Area photos


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(51.48996 -0.13937, 51.489 -0.139) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
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The 52 bus
TUM image id: 1556876554
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Boscobel Oaks, 1804
TUM image id: 1487173198
Licence: CC BY 2.0
Broadway SW1
TUM image id: 1530117235
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Antrobus Street sign
TUM image id: 1601897046
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In the neighbourhood...

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Wood engraving showing mothers, with their children, exercising at Tothill Fields Prison
Credit: Wiki Commons
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The Lillington Gardens estate
Credit: Ewan Munro
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Victoria coach station’s temporary base (1929) This was sited where the Tachbrook Estate is now. The open-air King’s Scholar Pond sewer is on the left.
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Nine Elms Station map in the 1850s with the new line to Waterloo on right. Before the Waterloo extension, Nine Elms was the main London terminus for the LSWR.
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Pulford Street being demolished
Credit: Peabody Trust
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Antrobus Street sign
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Rush Hour, Victoria Station (1960) Bob Collins’s wonderfully dynamic, impressionistic image. It’s somehow reassuring to know that overcrowding in London is the same as it ever was
Credit: Bob Collins/Museum of London
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Newsagent stand, Victoria (1896) The ’Illustrated London News’ at the upper right mentions an upcoming "Royal Visit To Blenheim" - a visit that occurred on 28 November 1896. This helps us date this photo quite precisely.
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Battersea Power Station
Credit: Robert Lowry/Wandsworth Museum
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Newsstand on the District (line/Railway) at Victoria station, London on 23 November 1896. Our nineteenth century ancestors certainly lived in a world designed for left-brained folk. There seems to be an overload of writing on just about every surface - even the wall behind the stall. If you were better with images, it was perhaps not the world for you. Maybe the reverse is true now
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