Area photos


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(51.57547 -0.26379, 51.575 -0.263) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
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Wembley Stadium, 1947
TUM image id: 1556882897
Licence:
The Plough - reputedly 800 years old
TUM image id: 1517936032
Licence: CC BY 2.0
Wembley Park, around 1898 A map a day for the month of May. The name Wembley Park referred to an area that fell within the limits of a late 18th-century landscaped estate. Part of this estate became the location of development in the 1890s after being sold to Edward Watkin and the Metropolitan Railway. Wembley Park was next developed into a pleasure and events destination with a large fairground and the beginnings of a tower designed to rival the Eiffel Tower. Wembley was later a key area of the Metroland suburban development in the 1920s - the same decade saw the Empire Stadium built on the site of the tower and the British Empire Exhibition was held. This map was requested by a user last week and the area covered stretches from Wembley Central station (just off the map to the bottom left) to Blackbird Hill in the top right. The area was mostly pasture farmland though some arable fields are marked in yellow. Wembley Park continues to be a recreational centre today, being home to Wembley Stadium as well as Wembley Arena among others.
Credit: Ordnance Survey/The Underground Map
TUM image id: 1714991989
Licence:
Barn Hill area (1900) This map is a response to a user idea based on a previous map featuring 1900 Wembley Park (6 May) and a request to feature the area just a little to the left/west of that one. So this is 1900 Barn Hill and surroundings. For reference to the previous map, Blackbird Hill Farm at the top of Blackbird Hill is now bottom right, as is St Andrew’s Kingsbury. The tiny village of Preston is situated at the top left. The road leading south from it is called Preston Road and where it crosses the tracks of the Metropolitan Railway is the site of the future Preston Road station. This station was at first only a halt, built because of the staging of the shooting competitions of the 1908 London Olympics at Uxendon Farm. It allowed competitors to get to the grounds which stretched up Barn Hill from Uxendon. The now-busy Forty Lane runs along the southern edge of the map. Other important modern roads such as Fryent Way didn’t exist, even as former paths.
Credit: Ordnance Survey
TUM image id: 1715774589
Licence: