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Wikipedia

Northern line

The Northern line is a London Underground line that runs from North London to South London. It is printed in black on the Tube map. The Northern line is unique on the Underground network in having two different routes through central London, two southern branches and two northern branches. Despite its name, it does not serve the northernmost stations on the Underground, though it does serve the southernmost station at Morden, the terminus of one of the two southern branches.

Northern line
1995 Stock emerging from the tunnel north of Hendon Central
Overview
Stations52
Colour on mapBlack
Websitetfl.gov.uk
Service
TypeRapid transit
SystemLondon Underground
Depot(s)
    • Golders Green
    • Morden
  • stabling sidings:
    • Highgate
    • Edgware
    • High Barnet[1]
Rolling stock1995 Stock
Ridership252.310 million passenger journeys (2011/12)[2]
History
Opened
  • 18 December 1890; 133 years ago (1890-12-18) (as City and South London Railway)
  • 28 August 1937; 86 years ago (1937-08-28) (renamed to Northern line)
Last extension20 September 2021; 2 years ago (2021-09-20)
Technical
Line length58 km (36 mi)
CharacterDeep-tube
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
ElectrificationFourth rail630 V DC
Operating speed45 mph (72 km/h)[3]
SignallingCBTC (SelTrac)
London Underground
Bakerloo
Central
Circle
District
Hammersmith & City
Jubilee
Metropolitan
Northern
Piccadilly
Victoria
Waterloo & City
London Overground
Liberty line
Lioness line
Mildmay line
Suffragette line
Weaver line
Windrush line
Other TfL Modes
DLR
Elizabeth line
London Trams

The line's northern termini, all in the London Borough of Barnet, are at Edgware and High Barnet; Mill Hill East is the terminus of a single-station branch line off the High Barnet branch. The two main northern branches run south to join at Camden Town where two routes, one via Charing Cross in the West End and the other via Bank in the City, continue and then join at Kennington in Southwark. At Kennington the line again divides into two branches, one to each of the southern termini – at Morden, in the borough of Merton, and at Battersea Power Station in Wandsworth.

For most of its length it is a deep tube line.[nb 1] The portion between Stockwell and Borough opened in 1890 and is the oldest section of deep-level tube line on the network. About 294 million passenger journeys were recorded in 2016/17 on the Northern line, making it the busiest on the Underground.[4] It has 18 of the system's 31 stations south of the River Thames. There are 52 stations in total on the line, of which 38 have platforms below ground.

The line has a complicated history. Its longtime structure of two main northern branches, two central branches, and southern unification, reflects its genesis as three separate railways, combined in the 1920s and 1930s. An extension in the 1920s used a route originally planned by a fourth company. Abandoned plans from the 1920s to extend the line further southwards, and then northwards in the 1930s, would have incorporated parts of the routes of two further companies. From the 1930s to the 1970s, the tracks of a seventh company were also managed as a branch of the Northern line.[nb 2] An extension of the Charing Cross branch from Kennington to Battersea opened on 20 September 2021, giving the line a second southern branch. There are also proposals to split the line into separate lines following the opening of the new link to Battersea.

History edit

Formation edit

 
City & South London Railway train, 1890

The core of the Northern line evolved from two railway companies: the City & South London Railway (C&SLR) and the Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway (CCE&HR).

The C&SLR, London's first electric hauled deep-level tube railway, was built under the supervision of James Henry Greathead, who had been responsible, with Peter W. Barlow, for the Tower Subway.[5] It was the first of the Underground's lines to be constructed by boring deep below the surface and the first to be operated by electric traction.[6] The railway opened in November 1890 from Stockwell to a now-disused station at King William Street.[7] This was inconveniently placed and unable to cope with the company's traffic so, in 1900, a new route to Moorgate via Bank was opened.[8] By 1907, the C&SLR had been further extended at both ends to run from Clapham Common to Euston.[9]

 
Formation of the Northern line (Northern Heights and Battersea extensions not shown)

The CCE&HR (commonly known as the "Hampstead Tube") was opened in 1907 and ran from Charing Cross (known for many years as Strand) via Euston and Camden Town (where there was a junction) to Golders Green and Highgate (now known as Archway).[10][11] It was extended south by one stop to Embankment in 1914 to form an interchange with the Bakerloo and District lines.[11][12] In 1913, the Underground Electric Railways Company of London (UERL), owner of the CCE&HR, took over the C&SLR, although they remained separate companies.[13]

Integration edit

During the early 1920s, a series of works was carried out to connect the C&SLR and CCE&HR tunnels to enable an integrated service to be operated. The first of these new tunnels, between the C&SLR's Euston station and the CCE&HR's station at Camden Town, had originally been planned in 1912,[14] but had been delayed by the First World War.[15] Construction began in 1922 and it opened in 1924.[11][15] The second connection linking the CCE&HR's Embankment and C&SLR's Kennington stations opened in 1926.[11][15] It provided a new intermediate station at Waterloo to connect to the main line station there and the Bakerloo line. The smaller-diameter tunnels of the C&SLR were also enlarged to match the standard diameter of the CCE&HR and the other deep tube lines.[16]

Extensions edit

In conjunction with the works to integrate the two lines, two major extensions were undertaken: northwards to Edgware in Middlesex (now in the London Borough of Barnet) and southwards to Morden in Surrey (then in the Merton and Morden Urban District, but now in the London Borough of Merton).

Edgware Extension edit

The Edgware extension used plans dating back to 1901 for the Edgware and Hampstead Railway (E&HR)[17] which the UERL's subsidiary, the London Electric Railway, had taken over in 1912.[18] It extended the CCE&HR line from its terminus at Golders Green to Edgware in two stages: to Hendon Central in 1923 and to Edgware in 1924.[11][19] The line crossed open countryside and ran mostly on viaduct from Golders Green to Brent and then on the surface, apart from a short tunnel north of Hendon Central.[19] Five new stations were built to pavilion-style designs by Stanley Heaps, head of the Underground's Architects Office, stimulating the rapid northward expansion of suburban developments in the following years.[20]

Morden Extension edit

The engineering of the Morden extension of the C&SLR from Clapham Common to Morden was more demanding, running in tunnels to a point just north of Morden station, which was constructed in a cutting. The line then runs under the wide station forecourt and public road outside the station, to the depot. The extension was initially planned to continue to Sutton[21] over part of the route for the unbuilt Wimbledon and Sutton Railway, in which the UERL held a stake, but agreements were made with the Southern Railway to end the extension at Morden. The Southern Railway built the surface line from Wimbledon to Sutton in the 1930s, via South Merton and St. Helier.[nb 3] The tube extension itself opened in 1926, with seven new stations, all designed by Charles Holden in a modern style. Originally, Stanley Heaps was to design the stations, but after seeing these designs Frank Pick, Assistant Joint Manager of the UERL, decided that Holden should take over the project.[22]

With the exception of Morden and Clapham South, where more land was available, the new stations were built on confined corner sites at main road junctions in areas that had been already developed. Holden made good use of this limited space and designed striking buildings. The street-level structures are of white Portland Stone with tall double-height ticket halls, with the London Underground roundel made up in coloured glass panels in large glazed screens. The stone columns framing the glass screens are surmounted by a capital formed as a three-dimensional version of the roundel. The large expanses of glass above the entrances ensure that the ticket halls are bright and, lit from within at night, welcoming.[23] The first and last new stations on the extension, Clapham South and Morden, include a parade of shops and were designed with structures capable of being built above (like many of the earlier central London stations). Clapham South was extended upwards soon after its construction with a block of apartments; Morden was extended upwards in the 1960s with a block of offices. All the stations on the extension, except Morden itself, are Grade II listed buildings.

Great Northern & City Railway edit

After the UERL and the Metropolitan Railway (MR) were brought under public control in the form of the London Passenger Transport Board (LPTB) in 1933, the MR's subsidiary, the Great Northern & City Railway, which ran underground from Moorgate to Finsbury Park, became part of the Underground as the Northern City Line. In preparation for the Northern Heights Plan, it was operated as part of the Northern line, although it was never connected to the rest of the line.

Naming edit

The resulting line became known as the Morden–Edgware line, although a number of alternative names were also mooted in the fashion of the contraction of Baker Street & Waterloo Railway to "Bakerloo", such as "Edgmor", "Mordenware", "Medgeway" and "Edgmorden".[24] With Egyptology very much in fashion after the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun in 1922, there was also a proposal to call the line the Tootancamden Line as it passed through both Tooting and Camden.[25] It was eventually named the Northern line from 28 August 1937,[26] reflecting the planned addition of the Northern Heights lines.[27]

Northern Heights plan edit

 
Line map of the abandoned Northern Heights plan
 
Sign displaying the route of the Northern Heights extension

In June 1935, the LPTB announced the New Works Programme, an ambitious plan to expand the Underground network which included the integration of a complex of existing London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) lines north of Highgate through the Northern Heights. These lines, built in the 1860s and 1870s by the Edgware, Highgate and London Railway (EH&LR) and its successors, ran from Finsbury Park to Edgware via Highgate, with branches to Alexandra Palace and High Barnet. The line taken over would be extended beyond Edgware to Brockley Hill, Elstree South and Bushey Heath with a new depot at Aldenham. The extension's route was that planned for the unbuilt Watford and Edgware Railway (W&ER), using rights obtained from the earlier purchase of the W&ER (which had long intended an extension of the EH&LR Edgware route towards Watford). This also provided the potential for further extension in the future; Bushey's town planners reserved space in Bushey village for a future station and Bushey Heath station's design was revised several times to ensure this option would remain available in the future.

The project involved electrification of the surface lines (operated by steam trains at the time), the doubling of the original single-line section between Finchley Central and the proposed junction with the Edgware branch of the Northern line, and the construction of three new linking sections of track: a connection between Northern City Line and Finsbury Park station on the surface; an extension from Archway to the LNER line near East Finchley via new deep-level platforms below Highgate station; and a short diversion from just before the LNER's Edgware station to the Underground's station of the same name.

Intended service levels edit

The peak-hour service pattern was to be 21 trains an hour each way on the High Barnet branch north of Camden Town, 14 of them via the Charing Cross branch and seven via the Bank branch. 14 would have continued on beyond Finchley Central, seven each on the High Barnet and Edgware branches. An additional seven trains an hour would have served the High Barnet branch, but continued via Highgate High-Level and Finsbury Park to Moorgate, a slightly shorter route to the City. It does not seem to have been intended to run through trains to the ex-Northern City branch from Edgware via Finchley Central. Seven trains an hour would have served the Alexandra Palace branch, to/from Moorgate via Highgate High-Level. In addition to the 14 through trains described, the ex-Northern City branch would have had 14 four-car shuttle trains an hour.

Progress of works edit

Work began in the late 1930s, and was in progress on all fronts by the outbreak of the Second World War. The tunnelling northwards from the original Highgate station (now Archway) had been completed, and the service to the rebuilt surface station at East Finchley started on 3 July 1939, but without the opening of the intermediate (new) Highgate Station, at the site of the LNER's station of the same name. Further progress was disrupted by the start of the war, though enough had been made to complete the electrification of the High Barnet branch onwards from East Finchley over which tube services started on 14 April 1940; the new (deep-level) Highgate station opened on 19 January 1941. The single track LNER line to Edgware was electrified as far as Mill Hill East, including the Dollis Brook Viaduct, opening as a tube service on 18 May 1941 to serve the barracks there, thus forming the Northern line as it is today. The new depot at Aldenham had already been built and was used to build Halifax bombers. Work on the other elements of the plan was suspended late in 1939.

Work on the extension from Edgware to Bushey Heath including work on a viaduct and a tunnel started in June 1939, but was stopped after war broke out.[28] After the war, the area beyond Edgware was made part of the Metropolitan Green Belt, largely preventing the anticipated residential development in the area, and the potential demand for services from Bushey Heath thus vanished. Passenger numbers also dropped on the then-BR's Mill Hill and Alexandra Palace branches, so it was useless to electrify them. Available funds were directed towards completing the eastern extension of the Central line instead, and the Northern Heights plan was dropped on 9 February 1954. Aldenham depot was converted into an overhaul facility for buses.

 
Close-up of a High Barnet-bound Northern line 1995 stock cab

The implemented service from High Barnet branch gave good access both to the West End and the City. This appears to have undermined traffic on the Alexandra Palace branch, still run with steam haulage to Kings Cross via Finsbury Park, as Highgate (low-level) was but a short bus ride away and car traffic was much lighter than it would become later. Consequently, the line from Finsbury Park to Muswell Hill and Alexandra Palace via the surface platforms at Highgate was closed altogether to passenger traffic in 1954.[citation needed] This contrasts with the decision to electrify the Epping-Ongar branch of the Central line, another remnant of the New Works programme, run as a tube-train shuttle from 1957. A local pressure group, the Muswell Hill Metro Group, campaigns to reopen this route as a light-rail service.[citation needed] So far there is no sign of movement on this issue: the route, now the Parkland Walk, is highly valued by walkers and cyclists, and suggestions in the 1990s that it could, in part, become a road were met with fierce opposition.[citation needed] Another pressure group has proposed using the track bed further north, as part of the North and West London Light Railway.[citation needed] The connection between Drayton Park and the surface platforms at Finsbury Park was opened in 1976, when the Northern City Line became part of British Rail.

1990s refurbishment and upgrade edit

In the 1980s, a southern extension of the line to Peckham was proposed, as part of a review of potential extensions of Underground lines. The proposal was not proceeded with.[29]

By the early 1990s, the line had deteriorated due to years of under-investment and the use of old rolling stock, most of which dated back to the early 1960s.[30] The line gained the nickname "Misery Line" due to its perceived unreliability.[31][32] In 1995, a comprehensive refurbishment of the line began – including track replacement, power upgrades, station modernisation (such as Mornington Crescent) and the replacement of older rolling stock with new 1995 Stock thanks to a public–private partnership deal with Alstom.[33][34]

Recent developments edit

Throughout the 2000s, no plans were considered for extending the Northern line, as the PPP to upgrade the Underground did not include provision for line extensions within the PPP contracts.[35][36] The Northern line was originally scheduled to switch to automatic train operation in 2012, using the same SelTrac S40 system[37] as used since 2009 on the Jubilee line and for a number of years on the Docklands Light Railway.[38] Originally the work was to follow on from the Jubilee line so as to benefit from the experience of installing it there, but that project was not completed until spring 2011. Work on the Northern line was contracted to be completed before the 2012 Olympics. It is now[when?] being undertaken in-house, and TfL predicted the upgrade would be complete by the end of 2014.[39] The first section of the line (West Finchley to High Barnet) was transferred to the new signalling system on 26 February 2013[40] and the line became fully automated on 1 June 2014 with the Chalk Farm to Edgware via Golders Green section being the last part of the line to switch to ATO.[41][42]

In January 2018, Transport for London announced that it would double the period during which it runs peak evening services in the central London section to tackle overcrowding. There would now be 24 trains an hour on both central London branches and the northern branches, as well as 30 trains an hour on the Kennington to Morden section between 5pm and 7pm.[4]

24-hour weekend service edit

Since the mid-autumn of 2016[43] a 24-hour "Night Tube" service has run on Friday and Saturday nights from Edgware and High Barnet to Morden via the Charing Cross branch; service is suspended on the Bank branch during these times.[44] Trains run every 8 minutes between Morden and Camden Town and every 15/16 minutes between Camden Town and Edgware/High Barnet. Labour disputes delayed the planned start date of September 2015.[45]

Battersea extension edit

In September 2021, the Northern line was extended to serve the redevelopment of Battersea Power Station. Partially funded by private developers, the £1.2bn[46] project extended the Charing Cross branch of the line for 3.2 km (2.0 mi) from Kennington to Battersea Power Station, with an intermediate stop at Nine Elms.[47][48] Approved by Wandsworth Council in 2010,[49] and Transport for London in 2014,[47] the construction of the line began in 2015. Tunnelling for the project was completed in 2017,[46] and the extension opened on 20 September 2021.[50][51] Provision has been made for a future extension to Clapham Junction railway station.[52]

Services edit

Peak edit

As of September 2021, morning peak southbound services are:[53]

  • 4 tph from Edgware to Kennington via Charing Cross
  • 2 tph from Edgware to Morden via Charing Cross
  • 12 tph from Edgware to Morden via Bank
  • 4 tph from High Barnet to Kennington via Charing Cross
  • 6 tph from High Barnet to Battersea Power Station via Charing Cross
  • 2 tph from High Barnet to Morden via Charing Cross
  • 8 tph from High Barnet to Morden via Bank
  • 1 tph from Mill Hill East to Kennington via Charing Cross
  • 1 tph from Mill Hill East to Battersea Power Station via Charing Cross
  • 2 tph from Mill Hill East to Morden via Bank

This service pattern provides 20 tph between Finchley Central and High Barnet, 4 tph between Finchley Central and Mill Hill East, 7 tph between Kennington and Battersea Power Station and 22 tph everywhere else on the line except between Kennington and Morden, between Camden Town and Finchley Central and on the Edgware branch where there will be 24 tph.

Off-peak edit

As of November 2022, off-peak services are the similar to peak services, minus the four hourly trains that run from Morden to the northern branches via Charing Cross:[53]

  • 10 tph from Edgware to Kennington via Charing Cross
  • 10 tph from Edgware to Morden via Bank
  • 8 tph from High Barnet to Battersea Power Station via Charing Cross
  • 8 tph from High Barnet to Morden via Bank
  • 2 tph from Mill Hill East to Battersea Power Station via Charing Cross
  • 2 tph from Mill Hill East to Morden via Bank

This service pattern provides 16 tph between Finchley Central and High Barnet, 4 tph between Finchley Central and Mill Hill East, 10 tph between Kennington and Battersea Power Station and 20 tph everywhere else on the line.

Night edit

Since 2016, the Northern line has operated Night Tube services on Friday and Saturday nights between the Edgware and High Barnet termini and Morden, via the Charing Cross branch only. Trains run every 15 minutes on each of the northern branches, combining to give eight trains per hour between Camden Town and Morden. There is no Night Tube service on the Mill Hill East, Bank, or Battersea branches.[43]

  • 4 tph from High Barnet to Morden via Charing Cross
  • 4 tph from Edgware to Morden via Charing Cross

Map edit

 
Geographical path of the Northern line

Stations edit

Northern line
Bushey Heath
 
 
 
 
 
 
Elstree South
 
 
 
Brockley Hill
 
Edgware
 
 
Edgware (LNER)
 
 
1867–1939
 
 
 
 
 
Edgware depot
 
 
 
 
 
proposed but
unbuilt connection
Burnt Oak
 
 
Mill Hill (The Hale)
 
 
 
Mill Hill East
 
 
 
 
High Barnet
Colindale
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Totteridge & Whetstone
 
 
 
 
 
Woodside Park
Burroughs tunnel
 
 
 
 
West Finchley
Hendon Central
 
 
 
 
Finchley Central
 
 
East Finchley
 
 
 
Alexandra Palace
Brent Cross
 
 
 
Muswell Hill
 
 
 
Cranley Gardens
 
 
 
 
 
 
1873–1954
Golders Green
 
 
 
 
 
 
Highgate depot
Golders Green depot
 
 
 
Highgate north tunnel
 
 
 
 
 
 
Highgate
not
completed
North End
 
 
 
 
Archway
 
 
 
 
Tufnell Park
Hampstead
 
 
 
 
 
 
Kentish Town  
Belsize Park
 
 
 
 
1867–1954
 
 
 
South Kentish Town
1907–24
Chalk Farm
 
 
 
Crouch End
 
 
 
Stroud Green
 
 
 
Finsbury Park      
Camden Town
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Drayton Park  
Mornington Crescent
 
 
 
 
 
 
Highbury and Islington      
      Euston
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Essex Road  
  Warren Street
 
 
 
 
Goodge Street
 
 
 
Angel
 
 
 
 
City Road
1901–22
   
 
 
 
Old Street  
 
 
 
 
Moorgate          
  Leicester Square
 
 
 
Lothbury
authorised
but not built
 
 
Bank       (Monument    )
    Charing Cross
 
 
 
 
King William Street
1890–1900
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
        Embankment
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
London Bridge      
1914–25
Charing Cross
reversing loop
 
 
 
 
 
          Waterloo
 
 
Borough
 
 
 
 
 
 
Elephant & Castle      
 
 
 
 
Kennington
reversing loop
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Oval
 
 
 
 
 
Stockwell depot
closed 1915
Nine Elms
 
 
Stockwell  
Battersea Power Station
 
 
 
Clapham North
reserved route
 
 
Clapham Common
    Clapham Junction
 
 
 
Clapham South
 
Balham  
 
Tooting Bec
 
Tooting Broadway
 
Colliers Wood
 
South Wimbledon
 
Morden
 
 
 
 
 
Morden depot
  Morden South
 
 
 
proposed but
unbuilt connection
 
 
South Morden
authorised
but not built
  Sutton Common
 
 
 
Cheam
authorised
but not built
  Sutton
 
 
Notice explaining about step-free access. This can be found inside every Northern line train.

Open stations edit

High Barnet branch edit

Station Image Opened Branch Additional information
High Barnet     1 April 1872 High Barnet branch Terminus. Northern line introduced 14 April 1940map 1
Totteridge & Whetstone   Northern line introduced 14 April 1940 map 2
Woodside Park     Northern line introduced 14 April 1940map 3
West Finchley     1 March 1933 Northern line introduced 14 April 1940map 4
Mill Hill East     22 August 1867 Mill Hill branch Closed 11 September 1939, reopened 18 May 1941map 5
Finchley Central     High Barnet & Mill Hill branches First Northern line train was 14 April 1940map 6
East Finchley   High Barnet branch First Northern line train was 3 July 1939map 7
Highgate   19 January 1941 Disused surface station opened 22 August 1867map 8
Archway   22 June 1907 Originally named Highgatemap 9
Tufnell Park   map 10
Kentish Town       Mainline station opened 13 July 1868. Change for National Rail services.map 11

Edgware branch edit

Station Image Opened Additional information
Edgware     18 August 1924 Terminusmap 12
Burnt Oak   27 October 1924 Opened with its current name, then renamed as "Burnt Oak (Watling)" approximately four years after its opening; was reverted to its original name in 1950.map 13
Colindale   18 August 1924 Used as a terminus for some trains travelling north.map 14
Hendon Central     19 November 1923 map 15
Brent Cross   Opened as "Brent"; renamed 20 July 1976.map 16
Golders Green     22 June 1907 Originally a terminus; remains a terminus for some trains.map 17
Hampstead   Originally proposed to be named "Heath Street"; this name can still be seen on wall tilings on station platform walls.map 18
Belsize Park   One of eight London Underground stations that have deep-level air-raid shelters underneath them. The shelter was constructed in the Second World War to provide safe accommodation for service personnel.map 19
Chalk Farm   map 20

Camden Town edit

Station Image Opened Branch Additional information
Camden Town   22 June 1907 Edgware, High Barnet, Charing Cross and Bank branches[a] The junctions connecting the two northern branches of the Northern line to the two central branches are just south of Camden Town station. The station has a pair of platforms on each of the two northern branches, and southbound trains can depart toward either Charing Cross or Bank from either of the two southbound platforms without crossing over.map 21

Charing Cross branch edit

Station Image Opened Additional information
Mornington Crescent   22 June 1907 Was planned to be named "Seymour Street", but this was changed. It was closed on 23 October 1992 to replace the lifts and was reopened on 27 April 1998.map 22
Euston (Charing Cross branch)       Change for southbound Northern line service via Bank from platform 6, Victoria line, London Overground and National Rail servicesmap 23
Warren Street   Change for Victoria linemap 24
Goodge Street   Opened as "Tottenham Court Road"; renamed 3 September 1908map 25
Tottenham Court Road       Change for Central line and Elizabeth line.
Leicester Square   Piccadilly line opened 15 December 1906 map 27
Charing Cross     Bakerloo line opened as Trafalgar Square 10 March 1906. Stations combined 1 May 1979. Change for Bakerloo line and National Rail servicesmap 28
Embankment (  Embankment Pier)   6 April 1914 District Railway opened 30 May 1870. Northern line extension from Charing Cross opened 6 April 1914. Extension from Kennington opened 13 September 1926. Change for Bakerloo, Circle and District linesmap 29
Waterloo   (  Waterloo Pier, Festival Pier)   13 September 1926 Waterloo and City line opened 8 August 1898. Extension from Kennington opened 13 September 1926. Change for Bakerloo, Jubilee and Waterloo & City lines and National Rail servicesmap 30

Bank branch edit

Station Image Opened Additional information
Euston (Bank branch)       12 May 1907 Change for southbound Northern line service via Charing Cross from platform 2, Victoria line, London Overground and National Rail servicesmap 23
King's Cross St Pancras         (  Trains Gatwick and Luton)   Metropolitan Railway station opened 10 January 1863. Change for Circle, Hammersmith & City, Metropolitan, Piccadilly and Victoria lines, National Rail services and Eurostarmap 31
Angel   17 November 1901 Has the longest escalator on the entire Underground networkmap 32
Old Street     Northern line platforms opened February 1904. Connects with National Rail services.map 33
Moorgate       25 February 1900 Metropolitan Railway station opened 23 December 1865. Change for Circle, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan lines and National Rail services.map 34 Has an interchange with the Elizabeth line via Liverpool Street station.
Bank       Linked with Monument by escalator 18 September 1933, change for Central, Circle, District and Waterloo & City lines and Docklands Light Railway.map 35
London Bridge       (  Trains to Gatwick and Luton) (  London Bridge City Pier)   Change for Jubilee line and National Rail servicesmap 36
Borough   18 December 1890 map 37
Elephant & Castle       Change for Bakerloo line and National Rail servicesmap 38

Kennington edit

Station Image Opened Branch Additional information
Kennington   18 December 1890 Charing Cross, Bank, Battersea and Morden branches[b] The station has four platforms arranged in two pairs: one pair for northbound services to each central branch of the Northern line, the other pair for southbound services from each central branch. The junctions connecting the central branches to the southern branches are just south of Kennington station. Southbound trains from the Charing Cross branch can terminate at this station, which has a reversing loop, or join either southern branch; southbound trains from the Bank branch can proceed onto the Morden branch but not the Battersea branch.map 39

Battersea branch edit

Station Image Opened Additional information
Nine Elms     20 September 2021
Battersea Power Station     Terminus

Morden branch edit

Station Image Opened Additional information
Oval   18 December 1890 map 40
Stockwell   Change for Victoria line. Original terminus until 1900, when the line was extended to Clapham Common. The station platforms were resited south of the original island platform. Formerly a depot existed here; it was branched off from the current southbound track. It is one of the eight stations that have a deep level air-raid shelter. map 41
Clapham North   3 June 1900 One of the two remaining stations to have an island platform underground. It is also one of the eight stations that have a deep level air-raid shelter.map 42
Clapham Common   Terminus from 1900 to 1926. It is also one of the two remaining stations to have an island platform underground. It is also one of the eight stations that have a deep level air-raid shelter.map 43
Clapham South   13 September 1926 One of the eight stations that have a deep level air-raid shelter.map 44
Balham     6 December 1926 Change for National Rail servicesmap 45
Tooting Bec   13 September 1926 Opened as "Trinity Road"; renamed 1 October 1950map 46
Tooting Broadway   Used as a terminus for some trains heading southmap 47
Colliers Wood   map 48
South Wimbledon   Opened as "South Wimbledon (Merton)". The suffix gradually fell out of use, but still can be seen on some platform signage.map 49
Morden     Terminusmap 50

Closed stations edit

Permanently closed stations edit

Resited stations edit

  • Stockwell – new platforms resited immediately to the south of its predecessor with the 1922–1924 upgrade of the line.
  • London Bridge – the northbound tunnel and platform converted into a concourse, and a new northbound tunnel and platform built in the late 1990s to increase the platform and circulation areas in preparation for the opening of the Jubilee line.

Abandoned plans edit

Northern Heights stations not transferred from LNER edit
Bushey Extension stations not constructed edit

Infrastructure edit

Rolling stock edit

 
A High Barnet-bound Northern line train arriving at Finchley Central

When the line opened, it was served by 1906 Stock. This was replaced by 1938 stock as part of the New Works Programme, later supplemented with identical 1949 Stock. When the Piccadilly line was extended to Heathrow Airport in the 1970s, its 1959 Stock and 1956 Stock (prototypes of the 1959 Stock) trains were transferred to the Northern line. As there were not enough 1956 and 1959 Stock trains to replace the Northern line's 1938 Stock fleet, they were supplemented with newly built 1972 Mark 1 Stock trains, which all served the line at the same time. A few 1972 Mark 2 stock trains also ran on this line until going to the Jubilee line; they were then moved to the Bakerloo line, where they remain in service. The few 1956 Stock trains were briefly replaced by 1962 Stock transferred from the Central line in 1995, before the entire Northern line fleet was replaced with 1995 Stock between 1997 and 1999.

Today, all Northern line trains consist of 1995 Stock in the Underground livery of red, white and blue. In common with the other deep-level lines, the trains are the smaller of the two loading gauges used on the system. 1995 stock has automated announcements and quick-close doors.[citation needed] If the proposed split of the line takes place (initial estimates of 2018 having been abandoned to focus on completion of the Battersea and Nine Elms extension work), 19 new trains will be added to the existing fleet of 106 trains,[54] though additional trains beyond the extra 19 trains may be required to provide a full service for the new Battersea extension.

Tunnels edit

Although two other London Underground lines operate fully underground, the Northern line is unusual in that it is a deep-level tube line that serves the outer suburbs of South London yet there is only one station above ground (Morden tube station) while the rest of this part of the line is deep below ground. The short section to Morden depot is also above ground. This is partly because its southern extension into the outer suburbs was not done by taking over an existing surface line as was generally the case with routes such as the Central, Jubilee and Piccadilly lines. Apart from the core central underground tunnels, part of the section between Hendon and Colindale is also underground. As bicycles are not allowed in tunnel sections (even if no station is in that section) as they would hinder evacuation, they are limited to High Barnet – East Finchley, the Mill Hill East branch, Edgware – Colindale and Hendon Central – Golders Green.[55] There are also time-based restrictions for the sections where bicycles are allowed.[55]

The tunnel from Morden to East Finchley via Bank, 17 miles 528 yards (27.841 km),[1] was for a time the longest rail tunnel in the world. Other tunnels, including the Channel Tunnel that links the UK and France, are now longer.

Depots edit

The Northern line is serviced by four depots. The main one is at Golders Greenmap 51, adjacent to Golders Green tube station, while the second, at Morden,map 52 is south of Morden tube station and is the larger of the two. The other two are at Edgware and Highgate. The Highgate depot is on the former LNER branch to Alexandra Palace. There was originally a depot at Stockwell, but this closed in 1915. There are sidings at High Barnet for stabling trains overnight.

Future edit

Northern line split edit

Since the 2000s, TfL has aspired to split the Northern line into two separate routes.[56][57] Running trains between all combinations of branches and the two central sections, as at present, means only 24 trains an hour can run through each of the central sections at peak times, because merging trains have to wait for each other at the junctions at Camden Town and Kennington.[58] Completely segregating the routes could allow 36 trains an hour on all parts of the line, increasing capacity by around 25%.[56][58]

TfL has already separated the Charing Cross and Bank branches during off-peak periods; however, four trains per hour still run to and from Morden via Charing Cross in the peak; the northern branches to Edgware and High Barnet cannot be separated until Camden Town station is upgraded to cope with the numbers of passengers changing trains.[59] The extension to Battersea would allow the Charing Cross branch to terminate at Battersea Power Station.[60][61]

Camden Town station upgrade and expansion edit

The proposed split of the Northern line would require Camden Town station to be expanded and upgraded, as the station is already severely overcrowded at weekend peak times, and a split would increase the number of passengers wishing to change trains at the station.[62][63][59] In 2005, London Underground failed to secure planning permission for a comprehensive upgrade plan for Camden Town tube station that would have involved demolition of the existing station entrance and several other surface-level buildings, all within a conservation area.[64][65] New redevelopment plans were first announced in 2013 by TfL, which proposed avoiding the existing station entrance and the conservation area by building a second entrance and interchange tunnels to the north, mostly on the site of a subsequently vacated infant school.[66] In 2018, plans to upgrade and rebuild Camden Town station were placed indefinitely on hold, due to TfL's financial situation.[67] As of 2022, there is currently no plan to split the line.

Incidents and accidents edit

In October 2003, a train derailed at Camden Town.[68] Although no one was hurt, points, signals and carriages were damaged. Concern was raised about the safety of the Tube, given the derailment at Chancery Lane earlier in 2003.[69] A joint report by the Underground and its maintenance contractor Tube Lines concluded that poor track geometry was the main cause, and therefore extra friction arising out of striations (scratches) on a newly installed set of points had allowed the leading wheel of the last carriage to climb the rail and derail. The track geometry at the derailment site is a very tight bend and tight tunnel bore, which precludes the normal solution for this sort of geometry of canting the track by raising the height of one rail relative to the other.[70]

In August 2010, a defective rail grinding train caused disruption on the Charing Cross branch, after it travelled four miles in 13 minutes without a driver. The train was being towed to the depot after becoming faulty. At Archway station, the defective train became detached and ran driverless until coming to a stop at an incline near Warren Street station. This caused morning rush-hour services to be suspended on this branch. All passenger trains were diverted via the Bank branch, with several not stopping at stations until they were safely on the Bank branch.[71][72]

In popular culture edit

  • In his debut novel Ghostwritten, David Mitchell characterises the Northern line as "the psycho of the family".[73]
  • The Bloc Party song "Waiting For the 7.18" references the Northern line as "the loudest".[74]
  • As part of a series of twelve books tied to the twelve lines of the London Underground, A Northern Line Minute focuses on the Northern line.[75]
  • The Nick Drake song "Parasite" references the Northern Line.[76]
  • It is also referred to in The New Vaudeville Band song "Finchley Central" and the Squeeze song "853-5937"
  • The 1982 Robyn Hitchcock song "Fifty Two Stations" begins, "There's fifty-two stations on the Northern Line/None of them is yours, one of them is mine."[77]

Maps edit

northern, line, this, article, about, london, underground, line, other, uses, disambiguation, london, underground, line, that, runs, from, north, london, south, london, printed, black, tube, unique, underground, network, having, different, routes, through, cen. This article is about the London Underground line For other uses see Northern line disambiguation The Northern line is a London Underground line that runs from North London to South London It is printed in black on the Tube map The Northern line is unique on the Underground network in having two different routes through central London two southern branches and two northern branches Despite its name it does not serve the northernmost stations on the Underground though it does serve the southernmost station at Morden the terminus of one of the two southern branches Northern line1995 Stock emerging from the tunnel north of Hendon CentralOverviewStations52Colour on mapBlackWebsitetfl gov ukServiceTypeRapid transitSystemLondon UndergroundDepot s Golders GreenMorden stabling sidings HighgateEdgwareHigh Barnet 1 Rolling stock1995 StockRidership252 310 million passenger journeys 2011 12 2 HistoryOpened18 December 1890 133 years ago 1890 12 18 as City and South London Railway 28 August 1937 86 years ago 1937 08 28 renamed to Northern line Last extension20 September 2021 2 years ago 2021 09 20 TechnicalLine length58 km 36 mi CharacterDeep tubeTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrificationFourth rail 630 V DCOperating speed45 mph 72 km h 3 SignallingCBTC SelTrac Transport for London rail linesLondon UndergroundBakerlooCentralCircleDistrictHammersmith amp CityJubileeMetropolitanNorthernPiccadillyVictoriaWaterloo amp CityLondon OvergroundLiberty lineLioness lineMildmay lineSuffragette lineWeaver lineWindrush lineOther TfL ModesDLRElizabeth lineLondon TramsvteThe line s northern termini all in the London Borough of Barnet are at Edgware and High Barnet Mill Hill East is the terminus of a single station branch line off the High Barnet branch The two main northern branches run south to join at Camden Town where two routes one via Charing Cross in the West End and the other via Bank in the City continue and then join at Kennington in Southwark At Kennington the line again divides into two branches one to each of the southern termini at Morden in the borough of Merton and at Battersea Power Station in Wandsworth For most of its length it is a deep tube line nb 1 The portion between Stockwell and Borough opened in 1890 and is the oldest section of deep level tube line on the network About 294 million passenger journeys were recorded in 2016 17 on the Northern line making it the busiest on the Underground 4 It has 18 of the system s 31 stations south of the River Thames There are 52 stations in total on the line of which 38 have platforms below ground The line has a complicated history Its longtime structure of two main northern branches two central branches and southern unification reflects its genesis as three separate railways combined in the 1920s and 1930s An extension in the 1920s used a route originally planned by a fourth company Abandoned plans from the 1920s to extend the line further southwards and then northwards in the 1930s would have incorporated parts of the routes of two further companies From the 1930s to the 1970s the tracks of a seventh company were also managed as a branch of the Northern line nb 2 An extension of the Charing Cross branch from Kennington to Battersea opened on 20 September 2021 giving the line a second southern branch There are also proposals to split the line into separate lines following the opening of the new link to Battersea Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Integration 1 3 Extensions 1 3 1 Edgware Extension 1 3 2 Morden Extension 1 4 Great Northern amp City Railway 1 5 Naming 1 6 Northern Heights plan 1 6 1 Intended service levels 1 6 2 Progress of works 1 7 1990s refurbishment and upgrade 2 Recent developments 2 1 24 hour weekend service 2 2 Battersea extension 3 Services 3 1 Peak 3 2 Off peak 3 3 Night 4 Map 5 Stations 5 1 Open stations 5 1 1 High Barnet branch 5 1 2 Edgware branch 5 1 3 Camden Town 5 1 4 Charing Cross branch 5 1 5 Bank branch 5 1 6 Kennington 5 1 7 Battersea branch 5 1 8 Morden branch 5 2 Closed stations 5 2 1 Permanently closed stations 5 2 2 Resited stations 5 2 3 Abandoned plans 5 2 3 1 Northern Heights stations not transferred from LNER 5 2 3 2 Bushey Extension stations not constructed 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Rolling stock 6 2 Tunnels 6 3 Depots 7 Future 7 1 Northern line split 7 2 Camden Town station upgrade and expansion 8 Incidents and accidents 9 In popular culture 10 Maps 11 See also 12 Explanatory footnotes 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Citations 13 3 Bibliography 14 External linksHistory editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Northern line news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Formation edit For broader coverage of the detailed histories of the original companies see City and South London Railway and Charing Cross Euston and Hampstead Railway nbsp City amp South London Railway train 1890The core of the Northern line evolved from two railway companies the City amp South London Railway C amp SLR and the Charing Cross Euston amp Hampstead Railway CCE amp HR The C amp SLR London s first electric hauled deep level tube railway was built under the supervision of James Henry Greathead who had been responsible with Peter W Barlow for the Tower Subway 5 It was the first of the Underground s lines to be constructed by boring deep below the surface and the first to be operated by electric traction 6 The railway opened in November 1890 from Stockwell to a now disused station at King William Street 7 This was inconveniently placed and unable to cope with the company s traffic so in 1900 a new route to Moorgate via Bank was opened 8 By 1907 the C amp SLR had been further extended at both ends to run from Clapham Common to Euston 9 nbsp Formation of the Northern line Northern Heights and Battersea extensions not shown The CCE amp HR commonly known as the Hampstead Tube was opened in 1907 and ran from Charing Cross known for many years as Strand via Euston and Camden Town where there was a junction to Golders Green and Highgate now known as Archway 10 11 It was extended south by one stop to Embankment in 1914 to form an interchange with the Bakerloo and District lines 11 12 In 1913 the Underground Electric Railways Company of London UERL owner of the CCE amp HR took over the C amp SLR although they remained separate companies 13 Integration edit During the early 1920s a series of works was carried out to connect the C amp SLR and CCE amp HR tunnels to enable an integrated service to be operated The first of these new tunnels between the C amp SLR s Euston station and the CCE amp HR s station at Camden Town had originally been planned in 1912 14 but had been delayed by the First World War 15 Construction began in 1922 and it opened in 1924 11 15 The second connection linking the CCE amp HR s Embankment and C amp SLR s Kennington stations opened in 1926 11 15 It provided a new intermediate station at Waterloo to connect to the main line station there and the Bakerloo line The smaller diameter tunnels of the C amp SLR were also enlarged to match the standard diameter of the CCE amp HR and the other deep tube lines 16 Extensions edit In conjunction with the works to integrate the two lines two major extensions were undertaken northwards to Edgware in Middlesex now in the London Borough of Barnet and southwards to Morden in Surrey then in the Merton and Morden Urban District but now in the London Borough of Merton Edgware Extension edit The Edgware extension used plans dating back to 1901 for the Edgware and Hampstead Railway E amp HR 17 which the UERL s subsidiary the London Electric Railway had taken over in 1912 18 It extended the CCE amp HR line from its terminus at Golders Green to Edgware in two stages to Hendon Central in 1923 and to Edgware in 1924 11 19 The line crossed open countryside and ran mostly on viaduct from Golders Green to Brent and then on the surface apart from a short tunnel north of Hendon Central 19 Five new stations were built to pavilion style designs by Stanley Heaps head of the Underground s Architects Office stimulating the rapid northward expansion of suburban developments in the following years 20 Morden Extension edit The engineering of the Morden extension of the C amp SLR from Clapham Common to Morden was more demanding running in tunnels to a point just north of Morden station which was constructed in a cutting The line then runs under the wide station forecourt and public road outside the station to the depot The extension was initially planned to continue to Sutton 21 over part of the route for the unbuilt Wimbledon and Sutton Railway in which the UERL held a stake but agreements were made with the Southern Railway to end the extension at Morden The Southern Railway built the surface line from Wimbledon to Sutton in the 1930s via South Merton and St Helier nb 3 The tube extension itself opened in 1926 with seven new stations all designed by Charles Holden in a modern style Originally Stanley Heaps was to design the stations but after seeing these designs Frank Pick Assistant Joint Manager of the UERL decided that Holden should take over the project 22 With the exception of Morden and Clapham South where more land was available the new stations were built on confined corner sites at main road junctions in areas that had been already developed Holden made good use of this limited space and designed striking buildings The street level structures are of white Portland Stone with tall double height ticket halls with the London Underground roundel made up in coloured glass panels in large glazed screens The stone columns framing the glass screens are surmounted by a capital formed as a three dimensional version of the roundel The large expanses of glass above the entrances ensure that the ticket halls are bright and lit from within at night welcoming 23 The first and last new stations on the extension Clapham South and Morden include a parade of shops and were designed with structures capable of being built above like many of the earlier central London stations Clapham South was extended upwards soon after its construction with a block of apartments Morden was extended upwards in the 1960s with a block of offices All the stations on the extension except Morden itself are Grade II listed buildings Great Northern amp City Railway edit After the UERL and the Metropolitan Railway MR were brought under public control in the form of the London Passenger Transport Board LPTB in 1933 the MR s subsidiary the Great Northern amp City Railway which ran underground from Moorgate to Finsbury Park became part of the Underground as the Northern City Line In preparation for the Northern Heights Plan it was operated as part of the Northern line although it was never connected to the rest of the line Naming edit The resulting line became known as the Morden Edgware line although a number of alternative names were also mooted in the fashion of the contraction of Baker Street amp Waterloo Railway to Bakerloo such as Edgmor Mordenware Medgeway and Edgmorden 24 With Egyptology very much in fashion after the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun in 1922 there was also a proposal to call the line the Tootancamden Line as it passed through both Tooting and Camden 25 It was eventually named the Northern line from 28 August 1937 26 reflecting the planned addition of the Northern Heights lines 27 Northern Heights plan edit nbsp Line map of the abandoned Northern Heights plan nbsp Sign displaying the route of the Northern Heights extension Northern Heights redirects here For the neighbourhood in Sudbury Ontario see Urban neighbourhoods of Sudbury Donovan Northern Heights For the condominium mall in Yellowknife Northwest Territories see Centre Square Mall For broader coverage of the detailed history see Edgware Highgate and London Railway In June 1935 the LPTB announced the New Works Programme an ambitious plan to expand the Underground network which included the integration of a complex of existing London and North Eastern Railway LNER lines north of Highgate through the Northern Heights These lines built in the 1860s and 1870s by the Edgware Highgate and London Railway EH amp LR and its successors ran from Finsbury Park to Edgware via Highgate with branches to Alexandra Palace and High Barnet The line taken over would be extended beyond Edgware to Brockley Hill Elstree South and Bushey Heath with a new depot at Aldenham The extension s route was that planned for the unbuilt Watford and Edgware Railway W amp ER using rights obtained from the earlier purchase of the W amp ER which had long intended an extension of the EH amp LR Edgware route towards Watford This also provided the potential for further extension in the future Bushey s town planners reserved space in Bushey village for a future station and Bushey Heath station s design was revised several times to ensure this option would remain available in the future The project involved electrification of the surface lines operated by steam trains at the time the doubling of the original single line section between Finchley Central and the proposed junction with the Edgware branch of the Northern line and the construction of three new linking sections of track a connection between Northern City Line and Finsbury Park station on the surface an extension from Archway to the LNER line near East Finchley via new deep level platforms below Highgate station and a short diversion from just before the LNER s Edgware station to the Underground s station of the same name Intended service levels edit The peak hour service pattern was to be 21 trains an hour each way on the High Barnet branch north of Camden Town 14 of them via the Charing Cross branch and seven via the Bank branch 14 would have continued on beyond Finchley Central seven each on the High Barnet and Edgware branches An additional seven trains an hour would have served the High Barnet branch but continued via Highgate High Level and Finsbury Park to Moorgate a slightly shorter route to the City It does not seem to have been intended to run through trains to the ex Northern City branch from Edgware via Finchley Central Seven trains an hour would have served the Alexandra Palace branch to from Moorgate via Highgate High Level In addition to the 14 through trains described the ex Northern City branch would have had 14 four car shuttle trains an hour Progress of works edit Work began in the late 1930s and was in progress on all fronts by the outbreak of the Second World War The tunnelling northwards from the original Highgate station now Archway had been completed and the service to the rebuilt surface station at East Finchley started on 3 July 1939 but without the opening of the intermediate new Highgate Station at the site of the LNER s station of the same name Further progress was disrupted by the start of the war though enough had been made to complete the electrification of the High Barnet branch onwards from East Finchley over which tube services started on 14 April 1940 the new deep level Highgate station opened on 19 January 1941 The single track LNER line to Edgware was electrified as far as Mill Hill East including the Dollis Brook Viaduct opening as a tube service on 18 May 1941 to serve the barracks there thus forming the Northern line as it is today The new depot at Aldenham had already been built and was used to build Halifax bombers Work on the other elements of the plan was suspended late in 1939 Work on the extension from Edgware to Bushey Heath including work on a viaduct and a tunnel started in June 1939 but was stopped after war broke out 28 After the war the area beyond Edgware was made part of the Metropolitan Green Belt largely preventing the anticipated residential development in the area and the potential demand for services from Bushey Heath thus vanished Passenger numbers also dropped on the then BR s Mill Hill and Alexandra Palace branches so it was useless to electrify them Available funds were directed towards completing the eastern extension of the Central line instead and the Northern Heights plan was dropped on 9 February 1954 Aldenham depot was converted into an overhaul facility for buses nbsp Close up of a High Barnet bound Northern line 1995 stock cabThe implemented service from High Barnet branch gave good access both to the West End and the City This appears to have undermined traffic on the Alexandra Palace branch still run with steam haulage to Kings Cross via Finsbury Park as Highgate low level was but a short bus ride away and car traffic was much lighter than it would become later Consequently the line from Finsbury Park to Muswell Hill and Alexandra Palace via the surface platforms at Highgate was closed altogether to passenger traffic in 1954 citation needed This contrasts with the decision to electrify the Epping Ongar branch of the Central line another remnant of the New Works programme run as a tube train shuttle from 1957 A local pressure group the Muswell Hill Metro Group campaigns to reopen this route as a light rail service citation needed So far there is no sign of movement on this issue the route now the Parkland Walk is highly valued by walkers and cyclists and suggestions in the 1990s that it could in part become a road were met with fierce opposition citation needed Another pressure group has proposed using the track bed further north as part of the North and West London Light Railway citation needed The connection between Drayton Park and the surface platforms at Finsbury Park was opened in 1976 when the Northern City Line became part of British Rail 1990s refurbishment and upgrade edit In the 1980s a southern extension of the line to Peckham was proposed as part of a review of potential extensions of Underground lines The proposal was not proceeded with 29 By the early 1990s the line had deteriorated due to years of under investment and the use of old rolling stock most of which dated back to the early 1960s 30 The line gained the nickname Misery Line due to its perceived unreliability 31 32 In 1995 a comprehensive refurbishment of the line began including track replacement power upgrades station modernisation such as Mornington Crescent and the replacement of older rolling stock with new 1995 Stock thanks to a public private partnership deal with Alstom 33 34 Recent developments editThroughout the 2000s no plans were considered for extending the Northern line as the PPP to upgrade the Underground did not include provision for line extensions within the PPP contracts 35 36 The Northern line was originally scheduled to switch to automatic train operation in 2012 using the same SelTrac S40 system 37 as used since 2009 on the Jubilee line and for a number of years on the Docklands Light Railway 38 Originally the work was to follow on from the Jubilee line so as to benefit from the experience of installing it there but that project was not completed until spring 2011 Work on the Northern line was contracted to be completed before the 2012 Olympics It is now when being undertaken in house and TfL predicted the upgrade would be complete by the end of 2014 39 The first section of the line West Finchley to High Barnet was transferred to the new signalling system on 26 February 2013 40 and the line became fully automated on 1 June 2014 with the Chalk Farm to Edgware via Golders Green section being the last part of the line to switch to ATO 41 42 In January 2018 Transport for London announced that it would double the period during which it runs peak evening services in the central London section to tackle overcrowding There would now be 24 trains an hour on both central London branches and the northern branches as well as 30 trains an hour on the Kennington to Morden section between 5pm and 7pm 4 24 hour weekend service edit Since the mid autumn of 2016 43 a 24 hour Night Tube service has run on Friday and Saturday nights from Edgware and High Barnet to Morden via the Charing Cross branch service is suspended on the Bank branch during these times 44 Trains run every 8 minutes between Morden and Camden Town and every 15 16 minutes between Camden Town and Edgware High Barnet Labour disputes delayed the planned start date of September 2015 45 Battersea extension edit Main article Northern line extension to Battersea In September 2021 the Northern line was extended to serve the redevelopment of Battersea Power Station Partially funded by private developers the 1 2bn 46 project extended the Charing Cross branch of the line for 3 2 km 2 0 mi from Kennington to Battersea Power Station with an intermediate stop at Nine Elms 47 48 Approved by Wandsworth Council in 2010 49 and Transport for London in 2014 47 the construction of the line began in 2015 Tunnelling for the project was completed in 2017 46 and the extension opened on 20 September 2021 50 51 Provision has been made for a future extension to Clapham Junction railway station 52 Services editPeak edit As of September 2021 morning peak southbound services are 53 4 tph from Edgware to Kennington via Charing Cross 2 tph from Edgware to Morden via Charing Cross 12 tph from Edgware to Morden via Bank 4 tph from High Barnet to Kennington via Charing Cross 6 tph from High Barnet to Battersea Power Station via Charing Cross 2 tph from High Barnet to Morden via Charing Cross 8 tph from High Barnet to Morden via Bank 1 tph from Mill Hill East to Kennington via Charing Cross 1 tph from Mill Hill East to Battersea Power Station via Charing Cross 2 tph from Mill Hill East to Morden via BankThis service pattern provides 20 tph between Finchley Central and High Barnet 4 tph between Finchley Central and Mill Hill East 7 tph between Kennington and Battersea Power Station and 22 tph everywhere else on the line except between Kennington and Morden between Camden Town and Finchley Central and on the Edgware branch where there will be 24 tph Off peak edit As of November 2022 off peak services are the similar to peak services minus the four hourly trains that run from Morden to the northern branches via Charing Cross 53 10 tph from Edgware to Kennington via Charing Cross 10 tph from Edgware to Morden via Bank 8 tph from High Barnet to Battersea Power Station via Charing Cross 8 tph from High Barnet to Morden via Bank 2 tph from Mill Hill East to Battersea Power Station via Charing Cross 2 tph from Mill Hill East to Morden via BankThis service pattern provides 16 tph between Finchley Central and High Barnet 4 tph between Finchley Central and Mill Hill East 10 tph between Kennington and Battersea Power Station and 20 tph everywhere else on the line Night edit Since 2016 the Northern line has operated Night Tube services on Friday and Saturday nights between the Edgware and High Barnet termini and Morden via the Charing Cross branch only Trains run every 15 minutes on each of the northern branches combining to give eight trains per hour between Camden Town and Morden There is no Night Tube service on the Mill Hill East Bank or Battersea branches 43 4 tph from High Barnet to Morden via Charing Cross 4 tph from Edgware to Morden via Charing CrossMap edit nbsp Geographical path of the Northern lineStations editvteNorthern lineLegendBushey Heath nbsp nbsp nbsp Aldenham Works nbsp nbsp nbsp Elstree South nbsp nbsp nbsp cancelled BusheyHeath extensionBrockley Hill nbsp Edgware nbsp nbsp Edgware LNER nbsp nbsp 1867 1939 Edgware Highgate amp London Railway nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Edgware depot nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp proposed butunbuilt connectionBurnt Oak nbsp nbsp Mill Hill The Hale nbsp nbsp nbsp Mill Hill East nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp High BarnetColindale nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Dollis Brook Viaduct nbsp nbsp nbsp Totteridge amp Whetstone nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Woodside ParkBurroughs tunnel nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp West FinchleyHendon Central nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Finchley Central nbsp nbsp East Finchley nbsp nbsp nbsp Alexandra PalaceBrent Cross nbsp nbsp nbsp Muswell Hill nbsp nbsp nbsp Cranley Gardens nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Muswell Hill branch 1873 1954Golders Green nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Highgate depotGolders Green depot nbsp nbsp nbsp Highgate north tunnel nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Highgatenotcompleted North End nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Archway nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Tufnell ParkHampstead nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Kentish Town nbsp Belsize Park nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Edgware Highgate amp London Railway 1867 1954 nbsp nbsp nbsp South Kentish Town 1907 24Chalk Farm nbsp nbsp nbsp Crouch End nbsp nbsp nbsp Stroud Green nbsp nbsp nbsp Finsbury Park nbsp nbsp nbsp Camden Town nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Northern City Line nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Drayton Park nbsp Mornington Crescent nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Highbury and Islington nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Euston nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Essex Road nbsp nbsp Warren Street nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp King s CrossSt Pancras nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Goodge Street nbsp nbsp nbsp Angel nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp City Road 1901 22 nbsp nbsp TottenhamCourt Road nbsp nbsp nbsp Old Street nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Moorgate nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Leicester Square nbsp nbsp nbsp Lothbury authorisedbut not built nbsp nbsp Bank nbsp nbsp nbsp Monument nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Charing Cross nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp King William Street 1890 1900 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp River Thames nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Embankment nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp London Bridge nbsp nbsp nbsp 1914 25 Charing Crossreversing loop nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Waterloo nbsp nbsp Borough nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Elephant amp Castle nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Kenningtonreversing loop nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Oval nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Stockwell depot closed 1915Nine Elms nbsp nbsp Stockwell nbsp Battersea Power Station nbsp nbsp nbsp Clapham Northreserved route nbsp nbsp Clapham Common nbsp nbsp Clapham Junction nbsp nbsp nbsp Clapham South nbsp Balham nbsp nbsp Tooting Bec nbsp Tooting Broadway nbsp Colliers Wood nbsp South Wimbledon nbsp MordenWimbledon amp Sutton Rlyto Wimbledon nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Morden depot nbsp Morden South nbsp nbsp nbsp proposed butunbuilt connection nbsp nbsp South Morden authorisedbut not built nbsp Sutton Common nbsp nbsp nbsp Cheam authorisedbut not built nbsp Sutton nbsp nbsp Notice explaining about step free access This can be found inside every Northern line train Open stations edit High Barnet branch edit Station Image Opened Branch Additional informationHigh Barnet nbsp nbsp 1 April 1872 High Barnet branch Terminus Northern line introduced 14 April 1940map 1Totteridge amp Whetstone nbsp Northern line introduced 14 April 1940 map 2Woodside Park nbsp nbsp Northern line introduced 14 April 1940map 3West Finchley nbsp nbsp 1 March 1933 Northern line introduced 14 April 1940map 4Mill Hill East nbsp nbsp 22 August 1867 Mill Hill branch Closed 11 September 1939 reopened 18 May 1941map 5Finchley Central nbsp nbsp High Barnet amp Mill Hill branches First Northern line train was 14 April 1940map 6East Finchley nbsp High Barnet branch First Northern line train was 3 July 1939map 7Highgate nbsp 19 January 1941 Disused surface station opened 22 August 1867map 8Archway nbsp 22 June 1907 Originally named Highgatemap 9Tufnell Park nbsp map 10Kentish Town nbsp nbsp nbsp Mainline station opened 13 July 1868 Change for National Rail services map 11Edgware branch edit Station Image Opened Additional informationEdgware nbsp nbsp 18 August 1924 Terminusmap 12Burnt Oak nbsp 27 October 1924 Opened with its current name then renamed as Burnt Oak Watling approximately four years after its opening was reverted to its original name in 1950 map 13Colindale nbsp 18 August 1924 Used as a terminus for some trains travelling north map 14Hendon Central nbsp nbsp 19 November 1923 map 15Brent Cross nbsp Opened as Brent renamed 20 July 1976 map 16Golders Green nbsp nbsp 22 June 1907 Originally a terminus remains a terminus for some trains map 17Hampstead nbsp Originally proposed to be named Heath Street this name can still be seen on wall tilings on station platform walls map 18Belsize Park nbsp One of eight London Underground stations that have deep level air raid shelters underneath them The shelter was constructed in the Second World War to provide safe accommodation for service personnel map 19Chalk Farm nbsp map 20Camden Town edit Station Image Opened Branch Additional informationCamden Town nbsp 22 June 1907 Edgware High Barnet Charing Cross and Bank branches a The junctions connecting the two northern branches of the Northern line to the two central branches are just south of Camden Town station The station has a pair of platforms on each of the two northern branches and southbound trains can depart toward either Charing Cross or Bank from either of the two southbound platforms without crossing over map 21Charing Cross branch edit Station Image Opened Additional informationMornington Crescent nbsp 22 June 1907 Was planned to be named Seymour Street but this was changed It was closed on 23 October 1992 to replace the lifts and was reopened on 27 April 1998 map 22Euston Charing Cross branch nbsp nbsp nbsp Change for southbound Northern line service via Bank from platform 6 Victoria line London Overground and National Rail servicesmap 23Warren Street nbsp Change for Victoria linemap 24Goodge Street nbsp Opened as Tottenham Court Road renamed 3 September 1908map 25Tottenham Court Road nbsp nbsp nbsp Change for Central line and Elizabeth line Leicester Square nbsp Piccadilly line opened 15 December 1906 map 27Charing Cross nbsp nbsp Bakerloo line opened as Trafalgar Square 10 March 1906 Stations combined 1 May 1979 Change for Bakerloo line and National Rail servicesmap 28Embankment nbsp Embankment Pier nbsp 6 April 1914 District Railway opened 30 May 1870 Northern line extension from Charing Cross opened 6 April 1914 Extension from Kennington opened 13 September 1926 Change for Bakerloo Circle and District linesmap 29Waterloo nbsp nbsp Waterloo Pier Festival Pier nbsp 13 September 1926 Waterloo and City line opened 8 August 1898 Extension from Kennington opened 13 September 1926 Change for Bakerloo Jubilee and Waterloo amp City lines and National Rail servicesmap 30Bank branch edit Station Image Opened Additional informationEuston Bank branch nbsp nbsp nbsp 12 May 1907 Change for southbound Northern line service via Charing Cross from platform 2 Victoria line London Overground and National Rail servicesmap 23King s Cross St Pancras nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Trains Gatwick and Luton nbsp Metropolitan Railway station opened 10 January 1863 Change for Circle Hammersmith amp City Metropolitan Piccadilly and Victoria lines National Rail services and Eurostarmap 31Angel nbsp 17 November 1901 Has the longest escalator on the entire Underground networkmap 32Old Street nbsp nbsp Northern line platforms opened February 1904 Connects with National Rail services map 33Moorgate nbsp nbsp nbsp 25 February 1900 Metropolitan Railway station opened 23 December 1865 Change for Circle Hammersmith amp City and Metropolitan lines and National Rail services map 34 Has an interchange with the Elizabeth line via Liverpool Street station Bank nbsp nbsp nbsp Linked with Monument by escalator 18 September 1933 change for Central Circle District and Waterloo amp City lines and Docklands Light Railway map 35London Bridge nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Trains to Gatwick and Luton nbsp London Bridge City Pier nbsp Change for Jubilee line and National Rail servicesmap 36Borough nbsp 18 December 1890 map 37Elephant amp Castle nbsp nbsp nbsp Change for Bakerloo line and National Rail servicesmap 38Kennington edit Station Image Opened Branch Additional informationKennington nbsp 18 December 1890 Charing Cross Bank Battersea and Morden branches b The station has four platforms arranged in two pairs one pair for northbound services to each central branch of the Northern line the other pair for southbound services from each central branch The junctions connecting the central branches to the southern branches are just south of Kennington station Southbound trains from the Charing Cross branch can terminate at this station which has a reversing loop or join either southern branch southbound trains from the Bank branch can proceed onto the Morden branch but not the Battersea branch map 39Battersea branch edit Station Image Opened Additional informationNine Elms nbsp nbsp 20 September 2021Battersea Power Station nbsp nbsp TerminusMorden branch edit Station Image Opened Additional informationOval nbsp 18 December 1890 map 40Stockwell nbsp Change for Victoria line Original terminus until 1900 when the line was extended to Clapham Common The station platforms were resited south of the original island platform Formerly a depot existed here it was branched off from the current southbound track It is one of the eight stations that have a deep level air raid shelter map 41Clapham North nbsp 3 June 1900 One of the two remaining stations to have an island platform underground It is also one of the eight stations that have a deep level air raid shelter map 42Clapham Common nbsp Terminus from 1900 to 1926 It is also one of the two remaining stations to have an island platform underground It is also one of the eight stations that have a deep level air raid shelter map 43Clapham South nbsp 13 September 1926 One of the eight stations that have a deep level air raid shelter map 44Balham nbsp nbsp 6 December 1926 Change for National Rail servicesmap 45Tooting Bec nbsp 13 September 1926 Opened as Trinity Road renamed 1 October 1950map 46Tooting Broadway nbsp Used as a terminus for some trains heading southmap 47Colliers Wood nbsp map 48South Wimbledon nbsp Opened as South Wimbledon Merton The suffix gradually fell out of use but still can be seen on some platform signage map 49Morden nbsp nbsp Terminusmap 50Closed stations edit Main article List of former and unopened London Underground stations Permanently closed stations edit King William Street closed 1900 replaced by Bank City Road closed 1922 South Kentish Town closed 1924 North End also known as Bull amp Bush Never opened work stopped 1906 Resited stations edit Stockwell new platforms resited immediately to the south of its predecessor with the 1922 1924 upgrade of the line London Bridge the northbound tunnel and platform converted into a concourse and a new northbound tunnel and platform built in the late 1990s to increase the platform and circulation areas in preparation for the opening of the Jubilee line Abandoned plans edit Northern Heights stations not transferred from LNER edit Highgate High level only Stroud Green Crouch End Cranley Gardens Muswell Hill Alexandra Palace Mill Hill The Hale Bushey Extension stations not constructed edit Brockley Hill Elstree South Bushey HeathInfrastructure editRolling stock edit nbsp A High Barnet bound Northern line train arriving at Finchley CentralWhen the line opened it was served by 1906 Stock This was replaced by 1938 stock as part of the New Works Programme later supplemented with identical 1949 Stock When the Piccadilly line was extended to Heathrow Airport in the 1970s its 1959 Stock and 1956 Stock prototypes of the 1959 Stock trains were transferred to the Northern line As there were not enough 1956 and 1959 Stock trains to replace the Northern line s 1938 Stock fleet they were supplemented with newly built 1972 Mark 1 Stock trains which all served the line at the same time A few 1972 Mark 2 stock trains also ran on this line until going to the Jubilee line they were then moved to the Bakerloo line where they remain in service The few 1956 Stock trains were briefly replaced by 1962 Stock transferred from the Central line in 1995 before the entire Northern line fleet was replaced with 1995 Stock between 1997 and 1999 Today all Northern line trains consist of 1995 Stock in the Underground livery of red white and blue In common with the other deep level lines the trains are the smaller of the two loading gauges used on the system 1995 stock has automated announcements and quick close doors citation needed If the proposed split of the line takes place initial estimates of 2018 having been abandoned to focus on completion of the Battersea and Nine Elms extension work 19 new trains will be added to the existing fleet of 106 trains 54 though additional trains beyond the extra 19 trains may be required to provide a full service for the new Battersea extension Tunnels edit Although two other London Underground lines operate fully underground the Northern line is unusual in that it is a deep level tube line that serves the outer suburbs of South London yet there is only one station above ground Morden tube station while the rest of this part of the line is deep below ground The short section to Morden depot is also above ground This is partly because its southern extension into the outer suburbs was not done by taking over an existing surface line as was generally the case with routes such as the Central Jubilee and Piccadilly lines Apart from the core central underground tunnels part of the section between Hendon and Colindale is also underground As bicycles are not allowed in tunnel sections even if no station is in that section as they would hinder evacuation they are limited to High Barnet East Finchley the Mill Hill East branch Edgware Colindale and Hendon Central Golders Green 55 There are also time based restrictions for the sections where bicycles are allowed 55 The tunnel from Morden to East Finchley via Bank 17 miles 528 yards 27 841 km 1 was for a time the longest rail tunnel in the world Other tunnels including the Channel Tunnel that links the UK and France are now longer Depots edit The Northern line is serviced by four depots The main one is at Golders Greenmap 51 adjacent to Golders Green tube station while the second at Morden map 52 is south of Morden tube station and is the larger of the two The other two are at Edgware and Highgate The Highgate depot is on the former LNER branch to Alexandra Palace There was originally a depot at Stockwell but this closed in 1915 There are sidings at High Barnet for stabling trains overnight Future editNorthern line split edit Since the 2000s TfL has aspired to split the Northern line into two separate routes 56 57 Running trains between all combinations of branches and the two central sections as at present means only 24 trains an hour can run through each of the central sections at peak times because merging trains have to wait for each other at the junctions at Camden Town and Kennington 58 Completely segregating the routes could allow 36 trains an hour on all parts of the line increasing capacity by around 25 56 58 TfL has already separated the Charing Cross and Bank branches during off peak periods however four trains per hour still run to and from Morden via Charing Cross in the peak the northern branches to Edgware and High Barnet cannot be separated until Camden Town station is upgraded to cope with the numbers of passengers changing trains 59 The extension to Battersea would allow the Charing Cross branch to terminate at Battersea Power Station 60 61 Camden Town station upgrade and expansion edit The proposed split of the Northern line would require Camden Town station to be expanded and upgraded as the station is already severely overcrowded at weekend peak times and a split would increase the number of passengers wishing to change trains at the station 62 63 59 In 2005 London Underground failed to secure planning permission for a comprehensive upgrade plan for Camden Town tube station that would have involved demolition of the existing station entrance and several other surface level buildings all within a conservation area 64 65 New redevelopment plans were first announced in 2013 by TfL which proposed avoiding the existing station entrance and the conservation area by building a second entrance and interchange tunnels to the north mostly on the site of a subsequently vacated infant school 66 In 2018 plans to upgrade and rebuild Camden Town station were placed indefinitely on hold due to TfL s financial situation 67 As of 2022 update there is currently no plan to split the line Incidents and accidents editIn October 2003 a train derailed at Camden Town 68 Although no one was hurt points signals and carriages were damaged Concern was raised about the safety of the Tube given the derailment at Chancery Lane earlier in 2003 69 A joint report by the Underground and its maintenance contractor Tube Lines concluded that poor track geometry was the main cause and therefore extra friction arising out of striations scratches on a newly installed set of points had allowed the leading wheel of the last carriage to climb the rail and derail The track geometry at the derailment site is a very tight bend and tight tunnel bore which precludes the normal solution for this sort of geometry of canting the track by raising the height of one rail relative to the other 70 In August 2010 a defective rail grinding train caused disruption on the Charing Cross branch after it travelled four miles in 13 minutes without a driver The train was being towed to the depot after becoming faulty At Archway station the defective train became detached and ran driverless until coming to a stop at an incline near Warren Street station This caused morning rush hour services to be suspended on this branch All passenger trains were diverted via the Bank branch with several not stopping at stations until they were safely on the Bank branch 71 72 In popular culture editIn his debut novel Ghostwritten David Mitchell characterises the Northern line as the psycho of the family 73 The Bloc Party song Waiting For the 7 18 references the Northern line as the loudest 74 As part of a series of twelve books tied to the twelve lines of the London Underground A Northern Line Minute focuses on the Northern line 75 The Nick Drake song Parasite references the Northern Line 76 It is also referred to in The New Vaudeville Band song Finchley Central and the Squeeze song 853 5937 The 1982 Robyn Hitchcock song Fifty Two Stations begins There s fifty two stations on the Northern Line None of them is yours one of them is mine 77 Maps edit map 1 High Barnet 51 39 02 N 000 11 39 W 51 65056 N 0 19417 W 51 65056 0 19417 01 High Barnet tube station map 2 Totteridge amp Whetstone 51 37 50 N 000 10 45 W 51 63056 N 0 17917 W 51 63056 0 17917 02 Totteridge amp Whetstone tube station map 3 Woodside Park 51 37 05 N 000 11 08 W 51 61806 N 0 18556 W 51 61806 0 18556 03 Woodside Park tube station map 4 West Finchley 51 36 34 N 000 11 18 W 51 60944 N 0 18833 W 51 60944 0 18833 04 West Finchley tube station map 5 Mill Hill East 51 36 30 N 000 12 37 W 51 60833 N 0 21028 W 51 60833 0 21028 05 Mill Hill East tube station map 6 Finchley Central 51 36 04 N 000 11 33 W 51 60111 N 0 19250 W 51 60111 0 19250 06 Finchley Central tube station map 7 East Finchley 51 35 14 N 000 09 54 W 51 58722 N 0 16500 W 51 58722 0 16500 07 East Finchley tube station map 8 Highgate 51 34 40 N 000 08 45 W 51 57778 N 0 14583 W 51 57778 0 14583 08 Highgate tube station map 9 Archway 51 33 56 N 000 08 06 W 51 56556 N 0 13500 W 51 56556 0 13500 09 Archway tube station map 10 Tufnell Park 51 33 24 N 000 08 17 W 51 55667 N 0 13806 W 51 55667 0 13806 10 Tufnell Park tube station map 11 Kentish Town 51 33 01 N 000 08 26 W 51 55028 N 0 14056 W 51 55028 0 14056 11 Kentish Town stationq map 12 Edgware 51 36 50 N 000 16 30 W 51 61389 N 0 27500 W 51 61389 0 27500 12 Edgware tube station map 13 Burnt Oak 51 36 10 N 000 15 50 W 51 60278 N 0 26389 W 51 60278 0 26389 13 Burnt Oak tube station map 14 Colindale 51 35 44 N 000 15 00 W 51 59556 N 0 25000 W 51 59556 0 25000 14 Colindale tube station map 15 Hendon Central 51 34 59 N 000 13 34 W 51 58306 N 0 22611 W 51 58306 0 22611 15 Hendon Central tube station map 16 Brent Cross 51 34 36 N 000 12 49 W 51 57667 N 0 21361 W 51 57667 0 21361 16 Brent Cross tube station map 17 Golders Green 51 34 19 N 000 11 38 W 51 57194 N 0 19389 W 51 57194 0 19389 17 Golders Green tube station map 18 Hampstead 51 33 25 N 000 10 42 W 51 55694 N 0 17833 W 51 55694 0 17833 18 Hampstead tube station map 19 Belsize Park 51 33 01 N 000 09 52 W 51 55028 N 0 16444 W 51 55028 0 16444 19 Belsize Park tube station map 20 Chalk Farm 51 32 39 N 000 09 12 W 51 54417 N 0 15333 W 51 54417 0 15333 20 Chalk Farm tube station map 21 Camden Town 51 32 22 N 000 08 34 W 51 53944 N 0 14278 W 51 53944 0 14278 21 Camden Town tube station map 22 Mornington Crescent 51 32 04 N 000 08 19 W 51 53444 N 0 13861 W 51 53444 0 13861 22 Mornington Crescent tube station map 23 Euston 51 31 42 N 000 07 59 W 51 52833 N 0 13306 W 51 52833 0 13306 23 Euston tube station map 24 Warren Street 51 31 29 N 000 08 18 W 51 52472 N 0 13833 W 51 52472 0 13833 24 Warren Street tube station map 25 Goodge Street 51 31 15 N 000 08 04 W 51 52083 N 0 13444 W 51 52083 0 13444 25 Goodge Street tube station map 26 Tottenham Court Road 51 30 58 N 000 07 51 W 51 51611 N 0 13083 W 51 51611 0 13083 26 Tottenham Court Road tube station map 27 Leicester Square 51 30 41 N 000 07 41 W 51 51139 N 0 12806 W 51 51139 0 12806 27 Leicester Square tube station map 28 Charing Cross 51 30 29 N 000 07 29 W 51 50806 N 0 12472 W 51 50806 0 12472 28 Charing Cross tube station map 29 Embankment 51 30 25 N 000 07 19 W 51 50694 N 0 12194 W 51 50694 0 12194 29 Embankment tube station map 30 Waterloo 51 30 09 N 000 06 47 W 51 50250 N 0 11306 W 51 50250 0 11306 30 Waterloo tube station map 31 King s Cross St Pancras 51 31 49 N 000 07 27 W 51 53028 N 0 12417 W 51 53028 0 12417 31 King s Cross St Pancras tube station map 32 Angel 51 31 55 N 000 06 22 W 51 53194 N 0 10611 W 51 53194 0 10611 32 Angel tube station map 33 Old Street 51 31 33 N 000 05 14 W 51 52583 N 0 08722 W 51 52583 0 08722 33 Old Street station map 34 Moorgate 51 31 07 N 000 05 19 W 51 51861 N 0 08861 W 51 51861 0 08861 34 Moorgate station map 35 Bank Monument 51 30 47 N 000 05 17 W 51 51306 N 0 08806 W, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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