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#1
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I have only just noticed that the LU underground map is now branded the tube
map, interesting as it also includes the overground lines and the DLR. When did the Underground as a whole become the Tube? Kevin |
#2
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![]() On Sep 5, 10:29*pm, "Zen83237" wrote: I have only just noticed that the LU underground map is now branded the tube map, interesting as it also includes the overground lines and the DLR. When did the Underground as a whole become the Tube? The "Tube map" has been so called for many years now - though they did use to call it the "Journey planner" for a number of years beforehand - that's referred to here by the artist Simon Patterson (he of the Great Bear): http://www.thegathering-artscouncilc...simonpatterson Not sure when it changed to being the "Tube Map" but this suggests it had happened by 1995: http://www.flickr.com/photos/17889585@N03/3588617911/ (or were the posters and leaflets of the map/diagram referred to by different names?) The Underground as a whole hasn't become the Tube though - instead the 'Tube' is just a short-hand term, one that's widely used colloquially - I think LT may have resisted for a while before eventually giving up and adopting it themselves (is that fair to say, LT/LU historians?). Here's an example of it in use on a "London Tube - Diagram of Lines" leaflet (not quite a "Tube map" but close enough) in 1979: http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipstreamjc/4348300895/ Also from 1979, "Fly the Tube" poster: http://preview.tinyurl.com/The-Tube-1979-poster (search the LT Museum poster collection using the term "the Tube" for more examples) "The Tube" is also a registered trade mark (no. 1527320) of TfL - filed in 1993 and granted in 1995, though obviously used by LT/LU before this date (organisations weren't quite so fastidious about intellectual property in years gone by as they are nowadays). In the period after the creation of the GLA and TfL, but when London Underground remained under the control of central government (through LRT), LU has a website which was at the address http:// www.thetube.com - it redirects to the LU modal pages on the TfL website now, but here's what seems to be the earliest capture of it in on the Internet Archive: http://web.archive.org/web/200010182...w.thetube.com/ (the two notable items on that page being "Tube strike latest" and "Northern line derailment"...) TfL (and beforehand, LT/LU) seem pretty meticulous in always capitalising the T in Tube. Nonetheless the widespread application of the term does seem to somewhat agitate the purists... |
#3
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In article
, (Mizter T) wrote: On Sep 5, 10:29*pm, "Zen83237" wrote: I have only just noticed that the LU underground map is now branded the tube map, interesting as it also includes the overground lines and the DLR. When did the Underground as a whole become the Tube? The "Tube map" has been so called for many years now - though they did use to call it the "Journey planner" for a number of years beforehand - that's referred to here by the artist Simon Patterson (he of the Great Bear): http://www.thegathering-artscouncilc.../simonpatterso n Not sure when it changed to being the "Tube Map" but this suggests it had happened by 1995: http://www.flickr.com/photos/17889585@N03/3588617911/ (or were the posters and leaflets of the map/diagram referred to by different names?) The Underground as a whole hasn't become the Tube though - instead the 'Tube' is just a short-hand term, one that's widely used colloquially - I think LT may have resisted for a while before eventually giving up and adopting it themselves (is that fair to say, LT/LU historians?). Here's an example of it in use on a "London Tube - Diagram of Lines" leaflet (not quite a "Tube map" but close enough) in 1979: http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipstreamjc/4348300895/ Also from 1979, "Fly the Tube" poster: http://preview.tinyurl.com/The-Tube-1979-poster (search the LT Museum poster collection using the term "the Tube" for more examples) "The Tube" is also a registered trade mark (no. 1527320) of TfL - filed in 1993 and granted in 1995, though obviously used by LT/LU before this date (organisations weren't quite so fastidious about intellectual property in years gone by as they are nowadays). In the period after the creation of the GLA and TfL, but when London Underground remained under the control of central government (through LRT), LU has a website which was at the address http:// www.thetube.com - it redirects to the LU modal pages on the TfL website now, but here's what seems to be the earliest capture of it in on the Internet Archive: http://web.archive.org/web/200010182...w.thetube.com/ (the two notable items on that page being "Tube strike latest" and "Northern line derailment"...) TfL (and beforehand, LT/LU) seem pretty meticulous in always capitalising the T in Tube. Nonetheless the widespread application of the term does seem to somewhat agitate the purists... The term "Tube" goes back to the earliest days of deep-level tunnels. Wasn't the Central London Railway (now the Central Line) dubbed "The Tuppenny Tube" soon after opening in 1900? -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#4
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![]() wrote: [...] The term "Tube" goes back to the earliest days of deep-level tunnels. Wasn't the Central London Railway (now the Central Line) dubbed "The Tuppenny Tube" soon after opening in 1900? It was - the company promoted themselves as such (dunno if they actually first came up with that phrase though) - but my comments were more in terms of when the term 'Tube' became a popularly used expression to describe the whole system, whether deep-level tube or sub-surface lines. |
#5
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![]() wrote in message ... In article , (Mizter T) wrote: On Sep 5, 10:29 pm, "Zen83237" wrote: I have only just noticed that the LU underground map is now branded the tube map, interesting as it also includes the overground lines and the DLR. When did the Underground as a whole become the Tube? The "Tube map" has been so called for many years now - though they did use to call it the "Journey planner" for a number of years beforehand - that's referred to here by the artist Simon Patterson (he of the Great Bear): http://www.thegathering-artscouncilc.../simonpatterso n Not sure when it changed to being the "Tube Map" but this suggests it had happened by 1995: http://www.flickr.com/photos/17889585@N03/3588617911/ (or were the posters and leaflets of the map/diagram referred to by different names?) The Underground as a whole hasn't become the Tube though - instead the 'Tube' is just a short-hand term, one that's widely used colloquially - I think LT may have resisted for a while before eventually giving up and adopting it themselves (is that fair to say, LT/LU historians?). Here's an example of it in use on a "London Tube - Diagram of Lines" leaflet (not quite a "Tube map" but close enough) in 1979: http://www.flickr.com/photos/slipstreamjc/4348300895/ Also from 1979, "Fly the Tube" poster: http://preview.tinyurl.com/The-Tube-1979-poster (search the LT Museum poster collection using the term "the Tube" for more examples) "The Tube" is also a registered trade mark (no. 1527320) of TfL - filed in 1993 and granted in 1995, though obviously used by LT/LU before this date (organisations weren't quite so fastidious about intellectual property in years gone by as they are nowadays). In the period after the creation of the GLA and TfL, but when London Underground remained under the control of central government (through LRT), LU has a website which was at the address http:// www.thetube.com - it redirects to the LU modal pages on the TfL website now, but here's what seems to be the earliest capture of it in on the Internet Archive: http://web.archive.org/web/200010182...w.thetube.com/ (the two notable items on that page being "Tube strike latest" and "Northern line derailment"...) TfL (and beforehand, LT/LU) seem pretty meticulous in always capitalising the T in Tube. Nonetheless the widespread application of the term does seem to somewhat agitate the purists... The term "Tube" goes back to the earliest days of deep-level tunnels. Wasn't the Central London Railway (now the Central Line) dubbed "The Tuppenny Tube" soon after opening in 1900? -- Colin Rosenstiel But as a whole I have always referred to it as the Underground. It is after all run by London Underground. I now find that some people inclding TfL themselves no refer to the whole system as the tube. |
#6
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![]() "Zen83237" wrote: wrote: The term "Tube" goes back to the earliest days of deep-level tunnels. Wasn't the Central London Railway (now the Central Line) dubbed "The Tuppenny Tube" soon after opening in 1900? But as a whole I have always referred to it as the Underground. It is after all run by London Underground. I now find that some people inclding TfL themselves no refer to the whole system as the tube. Nothing new in that at all - TfL refer to it as both the Tube and London Underground, as has been the case for the past three decades. Some references to the "Tube" in official publicity... 1978: http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =2000/9595&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=14 1981: http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =2000/7323&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=19 1982: http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =2000/7142&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=22 1982: http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =2000/6532&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=20 1983 (very eighties!): http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =1999/39466&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=23 1986: http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =1987/28/2&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=30 1987: http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =2000/4484&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=35 1988: http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =1989/99&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=40 1994: http://www.ltmcollection.org/posters/poster/poster.html?_IXSR_=24QJ1eoqNwo&_IXMAXHITS_=1&IXinv =1996/8353&IXsummary=results/results&IXsearch=tube&_IXFIRST_=59 |
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