford Bridge 2 tph to Slade Green via Greenwich and Woolwich Arsenal returning to London Cannon Street via Sidcup 2 tph to Slade Green via Sidcup returning to London Cannon Street via Woolwich Arsenal and GreenwichDuring peak hours there are also services to Barnehurst via Bexleyheath as well as long distance services to Ashford International Tunbridge Wells Hastings and Ore and to Ramsgate and Dover Priory via Chatham 55 Preceding station National Rail Following stationTerminusSoutheasternSouth Eastern Main LineLondon BridgeAccidents and incidents Edit On 26 December 1867 seven passengers and three train crew members were injured when during a very thick fog a train arriving at Cannon Street from Greenwich collided with another from Waterloo due to a signaller s error 56 On 27 June 1914 one person was killed and 20 were injured in a collision and subsequent derailment at Cannon Street A train departing for Hastings was in a side long collision with a train arriving across its path from Plumstead and although the collision occurred at low speed part of the Plumstead service was derailed and one of its carriages overturned The driver of the Plumstead service was blamed for a failure to observe and a misreading of signals which took his train into the path of the Hastings bound service An investigation found the man who died was likely leaning out of the window at the moment his carriage overturned and he might have avoided serious injury had he been seated 57 On 16 July 1919 75 people were injured or left shaken when a train arriving from Dartford hit the buffers at the end of Cannon Street s platform seven Twelve of the injured required hospital treatment A Board of Trade report into the incident blamed an error of judgment on the driver s part while he was braking on his approach to the platform end 58 On 11 May 1941 the station was bombed in a Luftwaffe air raid At least one locomotive was severely damaged 59 On 20 March 1951 a diesel electric multiple unit and an electric multiple unit were in a side long collision when the driver of the latter misread signals 60 On 5 April 1957 the signal box was destroyed by a fire due to an electrical fault The station was consequently put out of action Using hand signals a skeleton service was put in place on 8 April A temporary signal box was erected which came into operation on 5 May Steam locomotives were temporarily banned from using the station with Hastings Units being introduced into service earlier than planned A full service was resumed from 6 May Construction of a new signal box began on 19 April and it came into service on 16 December 61 On 20 March 1961 a side long collision and partial derailment resulted in injury to 12 people aboard an arriving service whose driver inadvertently passed a red signal and ran into an empty train as it left Cannon Street 62 On 4 March 1976 a bomb exploded on an empty electric multiple unit at the station Eight people in an adjacent train were injured 63 On 20 August 1989 the Marchioness pleasure boat sank close to Cannon Street Railway Bridge killing 51 people 64 On 8 January 1991 two people were killed and hundreds were injured when an electric multiple unit failed to stop on a dead end platform and collided with the buffers 65 London Underground EditCannon Street Entrance from Dowgate HillLocationCannon StreetLocal authorityCity of LondonManaged byLondon UndergroundNumber of platforms2AccessibleYes Westbound only 66 Fare zone1London Underground annual entry and exit2017 9 39 million 67 2018 7 43 million 68 2019 7 11 million 69 2020 1 56 million 70 2021 2 15 million 71 Key dates1884Opened MICCR Other informationExternal linksTfL station info page London transport portalThe London Underground station is sub surface situated immediately below the main line station It is served by the District and Circle lines 72 Entrances are located on Cannon Street Dowgate Hill and on the main line concourse upstairs at the National Rail station providing an interconnection for commuters 73 An out of station interchange with Bank station has been running since 2018 74 History Edit By 1876 the Metropolitan Railway MR and District Railway DR had constructed the majority of the Inner Circle now the Circle line reaching Aldgate and Mansion House respectively 75 The companies were in dispute over the completion of the route as the DR was struggling financially and the MR was concerned that completion would affect its revenues through increased competition from the DR in the City area In 1874 city financiers who were keen to see the line completed established the Metropolitan Inner Circle Completion Railway MICCR to link Mansion House to Aldgate 76 77 Forced into action the MR bought out the company and it and the DR began construction of the final section of the Inner Circle in 1879 76 On 6 October 1884 the final section of the Inner Circle was opened along with Cannon Street station 78 Initially the station was served by trains of both companies as part of the circular Inner Circle service but various operational patterns have been used during the station s life 79 The Inner Circle service achieved a separate identity as the Circle line in 1949 although its trains were still provided by the District or Metropolitan lines 80 A station here was part of the abandoned phase two expansion of the Fleet line now Jubilee line It had originally been planned in 1943 and was revived as a major transport plan in 1965 81 London Transport spent 10m now 140m in 1972 safeguarding the route underneath Cannon Street and building reinforcements for laying a tube in the water bearing ground around the station The plan was abandoned in the early 1980s in favour of the current extension further south 82 The Underground station underwent major reconstruction at the same time as the main line station with the work being completed in 2012 From 14 December 2014 the station s opening hours changed significantly with the station opening on Sundays and no longer closing early in the evenings 83 The station previously had restricted opening hours because it primarily served the local financial services sector so there was low demand for services outside office hours However with the main line station s opening hours being extended due to the Thameslink Programme the Underground station s opening hours were changed to accommodate the additional passengers citation needed Preceding station London Underground Following stationMansion Housetowards Edgware Road via Victoria Circle line Monumenttowards Hammersmith via King s Cross St PancrasMansion Housetowards Wimbledon Richmond or Ealing Broadway District line Monumenttowards UpminsterAbandoned plansPreceding station London Underground Following stationLudgate Circustowards Stanmore Jubilee linePhase 2 never constructed Fenchurch Streettowards New Cross Gate or LewishamReferences EditNotes The preferred site was the old Nine Elms goods yard in Battersea Had the bomb exploded 13 minutes earlier it would have caused widespread carnage as the train had been carrying hundreds of commuters on a service from Sevenoaks 38 Citations Out of Station Interchanges XLSX Transport for London 16 June 2020 Retrieved 5 November 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d e Estimates of station usage Rail statistics Office of Rail Regulation Please note Some methodology may vary year on year Station facilities for London Cannon Street National Rail Enquiries Archived from the original on 12 June 2013 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Our stations NetworkRail Retrieved 10 December 2017 a b c d e Christopher 2015 p 123 Buses from Monument and Cannon Street PDF TfL 30 November 2019 Retrieved 31 May 2020 Night buses from City of London PDF TfL 30 November 2019 Retrieved 31 May 2019 Weinreb et al 2008 p 127 a b Jackson 1984 p 172 Gray 1990 p 114 a b c Jackson 1984 p 173 a b Obituary Charles Thomas Lucas 1820 1895 Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers Institution of Civil Engineers 124 1896 440 1896 doi 10 1680 imotp 1896 19616 Retrieved 21 October 2021 Ball amp Sunderland 2002 p 214 McCarthy amp McCarthy 2009 p 69 a b Allinson amp Thornton 2014 p 58 a b c Jackson 1984 p 175 Gray 1990 p 120 Foundation Poetry 15 May 2019 The Waste Land by T S Eliot Poetry Foundation Jackson 1984 p 176 a b Jackson 1984 p 177 Gray 1990 p 124 Gray 1998 p 41 Gray 1990 p 119 Jackson 1984 pp 177 178 Cannon Street Station Reopened The Times 29 June 1926 p 8 Cannon Street Station Reopened The Times 25 July 1939 p 9 London Termini Bomb Damage The Times 19 November 1943 p 8 a b Rebuilding of Cannon Street Station The Times 17 November 1955 p 15 Davies amp Grant 1983 p 47 First Choice for Helicopter Site The Times 3 March 1962 p 6 Big New Buildings Over Two London Termini The Times 22 March 1962 p 12 Weinreb et al 2008 p 128 John Poulson tells of gifts to rail man The Times 15 January 1974 p 4 Seven year concurrent sentence on Mr Poulson The Times 16 March 1974 p 3 Historic England Pair of Towers at Cannon Street Station Western Tower to Cannon Street Station Grade II 1192326 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 April 2020 Historic England Eastern Tower to Cannon Street Station Pair of Towers at Cannon Street Station Grade II 1359145 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 20 April 2020 Cannon Street station closing for five weeks The Times 29 July 1974 p 3 a b Thirteen minutes saved hundreds on the 7 49 from Sevenoaks The Times 5 March 1976 p 2 Cannon Street rail station near to closure The Times 15 February 1984 p 2 Kirby David 22 February 1984 Cannon Street Station The Times p 15 Restoration at Cannon Street The Times 2 December 1985 p 2 Statue Plumber s Apprentice statue London Remembers Archived from the original on 8 April 2016 Retrieved 30 June 2017 Hutley Judith 17 March 1986 BR names Cannon St shortlist The Times p 20 McQuillan Colin 17 September 1986 Branching out with more support The Times p 37 Retrieved 18 July 2017 Construction Contracts Building Over Busy Station Financial Times 6 March 1989 City garden feels the frost The Times 27 November 1991 p 40 Foggo Wins Green Light for Cannon Street Station Redesign Architects Journal 21 March 2007 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Cannon Street to lead revamp of stations The Times 6 April 2007 p 55 Prentice Paul 27 November 2013 Boom time for Cannon Street station RAIL No 736 pp 48 53 ISSN 0953 4563 Impacts and Travel Advice Southern Railway January 2015 Archived from the original on 20 April 2015 Retrieved 18 July 2017 Four Weeks To Go Before Cross London Thameslink Trains Stop Calling At London Bridge Network Rail News 25 November 2014 Retrieved 18 July 2017 Southeastern consults on changes to timetable in December 2014 Team London Bridge 9 January 2014 Archived from the original on 3 October 2015 Retrieved 29 July 2015 Collier Hatty 18 April 2015 London Bridge and Cannon Street closed to Southeastern passengers on Sunday News Shopper Archived from the original on 9 August 2015 Retrieved 29 July 2015 Table 199 200 201 203 204 206 207 212 National Rail timetable December 2021 Timetables for London Cannon Street Southeastern Select an individual timetable to verify the service information Archived from the original on 19 July 2017 Retrieved 19 July 2017 Accident at Cannon Street on 26th December 1867 The Railways Archive www railwaysarchive co uk Accident at Cannon Street on 27th June 1914 The Railways Archive www railwaysarchive co uk Accident Returns Extract for the Accident at Cannon Street on 16th July 1919 The Railways Archive www railwaysarchive co uk Earnshaw Alan 1993 Trains in Trouble Vol 8 Penryn Atlantic Books p 20 ISBN 0 906899 52 4 Earnshaw Alan 1989 Trains in Trouble Vol 5 Penryn Atlantic Books pp 40 41 ISBN 0 906899 35 4 Glover John 2001 Southern Electric Hersham Ian Allan pp 138 39 ISBN 0 7110 2807 9 Accident at Cannon Street on 20th March 1961 The Railways Archive www railwaysarchive co uk Moody G T 1979 1957 Southern Electric 1909 1979 Fifth ed Shepperton Ian Allan Ltd p 231 ISBN 0 7110 0924 4 Christopher 2015 p 124 On this Day 8 January 1991 One dead as train crashes into buffers BBC News Archived from the original on 8 January 2008 Retrieved 17 July 2017 Step free Tube Guide PDF Transport for London April 2021 Archived PDF from the original on 15 May 2021 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 Station Usage Data CSV Usage Statistics for London Stations 2018 Transport for London 21 August 2019 Archived from the original on 22 May 2020 Retrieved 27 April 2020 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 Station Usage Data XLSX Usage Statistics for London Stations 2020 Transport for London 16 April 2021 Retrieved 1 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Station Usage Data XLSX Usage Statistics for London Stations 2021 Transport for London 12 July 2022 Retrieved 7 September 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Standard Tube Map PDF Transport for London Archived PDF from the original on 25 June 2017 Retrieved 19 July 2017 Cannon Street Underground Station Google Maps Retrieved 19 July 2017 London s Tube Map needs to rethink how it shows Bank Monument interchange City Metric 11 January 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2020 Day amp Reed 2008 pp 255 256 a b Brandon 2013 p 58 Martin 2012 p 64 Lee 1956 p 47 Martin 2012 p 65 Martin 2012 p 66 Mitchell 2003 p 1 Mitchell 2003 p 3 4 Increased Services of District Line Trains from 14 Dec Northbank News Archived from the original on 4 April 2015 Retrieved 19 July 2017 Sources Allinson Ken Thornton Victoria 2014 London s Contemporary Architecture An Explorer s Guide Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 69046 7 Ball Michael Sunderland David 2002 An Economic History of London 1800 1914 ISBN 978 1 134 54030 3 Brandon David 2013 London And The Victorian Railway Amberley Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1 445 62926 1 Christopher John 2015 London s Historic Railway Stations Through Time Amberley Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1 445 65111 8 Day John R Reed John 2008 1963 The Story of London s Underground 10th ed Capital Transport ISBN 978 1 85414 316 7 Davies R Grant M D 1983 London and its Railways David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 8107 5 Gray Adrian 1990 South Eastern Railway Middleton Press ISBN 978 0 906520 85 7 Gray Adrian 1998 South Eastern and Chatham Railways Middleton Press ISBN 1 901706 08 7 Jackson Alan 1984 1969 London s Termini New Revised ed London David amp Charles ISBN 0 330 02747 6 Lee Charles Edward 1956 The Metropolitan District Railway Oakwood Press Martin Andrew 2012 Underground Overground A Passenger s History of the Tube Profile Books ISBN 978 1 847 65807 4 McCarthy Colin McCarthy David 2009 Railways of Britain London North of the Thames Hersham Surrey Ian Allan Publishing ISBN 978 0 7110 3346 7 Mitchell Bob 2003 Jubilee Line Extension From Concept to Completion Thomas Telford ISBN 978 0 727 73028 2 Weinreb Ben Hibbert Christopher Keay Julia Keay John 2008 The London Encyclopedia Pan MacMillan ISBN 978 1 4050 4924 5 Further reading EditLee Charles E August 1966 Cannon Street Station 1866 1966 part one Railway Magazine No 784 pp 431 436 Lee Charles E September 1966 Cannon Street Station 1866 1966 part two Railway Magazine No 785 pp 500 505 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cannon Street station London Transport Museum Photographic Archive Underground station 1896 Underground station and Cannon Street Hotel 1916 Booking hall 1928 Underground station entrance 1939 Main line and Underground station entrances 1974 Station information on Cannon Street railway station from Network Rail Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cannon Street station amp oldid 1124668250, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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