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Old July 19th 03, 05:02 PM posted to uk.transport.london
simon swanson simon swanson is offline
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First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Jul 2003
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Default Chancery Lane

The original entrance building still stands at the junction of Holborn and
Fullwood place. It was reused as the entrance to the now redundant Kingsway
telephone exchange, which is located under Chancery lane station. see
http://www.subbrit.org.uk/rsg/sites/k/kingsway/ for details.

"Clive D. W. Feather" wrote in message
...
In article , Matthew
Malthouse writes
} How dare they call that station Chancery Lane
} Nowhere flippin near it
177 meters from it.


Very precise. From which street-level entrance, and from which corner of
the stairway?

But it makes me curious, why did it get named Chancery Lane rather than
Grey's Inn Road at the foot of which it stands?


As others have said, the station entrance has moved. I looked around
there a day or two ago and couldn't see any obvious site for the
original station. The escalators descend about 20m in total, so that's
35m horizontal distance. The platforms are about 100m long, so
altogether the lift shafts were perhaps 100m west of Gray's Inn Road,
and thus nearer Chancery Lane.

[Given that the CLR were trying to attract high class custom, I suspect
that "Chancery Lane", with the implications of the law courts, was a
more attractive-sounding name.]

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