It's a great city, I've been multiple times and I've still got much too learn, it's got alot of interesting facts and areas you don't usually know about
The view from the Thameslink platform is a hidden gem. It’s protected from the weather, you can see Tower Bridge, Canary Wharf, and various city landmark buildings. I also remember seeing an amazing fly past one VJ Day!
I have been to Vienna Hauptbahnhof on numerous occasions and also paid Vienna Westbahnhof a visit out of interest. At no point did I see any service to Blackfriars listed. Must have been served from Meidling.
I live in the Southwest United States, have never been to the UK, and have only been on a subway or "tube" once, about a dozen years ago. And yet, here I am, binge watching all of your fantastic videos! I don't know why, and I try not to question it. Keep up the great work!
For me, riding the Tube is a major reason to visit London. Last time I also went out of my way to take a short ride on the Elizabeth Line (and stumbled across this station in my subsequent explorations on the surface).
Excellent use of "footled" and "transpontine." One of the many reasons why I love your channel is your tongue-in-cheek narration. Also, as someone who has visited London only once (and liked it immensely), I like experiencing the city through your eyes. Thanks and keep up the great work!
When I used to commute from Kent in the early 1950's, one or two electric trains would sometimes take the origional bridge (now demolished) and then go via the Ludgate hill platform (with the round window in the building-end) to Holborn Viaduct.
Sounds a bit like the railroads around New York City. A lot of wealthy folks didn't like the idea of a bunch of railroad bridges across the Hudson (I'm not an expert on the history, but I'd imagine boating companies may also have put on some financial pressure; also, the Hudson at NYC is much wider than the Thames in London), so railroads were forced to enter Manhattan only by way of tunnels. Only one "classic" company based west of the Hudson, the mighty Pennsylvania Railroad, was able to build a tunnel under the river from New Jersey (a smaller rapid transit line, the Port Authority Trans-Hudson, also did so); all the other rail companies based west of the Hudson which claimed to serve NYC such as the Erie, Lackawanna, and Jersey Central were forced to terminate across the river in NJ and run ferries into Manhattan. And even then, until the tunnel was opened in 1910, the "Pennsy" itself required passenger ferry connections. One of the old rail/ferry terminals in Jersey City has been preserved with the old train shed and even destination signs. (The New York Central and New Haven, based respectively in NYC itself and east of the river, ran into Manhattan via land and relatively smaller bridges and tunnels.) To this day there's still only one mainline rail approach to Manhattan from the west; the old Pennsylvania RR tunnel. And it's now over 100 years old and in need of replacement, and as of now there's no shovel-ready plan for that.
andyjay729 I made a new england car tour bback in 2005and everything seemed in disrepair, at least from a continental europe perspective. I assume the infrastructures were very old, but thrashed too... It was a mayor dissapointment for a USA lover.
The Hudson is far more formidable than the Thames, but a bridge was initially planned to enter Manhattan from Jerseyside, but proved to be far too ambitious: www.6sqft.com/the-never-built-hudson-river-bridge-would-have-been-twice-the-length-of-the-george-washington-bridge/ In the event, the now famous tunnels were built. More here: jerseydigs.com/north-river-bridge-hoboken-history/ And: www.nycroads.com/crossings/hudson-river-bridge/
@@honestguy7764 Yes, a lot of the highways in the Northeast are pretty old. I think a lot of the newest ones were built in the '50s; some around NYC date back to the '30s. On top of all that there's the harsh climate, exacerbated by road salt in the winter. And of course no one wants to pay to fix things.
This gets my vote for most interesting and educational YT comment of the year! I am also just now realizing that this must be why, every time I’ve taken Amtrak into NYC, we’re always booking along until we get to that tunnel, and then everything slows down to a c r a w l.
The pub on the right heading out towards New Bridge Street north of the river is genuinely one of the most architecturally fascinating pubs in the entire country. Worth a visit
Thanks! Yeah, things are getting a bit crazy, it’s not so long ago that it was a good day when I got two subscribers. I’m planning a couple more videos in that area - there’s a lot of history.
I regularly used Blackfriars to commute to my office on southbank, well not any more due to Covid. It’s a great station with really good views over the river and city. One bit you missed was the dubious continuity of Tom Cruise chasing a bad guy through Blackfriars in his Mission Impossible film. The bad guy walks along the platform to cross the river to get to Tate Modern, meanwhile Cruise chases him, runs through an office block seemingly next to Blackfriars, throws a chair through a window and jumps down onto the roof of Blackfriars station. We then see him running across the top of the roof before somehow getting down to ground level and running underneath the railway arch on the south side. Nobody got stopped at the ticket barriers !
my beloved Blackfriars station .. a nice stroll from The Cut to get early trains to Gatwick i mostly used it for. But I was always around Southwark, my area, and the River. I'm noyt in London now and miss it deeply. Cool vid !
I have long found London's hodgepodge of mainline stations to be charming as well as vexing in their quirky spatial relationship to each other. If one hadn't any advanced knowledge of their precise histories it might seem as if they were haphazardly sited by some capricious Monopoly player no doubt reveling in their idiosyncratic city planning habits. Out of the London termini Blackfriars, a station that seemingly can't make up its mind on whether it desires to be known a mainline terminus or regional through-station, perplexed me the most. Jago, in his unwavering commitment to bring light on those London transport topics most of us had before never given a moment's thought to, once again cures me of my ignorance through this most illuminating of presentations. Bravo, good sir!
A couple of things (probably mentioned below, but who reads the comments, eh? Well, you, obviously, but...): The building immediately south of the river used to be the Daily Express building, and the first support - the one with the enormous coat of arms - was an adjunct to the tea room, apparently. In any case, you could see old men in suits being served meals on there, which wasn't terribly exciting at the time, even, but must have been a cool place to eat. And they knocked down the Daily Express building, that has to be a plus. The other thing is that you can catch trains from Blackfriars to Gatwick all through the night, and watching the dawn come up in summer from the southbound platform is almost impressive enough to distract you from the fact that you got up at three o'clock in the morning to catch an early plane. My favourite station. It also goes to Brighton. And Croydon. And Bedford, for that matter. Never been to Bedford, probably never will.
They say you learn something new everyday.. Solar bridges! Not a regular Blackfriars user but I've used the cafe in the entrance. Another good video and great to see this channel grow, 50K subs coming soon, well deserved!!
Blackfriars is cheap and easy to get to from Brighton plus it puts you in a good position to get anywhere on either side of the river. Plus it's simple, clean and easy to use also there is a lovely little pub on the north side just outside the station. Plus it has one of the best views whilst entering London.
Fascinating! I used to use Blackfriars daily when I lived in SW London and worked on the edge of the City (thank you Thameslink!), this was back in the 1990s to early 2000s when the station wasn't fully "transpontine". It was only when I had to use the station again a few years ago following a meeting in the area that I discovered the extent of the dramatic changes from when I used the station daily. It was barely recognisable, but I loved the views of the skyline from its glass walls, and snapped away with my phone's camera like a dry twig.
Excellent video and information. Can never tire of learning some more of London’s history, and particularly so of the railways. I’ve always loved the way a station name such as Blackfriars prolongs the memory of a history several hundred years earlier.
Great video! This is my favourite London train station. I live down in Kent, and coming up to London on a Spring or early Summer morning, with the sun shining over the river, as the train slowly comes to a halt on the station/bridge is magnificient.
I remember when me ol' mum was night editor at the Guardian opp Doggett's during the start of the Iraq war and she kept a prized "proof" edition of the first paper off the roll but day editors and new news soon had her name off the page :( She got me a bit of work with Newsflow which were the newspaper delivery vans that swarmed at around 4am between papers and stations for the newspaper trains, abs insane wage but miss your dropoff and you were out (as I found out) and was the few times the police turned a very blind eye to absolute manic driving and speeding, doing sixty down Grays Inn Road and sailing past parked police cars was cool as anything. I remember driving into Waterloo like I was in the Sweeney right up onto the platformy bit, handbrake turn, chaps had the bundles off and away and back again for the second load and it was foot to the floor all the way back.
I used to be in the Ambulance Service in London and we would have loved to do 60 down Grays Inn Road, until someone thought it would be a good idea to put 3 litre Holden engines into plastic bodied bread vans. Then we would regularly do 60 and more all over town. Oxford Street was the best, in and out of every traffic island, thems was the days.
Add an interesting tidbit,the Tram lines over both Blackfriars,and that other bridge,running a figure 8 services,serving South London,via Elephant &Castle,Mitcham,and other points! The night services ran on a 15 minute headway,now all bus! See,"The Wheels used to talk to us",a very interesting book,and Nemo Productions,did some paperbacks on the tram lines,by area,and also had a capsulated history of the lines,along with a roster,(including renumbering,which were notable)! More food for the fearless folk watching your great channel! Thank you,history is always interesting 👍!
The follow up bus services were for a time externally and internally were the 109B and 109W ( for services from Croydon). and 155B and 155W from Wimbledon and up the old route of Stane Street
Thank you for making my information more up to date! You are appreciated, and my guesses ate right for a change! All my data is not available where I now live,so I am working from pure memory! By the way,what was the other bridge,Waterloo,or ????
@@roberthuron9160 The embankment passes under Waterloo (there was an exit from the tram tunnel there for single deck trams to the lines that went to from the other bridge - Westminster. You will note the 109 and 155 oick up their common sections at Elephant and Castle to where all reads in london lead to
Ah so,Charlie Brown! I had a brain freeze,and a couple of cells didn't connect! I knew Waterloo was involved,but with no maps available,my visualization was very off! So,it was Westminister Bridge,and since you jogged my memory,I think Clapham,and Purley,as well as,Catford all contributed trams into those services: the 5/22,35,38,and 2/4,were lines operated! I hope I got it right,or close to it,as the lines South of the Thames were EVEN numbered,and those North were ODD numbers!Correct??
@@roberthuron9160 Not quite a fig 8 but it was a loop. Think you may be right on tram service numbering. The depots involved sound about right , I am not an expert on London Trams - I have a Willouby and Oakley Book on the table in front of me waiting to be read. and a misplaced ABC Ian Allan of 1951 reprint. Dont think there was a Depot at Catford - it would have been New Cross. (Walworth Brixton and Thornton Heath were the othermain ones in this context that would have supplied south london routes.
I seem to remember my father mentioning that the old piers of the bridge were not sound and would need extensive repair if required to carry weight again. BR did kinda not fight too hard in keeping the pillars there as the casements and foundations were solid and could be used again if demand was serious enough, I think they at one point filled the pillars with concrete to stop them shifting as there used to be straps and bands around them when the bridge was still extant.
As a Northerner, I usually roll my eyes hard whenever anyone talks about London infrastructure, and the billions of stupid station names. But your presentation is good and I'm learning despite my prejudices :D
I love Blackfriars, the view from the platform is great especially at night. The Thameslink line is also far better than any of the other Southeastern commuter routes.
Been there just once -- last year. I admired the 'Shard' from its platform. I used to regularly use Aldwych Underground Station in the 50's. What a place! But it was close to Kings Chapel in the Savoy - so it was that . . . . or the Tram along the embankment. Hey-ho! And the double-decker Southern Railway trains from Charing Cross added to the fun!
I work at 160 Queen Victoria Street in Pre Covid times, just behind the blackfriar pub. I find the history of the area all very interesting. Im also a big fan of City Thameslink station.
Great video. I had a contract in Lambeth and would cycle on a Boris bike daily over Blackfriars Bridge to Hatton Garden for lunch and so it is fascinating to have some historical context..Thanks!
2:24 I'm lived my whole life in the Medway Town, where to know anything about the local railway history is to know about the rivalry between LC&DR and SER. A few highlights: Chatham Central Station - Not in Chatham, but right next to Rochester Station (the old one not the new one). Rochester Bridge Station - Next to Rochester Bridge but on the Strood side not the Rochester Side. Rochester Bridge(s) - The second railway bridge (now the only railway bridge) built by SER right next to the LC&DR Bridge because they had to get to Chatham as well. I think at one point we basically ended up with five mainline stations all in use (for a short while) within about a mile: Strood Station, Rochester Bridge Station, Rochester Station (the old one), Rochester Common Station and Chatham Central Station. And throughout history you've had seven stations in total, the other two being: the original Strood Terminus and the New Rochester Station, next to the old Rochester Common site. The fighting between the two companies may have been stupid and petty (it really was), but it sure made the railways of the south east a lot more interesting.
I share your delight in the views from Blackfriars Station, which I often use, or pass through on my way to Eurostar from my local station, Nunhead. I frequently choose that way into London over the Underground/Overground, just to enjoy the views of the river.
I always thought Blackfriars was named after a Joes Cafe in the area where they kept burning the chips. It turns out though that it was actually named after a priory built in the 13th century of Dominican Friars who used to wear black hoods?
to get to such diverse destinations as ..... HOW COULD YOU MISS EAST CROYDON !!! lol :) have to say when i used to live in Brighton the Thameslink trains provided a very affordable (and quick) way to get to Victoria, cheaper than southern, but not the comfy seats you *used* to have on the gatwick express rolling stock. Have to say I really love your videos and one of the rare few i will stop eveything else, put it full screen and enjoy all the details and narration you have put together. Fingers crossed one day I'm walking thru your filming and I can spot myself :)
I laugh so much at your videos, your mildly sarcastic presentation just gets me in fits of giggles. Thanks for giving me something to watch while waiting for my model railway glue to dry!
A really good and informative video about London subway and railway passenger transports, showing history, unknown facts and other interesting details to all of us. Thank you very much for your work in research, filming, cutting and uploading your videos. Stay healthy and keep going on with your reports on London themes. Best greetings from Germany. Günter.
I remember travelling back from an A level conference from London to Bedford in the late 90s. Terribly late at night for a group of schoolgirls, but we did feel all grown up travelling to get instructions on what the examiners wanted to see on our scripts. I'm not a trainspotter per se, but Thameslink is an amazing service and close to my heart.
I regularly use Blackfriars since our offices moved to Queen Victoria Street in 2016. The station feels and is very much like a stop on the line rather than a destination to meet for food or drinks cose by. Perhaps because it's midway between the City and Westminster there's not much going on around it in that sense. Although it's mainly functional, there are great views across the river from the platform. Since I'm always heading south of the river on the way back, my views are out towards the city. I'd never seen the supports for the old platform on the other side!
Great video. The historical stations in this area are a right mess, and a hundred years later we are still trying to unpick the incredibly comprehensive but illogical rail network bequeathed to us!
We've had Thameslink trains passing through Gravesend for about 2 years. Their destination is Cambridge via Abbeywood and Blackfriars. I'll try it out when the Crossrail services from Abbeywood start. Big changes since I used to commute into Cannon St in the 1970's
I used the dingy old Blackfriars back in 1999 up to about 2002 when I was working for Sainsbury’s, whose offices, like the original station, were in Southwark!
I didn't know any of that! Thanks for taking the trouble to make this video with such a laconic commentary. I haven't been to London for years, so it is interesting to know the old Blackfriars Bridge is now gone!
From 1998 to 2005 I used Blackfriars Tube station every weekday, but I realise now I can't remember what any of the surface buildings used to look like before the redevelopment. My workplace was on the South Bank near the OXO Tower, so when leaving or entering Blackfriars station I always used the tunnel that connected the underground entrance with the west side of Blackfriars Bridge.
I visited the National Railway Museum earlier this year, before the plague happened, saw a Swiss (Integra Domino) signal box table somewhere in the depot, wondered how it got to England, took a photo, and only when looking at the photo at home I realized it was actually in use at Blackfriars.
Taschi The Integra was licenced to Henry Williams Ltd in the UK and British Rail Western Region used them extensively. Gloucester, Plymouth and Exeter still have them, and Swindon Panel has been preserved at Didcot Railway Centre and linked to a simulator. Great fun to work.
Our head office used to be south of the river from Blackfriars underground. It was pleasant walking across the bridge when I visited, but I always wondered about the red pillars. Between you and Geoff, I feel I now know much more about this familiar part of London,
An area and station very familiar to me, as I used to work in a building very close to the SER Blackfriars station, and now work in a building attached to the current Blackfriars! A very convenient commute indeed.
Last time I used Blackfriars was coming home from work at the start of lockdown, already eerily empty. I did wonder about the closed entrance on the south side, now I know. Thanks for the video.
I worked on Blackfriars bridge directing traffic away from the area during Olympic events, I remember the station on its first day and went in to see how nice it all looked, machines still wrapped e.t.c
Excellent as ever. The pub you briefly showed is The Blackfriar, well worth a visit. There were plans to pull it down back in the ‘60s and John Betjeman was part of the protest that saved it. It is the only protest I have ever attended, I can only hope my part was to some tiny extent critical. I could write down more stuff from Wikipedia, but it is mostly there. An interesting area.
2:56 What is the round plaque commemorating? 7:25 The font used in the destination plaques are all the same, just had to squash the letters together for the longer named cities. Maybe one has to read them faster. 8:40 a police Tesla? I was going to say unmarked, but it has blue lamps on the roof. sorry that was a distraction, what was you saying?
@@jacobferron5952 You are correct. A quick google search of the plates bring up this - www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/local-news/gallery/redwood-estate-flat-fire-14811366 - and you can clearly see the "fire" inscription on the blue lights at the top.
Superb stuff - it’s a station that I use far more these days as many London bound trains from redhill go to London Bridge / Blackfriars with thameslink rather than to Victoria.
Blackfryers is perhaps my favourite station on the network. Remember being pretty amazed when I first travelled through it not even knowing a station was on a bridge - pretty cool :)
Great vid, thanks. I did some work at the electricity substation supplying power to trains passing through Blackfriars. It's allegedly the largest DC traction substation in Europe or the world or something. 10MW capacity. Just north of Blackfriars (before Farringdon) the track is overhead AC electrified, so Blackfriars marks the end (or beginning) of the DC railway all the way to the Kent coast.
Back in the day, you would get off the train at Blackfriars north side pop down the stairs and you were out. Now with the new station that stretches across to south london you have to walk about 1/2 mile from the entrance to get to the trains. When it pulls in everybody is running from north to south london to get on it, it stops so far away!
1993 and Maidstone East gets a third platform and a siding line for 'Thameslink 2000' services. In 2020 we are still waiting for a start date for through trains to Cambridge.
I like Blackfriars. Have taken the train to Gatwick twice from there in early rush hour. The view from the platform is great. It's sorta sad with us leaving to go home each time. Great video. When this covidemic is over, we will get back to London. Looking forward to your next video!
There was a map published by Ian Allan,on the Pre-Grouping railways,showing the goods stations around London! The really,very interesting one,was under St.Pancras Station! That was a storage facility for Burton Beer,brought in by the Midland Railway,from the North! Real hidden treasure,and I think now,that is a suburban station,but I can be corrected, as I don't have my books available! Cross London connection???
@@highpath4776 The giants that used to inhabit the beer cellars below St Pancras have now moved on. But you can still see evidence of their tenure. Every one of the columns in the shopping area of the station (they're hundreds of them, and all painted white, which I hate) still has a shelf high up where the giants would put their pints.
There are moments in this video (like 1:59) where I felt a glossary wouldn't come amiss... (I'm American and use the phrase "come amiss" from years of watching BBC TV shows. Apparently, _Fawlty Towers, Doctor Who 1963-1989, Prime Suspect, Are You Being Served, As Time Goes By, The Two Ronnies, and Absolutely Fabulous,_ to name but a few, have only given me a hint of the slang and idioms that are out there...)
'some joker had left a bunch of piers in the river.....' this sort of thing is why I love your vids
It made me chuckle as well!😂
Waiting for some batman to clean it up?
That was quite funny
"The City of London had reservations about the bridge, holding things up further"
Isn't that what bridges are supposed to do?
😂💥
Nice one
Heyoooooooooo
welcome
NOICE
I don't live in London, don't even have vague plans to go there in the foreseeable future, but your videos have me hooked
Honestly, its sucha incredible City. My favourite in the world
It's a great city, I've been multiple times and I've still got much too learn, it's got alot of interesting facts and areas you don't usually know about
Me too. This guys videos make London very interesting. Maybe I'll go there someday.
Nice pfp
I escaped London many years ago and will never go back (not enough tractors or cows) and yet these little films are still fascinating.
The view from the Thameslink platform is a hidden gem. It’s protected from the weather, you can see Tower Bridge, Canary Wharf, and various city landmark buildings. I also remember seeing an amazing fly past one VJ Day!
I love the way the "destinations served" bit of the old station has Sheerness next to Vienna. I often get those two places confused.
You laugh but don't you just hate it when you're trying to get to Frankfort but accidentally end up in Maidstone
I have been to Vienna Hauptbahnhof on numerous occasions and also paid Vienna Westbahnhof a visit out of interest.
At no point did I see any service to Blackfriars listed.
Must have been served from Meidling.
@@lewis72 probably served from Franz-Josefs-Bahnhof. If it's good enough for the Czech Republic, it must be good enough for Blackfriars.
@@Pieman6930 It happens to me all the time. That junction between Bundesautobahn 3 and Boxley Road is very badly signposted.
Disappointed that Kraftwerk's Trans Europa Express didn't mention Blackfriars either.
I live in the Southwest United States, have never been to the UK, and have only been on a subway or "tube" once, about a dozen years ago. And yet, here I am, binge watching all of your fantastic videos! I don't know why, and I try not to question it. Keep up the great work!
I can't even make sense of most of it yet I keep right on watching.
please go on the Tube again
For me, riding the Tube is a major reason to visit London. Last time I also went out of my way to take a short ride on the Elizabeth Line (and stumbled across this station in my subsequent explorations on the surface).
Anthony - Where did you ride a subway train?
Excellent use of "footled" and "transpontine." One of the many reasons why I love your channel is your tongue-in-cheek narration. Also, as someone who has visited London only once (and liked it immensely), I like experiencing the city through your eyes. Thanks and keep up the great work!
If you liked London, you haven't been there enough.
When I used to commute from Kent in the early 1950's, one or two electric trains would sometimes take the origional bridge (now demolished) and then go via the Ludgate hill platform (with the round window in the building-end) to Holborn Viaduct.
Sounds a bit like the railroads around New York City. A lot of wealthy folks didn't like the idea of a bunch of railroad bridges across the Hudson (I'm not an expert on the history, but I'd imagine boating companies may also have put on some financial pressure; also, the Hudson at NYC is much wider than the Thames in London), so railroads were forced to enter Manhattan only by way of tunnels. Only one "classic" company based west of the Hudson, the mighty Pennsylvania Railroad, was able to build a tunnel under the river from New Jersey (a smaller rapid transit line, the Port Authority Trans-Hudson, also did so); all the other rail companies based west of the Hudson which claimed to serve NYC such as the Erie, Lackawanna, and Jersey Central were forced to terminate across the river in NJ and run ferries into Manhattan. And even then, until the tunnel was opened in 1910, the "Pennsy" itself required passenger ferry connections. One of the old rail/ferry terminals in Jersey City has been preserved with the old train shed and even destination signs. (The New York Central and New Haven, based respectively in NYC itself and east of the river, ran into Manhattan via land and relatively smaller bridges and tunnels.)
To this day there's still only one mainline rail approach to Manhattan from the west; the old Pennsylvania RR tunnel. And it's now over 100 years old and in need of replacement, and as of now there's no shovel-ready plan for that.
andyjay729 I made a new england car tour bback in 2005and everything seemed in disrepair, at least from a continental europe perspective. I assume the infrastructures were very old, but thrashed too... It was a mayor dissapointment for a USA lover.
The Hudson is far more formidable than the Thames, but a bridge was initially planned to enter Manhattan from Jerseyside, but proved to be far too ambitious:
www.6sqft.com/the-never-built-hudson-river-bridge-would-have-been-twice-the-length-of-the-george-washington-bridge/
In the event, the now famous tunnels were built.
More here:
jerseydigs.com/north-river-bridge-hoboken-history/
And:
www.nycroads.com/crossings/hudson-river-bridge/
@@honestguy7764 Yes, a lot of the highways in the Northeast are pretty old. I think a lot of the newest ones were built in the '50s; some around NYC date back to the '30s. On top of all that there's the harsh climate, exacerbated by road salt in the winter. And of course no one wants to pay to fix things.
This gets my vote for most interesting and educational YT comment of the year! I am also just now realizing that this must be why, every time I’ve taken Amtrak into NYC, we’re always booking along until we get to that tunnel, and then everything slows down to a c r a w l.
The PATH/Hudson Tubes was built by a company controlled by Pennsylvania Railroad?
.. Exchange Place, Jersey City was the site of a Pennsy terminal.
The narrative skills are mesmerising.
I love history and I love humor. Your channel is a fantastic mix of the two!
😂
Take a Dickens of a stroll with Pat London th-cam.com/video/WDByXixazK0/w-d-xo.html
*THIS IS London, history and stories on every corner. Good video!*
Not going to pretend I wasn’t majorly distracted at 8:40 by the fact the police are now using unmarked Teslas 👀
With private numberplates too!?
I couldn't resist googling it and apparently it's a Fire brigade response car.
Yep that got me too!
i had to double take! not like any english council to splash out that much
I was looking at the old buildings in the top right,
but it is
often said that I miss the most obvious of things.
The pub on the right heading out towards New Bridge Street north of the river is genuinely one of the most architecturally fascinating pubs in the entire country. Worth a visit
Channels blowing up man!! I always liked walking down past the Palestrina and southwark station when I used to work at London Road at the Elephant!
Thanks! Yeah, things are getting a bit crazy, it’s not so long ago that it was a good day when I got two subscribers. I’m planning a couple more videos in that area - there’s a lot of history.
@@JagoHazzard A good one around there albeit a little further on the down south of London Bridge is Spar road junction, might be up your alley!
@@PlainlyDifficult Do you think you could collab on something in the future?
@@JagoHazzard à
@@PlainlyDifficult you 2 need to collaborate. Two of my favourite TH-cam Channels
I regularly used Blackfriars to commute to my office on southbank, well not any more due to Covid. It’s a great station with really good views over the river and city.
One bit you missed was the dubious continuity of Tom Cruise chasing a bad guy through Blackfriars in his Mission Impossible film. The bad guy walks along the platform to cross the river to get to Tate Modern, meanwhile Cruise chases him, runs through an office block seemingly next to Blackfriars, throws a chair through a window and jumps down onto the roof of Blackfriars station. We then see him running across the top of the roof before somehow getting down to ground level and running underneath the railway arch on the south side. Nobody got stopped at the ticket barriers !
@Geoffrey Coan. Another bit of social history into the big pot, all so interesting.
The thought that you put into your scripts throughout all your videos are always exceeds expectations and have been executed excellently 👌🏻
Thanks!
my beloved Blackfriars station .. a nice stroll from The Cut to get early trains to Gatwick i mostly used it for. But I was always around Southwark, my area, and the River. I'm noyt in London now and miss it deeply. Cool vid !
These little gems are fascinating and beautifully put together.
Thank-you Jago🙂
Jago, 2 in one day? you know how to spoil us
It'll be Ferrero Roche next...
I’ve watched like 100 of your videos and there’s still more and all interesting! Well done
I have long found London's hodgepodge of mainline stations to be charming as well as vexing in their quirky spatial relationship to each other. If one hadn't any advanced knowledge of their precise histories it might seem as if they were haphazardly sited by some capricious Monopoly player no doubt reveling in their idiosyncratic city planning habits. Out of the London termini Blackfriars, a station that seemingly can't make up its mind on whether it desires to be known a mainline terminus or regional through-station, perplexed me the most. Jago, in his unwavering commitment to bring light on those London transport topics most of us had before never given a moment's thought to, once again cures me of my ignorance through this most illuminating of presentations. Bravo, good sir!
A couple of things (probably mentioned below, but who reads the comments, eh? Well, you, obviously, but...): The building immediately south of the river used to be the Daily Express building, and the first support - the one with the enormous coat of arms - was an adjunct to the tea room, apparently. In any case, you could see old men in suits being served meals on there, which wasn't terribly exciting at the time, even, but must have been a cool place to eat. And they knocked down the Daily Express building, that has to be a plus. The other thing is that you can catch trains from Blackfriars to Gatwick all through the night, and watching the dawn come up in summer from the southbound platform is almost impressive enough to distract you from the fact that you got up at three o'clock in the morning to catch an early plane. My favourite station. It also goes to Brighton. And Croydon. And Bedford, for that matter. Never been to Bedford, probably never will.
The only attraction bedford has is the hmp.
And here I was trying to find a practical use for the word transpontine. Thanks for the suggestion!
You Sir, have an absolutely fantastic narration voice! Many, many complements. Such a welcome change to watch professionally made video material.
They say you learn something new everyday.. Solar bridges! Not a regular Blackfriars user but I've used the cafe in the entrance. Another good video and great to see this channel grow, 50K subs coming soon, well deserved!!
You keep knocking them out! Wow,always entertaining and educational.Thanks.
Blackfriars is cheap and easy to get to from Brighton plus it puts you in a good position to get anywhere on either side of the river. Plus it's simple, clean and easy to use also there is a lovely little pub on the north side just outside the station. Plus it has one of the best views whilst entering London.
Fascinating! I used to use Blackfriars daily when I lived in SW London and worked on the edge of the City (thank you Thameslink!), this was back in the 1990s to early 2000s when the station wasn't fully "transpontine". It was only when I had to use the station again a few years ago following a meeting in the area that I discovered the extent of the dramatic changes from when I used the station daily. It was barely recognisable, but I loved the views of the skyline from its glass walls, and snapped away with my phone's camera like a dry twig.
I've lived in Oz for 50 years but it's nice to learn about the old home town.
Excellent video and information. Can never tire of learning some more of London’s history, and particularly so of the railways. I’ve always loved the way a station name such as Blackfriars prolongs the memory of a history several hundred years earlier.
Great video! This is my favourite London train station. I live down in Kent, and coming up to London on a Spring or early Summer morning, with the sun shining over the river, as the train slowly comes to a halt on the station/bridge is magnificient.
The bridge (and the view from it) are honestly so cool. I want to see it in person one day!
My old school at 3:38. Went through Blackfriars every school-day in the '70s
By far my favourite station in London. The view from the platforms is one of the best in London.
I remember when me ol' mum was night editor at the Guardian opp Doggett's during the start of the Iraq war and she kept a prized "proof" edition of the first paper off the roll but day editors and new news soon had her name off the page :( She got me a bit of work with Newsflow which were the newspaper delivery vans that swarmed at around 4am between papers and stations for the newspaper trains, abs insane wage but miss your dropoff and you were out (as I found out) and was the few times the police turned a very blind eye to absolute manic driving and speeding, doing sixty down Grays Inn Road and sailing past parked police cars was cool as anything. I remember driving into Waterloo like I was in the Sweeney right up onto the platformy bit, handbrake turn, chaps had the bundles off and away and back again for the second load and it was foot to the floor all the way back.
I used to be in the Ambulance Service in London and we would have loved to do 60 down Grays Inn Road, until someone thought it would be a good idea to put 3 litre Holden engines into plastic bodied bread vans. Then we would regularly do 60 and more all over town. Oxford Street was the best, in and out of every traffic island, thems was the days.
Nice memories mate. Good days
Add an interesting tidbit,the Tram lines over both Blackfriars,and that other bridge,running a figure 8 services,serving South London,via Elephant &Castle,Mitcham,and other points! The night services ran on a 15 minute headway,now all bus! See,"The Wheels used to talk to us",a very interesting book,and Nemo Productions,did some paperbacks on the tram lines,by area,and also had a capsulated history of the lines,along with a roster,(including renumbering,which were notable)! More food for the fearless folk watching your great channel! Thank you,history is always interesting 👍!
The follow up bus services were for a time externally and internally were the 109B and 109W ( for services from Croydon). and 155B and 155W from Wimbledon and up the old route of Stane Street
Thank you for making my information more up to date! You are appreciated, and my guesses ate right for a change! All my data is not available where I now live,so I am working from pure memory! By the way,what was the other bridge,Waterloo,or ????
@@roberthuron9160 The embankment passes under Waterloo (there was an exit from the tram tunnel there for single deck trams to the lines that went to from the other bridge - Westminster. You will note the 109 and 155 oick up their common sections at Elephant and Castle to where all reads in london lead to
Ah so,Charlie Brown! I had a brain freeze,and a couple of cells didn't connect! I knew Waterloo was involved,but with no maps available,my visualization was very off! So,it was Westminister Bridge,and since you jogged my memory,I think Clapham,and Purley,as well as,Catford all contributed trams into those services: the 5/22,35,38,and 2/4,were lines operated! I hope I got it right,or close to it,as the lines South of the Thames were EVEN numbered,and those North were ODD numbers!Correct??
@@roberthuron9160 Not quite a fig 8 but it was a loop. Think you may be right on tram service numbering. The depots involved sound about right , I am not an expert on London Trams - I have a Willouby and Oakley Book on the table in front of me waiting to be read. and a misplaced ABC Ian Allan of 1951 reprint. Dont think there was a Depot at Catford - it would have been New Cross. (Walworth Brixton and Thornton Heath were the othermain ones in this context that would have supplied south london routes.
I seem to remember my father mentioning that the old piers of the bridge were not sound and would need extensive repair if required to carry weight again. BR did kinda not fight too hard in keeping the pillars there as the casements and foundations were solid and could be used again if demand was serious enough, I think they at one point filled the pillars with concrete to stop them shifting as there used to be straps and bands around them when the bridge was still extant.
Videos like yours about UK Rail have me extremely interested in visiting!
“Why on earth would you have two connected stations with two different names, that would be ridiculous”
*Zooms in on Bank and Monument*
Amazing Jago didn't notice this.
Wow, I can’t believe how addictive these videos are. Thanks again for such a fascinating video. Well presented, factual, well edited.
As a Northerner, I usually roll my eyes hard whenever anyone talks about London infrastructure, and the billions of stupid station names. But your presentation is good and I'm learning despite my prejudices :D
Thanks!
I love Blackfriars, the view from the platform is great especially at night. The Thameslink line is also far better than any of the other Southeastern commuter routes.
I am quite glad that I found this channel.
I like this Station. Travelling to Brighton from there is a pleasure.
The wraps from the guys in the old station there are amazing, I miss working from the office purely because of them.
Been there just once -- last year. I admired the 'Shard' from its platform. I used to regularly use Aldwych Underground Station in the 50's. What a place! But it was close to Kings Chapel in the Savoy - so it was that . . . . or the Tram along the embankment. Hey-ho! And the double-decker Southern Railway trains from Charing Cross added to the fun!
I work at 160 Queen Victoria Street in Pre Covid times, just behind the blackfriar pub. I find the history of the area all very interesting. Im also a big fan of City Thameslink station.
Great video. I had a contract in Lambeth and would cycle on a Boris bike daily over Blackfriars Bridge to Hatton Garden for lunch and so it is fascinating to have some historical context..Thanks!
Just love these videos.. can't help myself from laughing along with your brilliant humour and presentation style. Keep them coming!
Definetely the best looking modern station. Clean and crisp and love the airy-ness of the platforms
I wish I could own this on dvd and just fall asleep to it every night.
Those things aren’t really dependent on each other, I just want them both.
'You need to know a little bit about the situation with the London, Chatham & Dover Railway and the South Eastern Railway' yes. Yes, we do.
2:24 I'm lived my whole life in the Medway Town, where to know anything about the local railway history is to know about the rivalry between LC&DR and SER.
A few highlights:
Chatham Central Station - Not in Chatham, but right next to Rochester Station (the old one not the new one).
Rochester Bridge Station - Next to Rochester Bridge but on the Strood side not the Rochester Side.
Rochester Bridge(s) - The second railway bridge (now the only railway bridge) built by SER right next to the LC&DR Bridge because they had to get to Chatham as well.
I think at one point we basically ended up with five mainline stations all in use (for a short while) within about a mile: Strood Station, Rochester Bridge Station, Rochester Station (the old one), Rochester Common Station and Chatham Central Station. And throughout history you've had seven stations in total, the other two being: the original Strood Terminus and the New Rochester Station, next to the old Rochester Common site.
The fighting between the two companies may have been stupid and petty (it really was), but it sure made the railways of the south east a lot more interesting.
Oooo, next time in the UK I'll have to have a cheeky Nando's as I look for the bridge on Blackfriars Road!
Huh I always wondered what that huge crest was. And so interesting to learn about that weird closed station, never understood that either
been waiting for this episode! thank you for this video
The ground was FROZEN cracked me up. Love the channel !!! Xx
Thanks for posting. This is the fourth video of yours I've just watched in a row 👍
Liked and subscribed 👍 👍
The new terminal reminds me of some of the Amtrak stations you will run into in the states.
I'd not visited this part of London for quite some years, so when I was last there I got quite a shock when I saw the "new" Blackfriars station !! 😱
I miss London, hope to visit again soon
I share your delight in the views from Blackfriars Station, which I often use, or pass through on my way to Eurostar from my local station, Nunhead. I frequently choose that way into London over the Underground/Overground, just to enjoy the views of the river.
I always thought Blackfriars was named after a Joes Cafe in the area where they kept burning the chips. It turns out though that it was actually named after a priory built in the 13th century of Dominican Friars who used to wear black hoods?
Also the name of two theeahtuhs in the old priory, borderline respectable enuf to lurk on the north side of the river.
The Thameslink was my favourite rail trip I did when I visited London.
to get to such diverse destinations as ..... HOW COULD YOU MISS EAST CROYDON !!! lol :) have to say when i used to live in Brighton the Thameslink trains provided a very affordable (and quick) way to get to Victoria, cheaper than southern, but not the comfy seats you *used* to have on the gatwick express rolling stock. Have to say I really love your videos and one of the rare few i will stop eveything else, put it full screen and enjoy all the details and narration you have put together. Fingers crossed one day I'm walking thru your filming and I can spot myself :)
I laugh so much at your videos, your mildly sarcastic presentation just gets me in fits of giggles. Thanks for giving me something to watch while waiting for my model railway glue to dry!
A really good and informative video about London subway and railway passenger transports, showing history, unknown facts and other interesting details to all of us. Thank you very much for your work in research, filming, cutting and uploading your videos. Stay healthy and keep going on with your reports on London themes. Best greetings from Germany. Günter.
My dad was born and raised in Blackfrairs. My grandparents old flat is almost directly opposite southwark tube!
I remember travelling back from an A level conference from London to Bedford in the late 90s. Terribly late at night for a group of schoolgirls, but we did feel all grown up travelling to get instructions on what the examiners wanted to see on our scripts. I'm not a trainspotter per se, but Thameslink is an amazing service and close to my heart.
I regularly use Blackfriars since our offices moved to Queen Victoria Street in 2016. The station feels and is very much like a stop on the line rather than a destination to meet for food or drinks cose by. Perhaps because it's midway between the City and Westminster there's not much going on around it in that sense. Although it's mainly functional, there are great views across the river from the platform. Since I'm always heading south of the river on the way back, my views are out towards the city. I'd never seen the supports for the old platform on the other side!
Great video. The historical stations in this area are a right mess, and a hundred years later we are still trying to unpick the incredibly comprehensive but illogical rail network bequeathed to us!
The price of being the railway pioneers i am afraid.
Finally: someone who says they'll add link in the description and does it!
Jago I love your videos! Keep them coming! You're fantastic!
Thanks!
We've had Thameslink trains passing through Gravesend for about 2 years. Their destination is Cambridge via Abbeywood and Blackfriars. I'll try it out when the Crossrail services from Abbeywood start.
Big changes since I used to commute into Cannon St in the 1970's
I used the dingy old Blackfriars back in 1999 up to about 2002 when I was working for Sainsbury’s, whose offices, like the original station, were in Southwark!
I didn't know any of that! Thanks for taking the trouble to make this video with such a laconic commentary. I haven't been to London for years, so it is interesting to know the old Blackfriars Bridge is now gone!
From 1998 to 2005 I used Blackfriars Tube station every weekday, but I realise now I can't remember what any of the surface buildings used to look like before the redevelopment. My workplace was on the South Bank near the OXO Tower, so when leaving or entering Blackfriars station I always used the tunnel that connected the underground entrance with the west side of Blackfriars Bridge.
I visited the National Railway Museum earlier this year, before the plague happened, saw a Swiss (Integra Domino) signal box table somewhere in the depot, wondered how it got to England, took a photo, and only when looking at the photo at home I realized it was actually in use at Blackfriars.
Taschi The Integra was licenced to Henry Williams Ltd in the UK and British Rail Western Region used them extensively. Gloucester, Plymouth and Exeter still have them, and Swindon Panel has been preserved at Didcot Railway Centre and linked to a simulator. Great fun to work.
Our head office used to be south of the river from Blackfriars underground. It was pleasant walking across the bridge when I visited, but I always wondered about the red pillars. Between you and Geoff, I feel I now know much more about this familiar part of London,
An area and station very familiar to me, as I used to work in a building very close to the SER Blackfriars station, and now work in a building attached to the current Blackfriars! A very convenient commute indeed.
Excellent narration and history,well done.
I love how you can still see war time damage after such a long time
Yes, all part of it's history
Ahh the hours I’ve spent dancing in the vaulted remains of Blackfriars Station when it was Pulse nightclub...
Last time I used Blackfriars was coming home from work at the start of lockdown, already eerily empty. I did wonder about the closed entrance on the south side, now I know. Thanks for the video.
I worked on Blackfriars bridge directing traffic away from the area during Olympic events, I remember the station on its first day and went in to see how nice it all looked, machines still wrapped e.t.c
congrats on seemingly being picked up by the algorithm! i expect your many uploads and 10minute mark are helpful to that!
Excellent as ever. The pub you briefly showed is The Blackfriar, well worth a visit. There were plans to pull it down back in the ‘60s and John Betjeman was part of the protest that saved it. It is the only protest I have ever attended, I can only hope my part was to some tiny extent critical. I could write down more stuff from Wikipedia, but it is mostly there. An interesting area.
2:56 What is the round plaque commemorating?
7:25 The font used in the destination plaques are all the same, just had to squash the letters together for the longer named cities. Maybe one has to read them faster.
8:40 a police Tesla? I was going to say unmarked, but it has blue lamps on the roof. sorry that was a distraction, what was you saying?
Ribierasacra it would probably be a fire officers car
I saw that. Dodgy, police don’t use private plates in this country
@@jacobferron5952 You are correct. A quick google search of the plates bring up this - www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/local-news/gallery/redwood-estate-flat-fire-14811366 - and you can clearly see the "fire" inscription on the blue lights at the top.
Superb stuff - it’s a station that I use far more these days as many London bound trains from redhill go to London Bridge / Blackfriars with thameslink rather than to Victoria.
Blackfryers is perhaps my favourite station on the network. Remember being pretty amazed when I first travelled through it not even knowing a station was on a bridge - pretty cool :)
Great vid, thanks. I did some work at the electricity substation supplying power to trains passing through Blackfriars. It's allegedly the largest DC traction substation in Europe or the world or something. 10MW capacity. Just north of Blackfriars (before Farringdon) the track is overhead AC electrified, so Blackfriars marks the end (or beginning) of the DC railway all the way to the Kent coast.
I think the substation is where the old Ludgate Hill station stood, roughly.
I think I just found my new favourite informational channel
Back in the day, you would get off the train at Blackfriars north side pop down the stairs and you were out. Now with the new station that stretches across to south london you have to walk about 1/2 mile from the entrance to get to the trains. When it pulls in everybody is running from north to south london to get on it, it stops so far away!
1993 and Maidstone East gets a third platform and a siding line for 'Thameslink 2000' services. In 2020 we are still waiting for a start date for through trains to Cambridge.
didnt someone swap the ends of what was going where ?
Love your channel content and your voice is very nice. Keep these videos coming x
I like Blackfriars. Have taken the train to Gatwick twice from there in early rush hour. The view from the platform is great. It's sorta sad with us leaving to go home each time.
Great video. When this covidemic is over, we will get back to London. Looking forward to your next video!
Hey Jago could you do a video on the history of goods railways in London please?
love your content, very underrated! :)
I'd also be interested in that.
@@IanPhillipsWildlife Se Kellet " the impact of railways on victorian cities" its a heavy read of planned and built.
There was a map published by Ian Allan,on the Pre-Grouping railways,showing the goods stations around London! The really,very interesting one,was under St.Pancras Station! That was a storage facility for Burton Beer,brought in by the Midland Railway,from the North! Real hidden treasure,and I think now,that is a suburban station,but I can be corrected, as I don't have my books available! Cross London connection???
@@roberthuron9160 yes its the shopping and cafe area now of St Pancras International, the thameslink station is at a lower level
@@highpath4776 The giants that used to inhabit the beer cellars below St Pancras have now moved on. But you can still see evidence of their tenure. Every one of the columns in the shopping area of the station (they're hundreds of them, and all painted white, which I hate) still has a shelf high up where the giants would put their pints.
There are moments in this video (like 1:59) where I felt a glossary wouldn't come amiss...
(I'm American and use the phrase "come amiss" from years of watching BBC TV shows. Apparently, _Fawlty Towers, Doctor Who 1963-1989, Prime Suspect, Are You Being Served, As Time Goes By, The Two Ronnies, and Absolutely Fabulous,_ to name but a few, have only given me a hint of the slang and idioms that are out there...)
That satisfying feeling, when you hit thumbs up at 9.9 k and it rolls over to 10k. Congrats man.