Mark Lane tube station

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Mark Lane
Location
Place City of London
History
Opened by Metropolitan Railway &
Metropolitan District Railway
Platforms 2
Key dates Opened 1884
Closed 1967
Replaced by Tower Hill
How Mark Lane tube station might have appeared on the London Underground Map if it were still open to passengers today
How Mark Lane tube station might have appeared on the London Underground Map if it were still open to passengers today
The large white grilles now cover up the original stairs down to the platforms.
The large white grilles now cover up the original stairs down to the platforms.

Mark Lane tube station is a disused station on the Circle and District Lines of the London Underground, west of the modern Tower Hill station.

It was originally opened in October 1884 to replace the short lived Tower of London station, which was closed when the Metropolitan Railway and Metropolitan District Railway were connected to form the Circle Line and a new larger station had to be built.

In 1946 the station was renamed from Mark Lane to Tower Hill.

The station became disused due to overwhelming passenger numbers and there was little space available for expansion. It was closed on 4 February 1967, and the present Tower Hill station was opened as its replacement.

The sub-surface section of the station can still be seen between Monument and Tower Hill, though only one platform on the eastbound track now remains due to redevelopment of the track. The surface station, sited in Seething Lane, can be seen in the form of a subway under the road, where large grilles now cover the original stairways down to the platforms.

The offices above the station were called 'Mark Lane Station Buildings', and this can still be read above an entrance.

Preceding station   London Underground   Following station
towards Inner Circle
Circle line
towards Inner Circle
District line
towards Upminster