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On 10 Jan 2021 16:44:34 GMT
Jeremy Double wrote: Sam Wilson wrote: Graeme Wall wrote: On 10/01/2021 10:36, Recliner wrote: There's a tweet from Tim this morning reminding us that today is the 157th anniversary of the opening of the Metropolitan Railway, complete with then-and-now pictures of Baker Street station: https://twitter.com/mrtimdunn/status/1348212174574014464?s=21 At opening, there were broad gauge tracks, but narrow platforms; now, there are visibly wider platforms that take advantage of the narrower tracks. The skill of the presentation of the original 'look' is very apparent. Nice comparison of pictures. Like many paintings the older one exaggerates the cathedrality(?) of the station. Either that or people were only about 4’ tall 150 years ago. The average height of a British soldier in the Great War was 5 ft 5 in, and the average weight was 8 stones. People were considerably smaller in those days. Isn't that mainly because of the lousy nutrition the working class who made up most of the soldiers suffered from? I imagine the commissioned officers and upper classes in general were probably healthier and taller. |
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