South Woodford tube station
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South Woodford | |
Location | |
---|---|
Place | South Woodford |
Local authority | Redbridge |
Operations | |
Managed by | London Underground |
Platforms in use | 2 |
Transport for London | |
Zone | 4 |
Annual entry/exit | 3.141 million † |
History | |
Key dates | Opened 1856 |
Transport for London List of London stations: Underground | National Rail |
|
† Data from Transport for London [1] | |
South Woodford tube station is a London Underground station on the Central Line, between Snaresbrook and Woodford in Zone 4.
[edit] History
The station opened as South Woodford (George Lane) on 22 August 1856 as part of the Eastern Counties Railway branch to Loughton, which was eventually extended to Epping and Ongar in 1865. The station then formed part of the Great Eastern Railway's system until that company was merged into the London & North Eastern Railway (LNER) in 1923. The station was subsequently transferred to form part of London Underground's Central Line from 14 December 1947. This formed a part of the long planned, and delayed, Eastern Extension of the Central line that was part of the London Passenger Transport Board's "New Works Programme" of 1935 - 1940.
The station underwent considerable renovation in 2006, 150 years after its first opening.
The suffix "George Lane" has never been officially used since the transfer to the Underground but is, unusually, retained on the station's nameplate roundels.
Previous station | London Underground | Next station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Central Line |
toward Epping
|