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The station's modern entrance and platform signage lacks the "(Battersea)" suffix that appears in timetables and on some maps. The latest "Oyster Rail Services" map produced by Transport for London shows the station as plain "Queenstown Road". [4] On the map produced by the station managers, South Western Railway, the station is called ...
Station Name Postcode links to map of station at Multimap.com Code links to arrivals and departures Code links to station information Quakers Yard: CF46 5NJ: QYD: QYD: Queenborough: ME11 5AZ: QBR: QBR: Queen's Park (Glasgow) G42 8PH: QPK: QPK: Queen's Park (London) NW6 6NL: QPW: QPW: Queens Road (Peckham) SE15 2JN: QRP: QRP: Queenstown Road ...
Queens Road station may refer to these stations in London: Queens Road Peckham railway station; Queens Road (GER) railway station, a proposed station; Queensway tube station, formerly called Queen's Road; Walthamstow Queen's Road railway station; Queenstown Road railway station formerly called Queen's Road (Battersea)
An article appearing in the April 9, 1897 issue of The Morning News announcing the opening of the new railway lists the stations, in order, as Queenstown, Bloomingdale, Wye Mills, Willoughby, Queen Anne, Hillsboro, Downes, Tuckahoe, Denton, Hobbs, Hickman, Adamsville, Blanchard, and Greenwood where the line terminated while construction continued to Ellendale.
A 1908 Railway Clearing House map of lines around the approaches to London Bridge. The station opened with the line on 13 August 1866, and had two wooden side platforms and an intermediate centre platform to serve the third centre line. [3] Until 1911 passenger trains ran to the East London line, stopping at Old Kent Road.
Queenstown MRT station is an elevated Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) station on the East–West line (EWL) in Queenstown, Singapore. It is built on a traffic island along Commonwealth Avenue. The station is named after Queen Elizabeth II to mark her coronation in 1952 .
The road from Quainton now crosses the railway line via an 1896 bridge immediately northwest of the station platforms. Quainton Road had seen little change since its construction by the A&B in 1868, and in 1890 was described by The Times as "one of the most primitive-looking stations in the British Isles". [17]
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