South Kentish Town tube station

Coordinates: 51°32′43″N 0°08′30″W / 51.54528°N 0.14167°W / 51.54528; -0.14167
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

South Kentish Town
Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway
Key dates
22 June 1907 (1907-06-22)Opened
5 June 1924 (1924-06-05)Closed
Other information
Coordinates51°32′43″N 0°08′30″W / 51.54528°N 0.14167°W / 51.54528; -0.14167
 London transport portal

South Kentish Town is a disused London Underground station located in Kentish Town, north London, on the High Barnet branch of the Northern line.

It was opened in 1907 by the

Kentish Town stations. The surface building survives on Kentish Town Road near its junction with Castle Road and is currently a retail unit. The Underground station is now an Escape Room https://www.missionbreakout.london/
.

History

South Kentish Town station was opened on 22 June 1907 by the

Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway (CCE&HR) on its branch to Highgate (now Archway).[1]
The station was planned to be called Castle Road; however, this was changed just before it opened. The Castle Road name had already been fired into the original Leslie Green tiles inside the station, so after the name change they were painted over with the revised name.

On 20 April 1924, trains of the

air-raid shelter
.

There have been occasional proposals to rebuild the platforms and the station as part of the redevelopment plans for Camden Town. The layout of South Kentish Town is similar to Kentish Town (also originally a CCE&HR station); with two 23 ft (7.0 m) diameter lift-shafts and an 18 ft (5.5 m) diameter spiral staircase. South Kentish Town now serves as an access point for permanent way works and as an emergency egress point for passenger services.

A 1951 short story called South Kentish Town by John Betjeman told the fictional story of a passenger who became trapped in the disused station. It was based on a true incident where a train stopped at the station and mistakenly opened its doors, but in reality nobody became trapped.[2]

As of 2016, the station building housed a retail unit and a yoga studio.[3] From 2021, it contained three escape rooms themed to its heritage as both a former Underground station (with the aforementioned John Betjeman story being a crucial plot point) and a World War 2 air-raid shelter.[4]

Former service
Preceding station London Underground Following station
Kentish Town
towards Highgate
Northern line
(June 1907–April 1924)
Camden Town
Northern line
(April–June 1924)
Camden Town
  • Note: this template is wrong. For the 1907 former service, please read Hampstead instead of Northern, with a violet colour instead of black.

References

External links