Why Do Shepherds Need a Bush?: London’s Underground History of Tube Station Names

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Who travelling through Totteridge and Whetstone is aware that the station got its name from the medieval soldiers who sharpened their swords at the whetstone before the bloody Battle of Barnet? Or that Canary Wharf was built for importing fruit from the Canary Islands? Or that Shepherd’s Bush was previously known as Gagglegoose Green? The names of the 300 or so underground stations are part of everyday life for Londoners, but we hardly ever question their meanings or history. This entertaining book delves into their origins, ensuring you never view your journey beneath the city in the same way again.

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EAN: 2000000184166 SKU: AA9DB859 Category:

Additional information

Publisher

Illustrated edition (6 July 2015), The History Press

Language

English

Paperback

168 pages

ISBN-10

0750963034

ISBN-13

978-0750963039

Dimensions

12.7 x 1.27 x 20.32 cm

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Why Do Shepherds Need a Bush?: London's Underground History of Tube Station Names

£7.30£8.50 (-14%)

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