Stockwell tube station
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stockwell | |
Location | |
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Place | Stockwell |
Local authority | London Borough of Lambeth |
Operations | |
Managed by | London Underground |
Platforms in use | 4 |
Transport for London | |
Zone | 2 |
Annual entry/exit | 6.924 million † |
History | |
1890 1900 1971 |
Opened (C&SLR, as terminus) Became through station Opened (Victoria Line) |
Transport for London List of London stations: Underground | National Rail |
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† Data from Transport for London [1] | |
Stockwell tube station is a London Underground station in Stockwell, in the London Borough of Lambeth. It is situated between Clapham North and Oval on the Northern Line, and between Vauxhall and Brixton on the Victoria Line. It is in Travelcard Zone 2.
Stockwell station is served by bus routes: 2, 88, 155, 196, 255, 345, 355 and P5.
[edit] History
Stockwell station was ceremonially opened on November 4, 1890 by the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII), as the most southerly station on the City & South London Railway (C&SLR) - London's first deep level tube railway. Passenger services began just over one month later on 18 December 1890. The station had a single island platform, with tracks on either side, an arrangement rarely seen on the underground network, this original platform is slightly further north than the modern day platform and present day trains still pass through it. The other terminal of the CSLR line was the King William Street tube station, which was only open for 10 years (1890-1900) and is currently inaccessible following the rebuilding of Regis House above it and other alterations that were made during the extension of the Jubilee Line.
Stockwell ceased to be a terminus in 1900 after the opening of an extension to Clapham Common. This involved the addition of a flight of stairs at the south end of the platform to take passengers to a subway that passed over the new northbound tunnel and joined the lift shaft at a higher level.
The original building at Stockwell was similar to—but larger than—the existing surface building at Kennington with a domed roof to the original lift shaft. Between 1923 and 1924, the station was modernised in advance of the 1926 extension from Clapham Common to Morden (Morden Extension). A new surface building was constructed on the original site, but the platforms were rebuilt to a larger diameter - and with a single patform in each tunnel - south of the original station tunnel.
With the opening of the Victoria Line on July 23, 1971, parallel cross-platform interchanges were provided between the two lines in both directions and the 1920s surface buildings were demolished and replaced by a rather non-descript structure dominated by a ventilation shaft. The surface buildings demolished in the 1920s were designed by T. P. Figgis, and were topped by a large decorative dome inside which were a pair of small guide wheels for the wires which controlled the hydraulic lifts. The two lifts each carried 50 people to and from the platforms until their replacement by escalators in the mid-1920s.
Stockwell is one of eight London Underground stations each with a deep-level air-raid shelter beneath it. These shelters were constructed during World War II. The shelters are below the current station and comprise two parallel tunnels, each of which is approximately six times the length of the current platform. These tunnels are 16 foot 6 inches (5.3 m) in diameter (wider than the current platforms), the shelters are split horizontally into upper and lower levels, there are various connecting and branch tunnels used for medical posts, lavatories, and for ventilation. The total capacity of the shelter was around 1600 people. Access was via the station as well as two further entrance shafts containing spiral staircases located one of which is now at the middle of the junction of South Lambeth Road and Clapham Road and the other on Studley Road.
The shelter was completed in September 1942, and was used by the Government until 1944 when it was opened to the public. It was used for one year as a shelter. After the war it was used for a period to billet military personnel. Unlike the current uses of the other deep level shelters within the tube network its present use is unknown.
Just north of the station there is a branch tunnel which used to lead to a nearby generating station (closed 1915), depot and workshop located at the junction of Stockwell and Clapham Roads. The tunnel was very steep with an incline of 1:3.5, rolling stock was originally pulled up to the surface using a wire rope and a winch. This system was replaced in 1907 by a hydraulic lift which could carry one locomotive or one carriage.
During the 1920s, the line was closed for reconstruction and the depot was used as a working site for transporting spoil, equipment and works traffic in and out of the tunnels. The depot and lift were finally taken out of use at the end of 1924. The incline tunnel and the lift shaft were plugged on the surface and several blocks of flats were constructed on the old depot site by the LCC. These flats still stand (2006) as does one retaining wall of the old depot.
[edit] Shooting
On 22 July 2005, Jean Charles de Menezes, a Brazilian electrician living in London, was shot dead by plain clothes police officers at Stockwell station. This incident came a day after the failed 21 July 2005 London bombings occurred on Tube trains and a bus in London, and it later emerged that the dead man had nothing to do with the attacks.
[edit] External links
London Transport Museum Photographic Archive:
Previous station | London Underground | Next station | ||
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toward Morden
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Northern Line | |||
Terminus
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Victoria Line |
toward Walthamstow Central
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