Area photos


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(51.53027 -0.17438, 51.53 -0.174) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
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Lisson Green
TUM image id: 1593182694
Licence: CC BY 2.0

In the neighbourhood...

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A photographer called Iain Macmillan was a friend of John and Yoko and, during the morning of Friday 8 August 1969 found himself commissioned to take a photo of the Fab Four to adorn their latest studio release, an album called ’Abbey Road’. As the group waited outside the studio for the shoot to begin, Linda McCartney took a number of extra photographs.
Credit: Apple Corps
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The oldest parts of the Barrow Hill Estate in St John’s Wood date from 1937
Credit: GoArt/The Underground Map
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Paddington Fire Station (c.1900)
Credit: London Metropolitan Archives
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Edwardian view of Marlborough Road station This gives an idea of the general arrangement; the building was directly over the railway cutting. The thoroughfare Marlborough Road was renamed Marlborough Place in the 1930s but the station retained the old name until closure.
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Cochrane Street, St John’s Wood (1958) From the episode ’Radioactive’ of the TV series ’Dial 999’,
Credit: http://avengerland.theavengers.tv/
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Allitsen Road, NW8 was named after Frances Allitsen, a songwriter. During the Boer War, she composed the then-popular ’There’s A Land’.
Credit: GoArt/The Underground Map
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Derived from a somewhat famous cover work by Iain Macmillan. Behind the art, the view is Abbey Road, NW8 looking north. The gates of the Abbey Road Studios are behind the white VW Beetle on the left.
Credit: Iain Macmillan
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St Marylebone Electricity Generating Station, built in 1905 and then located at the corner of Richmond Street and Fisherton Street
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St John’s Wood was once on the Bakerloo Line
Credit: The Underground Map
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St John’s Wood station is the only Underground station to have no letters in common with the word ’mackerel’. (Hoxton on the London Overground also doesn’t)
Credit: https://the-underground-map.myshopify.com/products/st-johns-wood-mug-mackerel
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