Join author and London tour guide Katie Wignall as she explores a huge network of abandoned underground tunnels beneath central London. Preserved by The Postal Museum, this historic subterranean railway carried letters across the capital from 1927 until its controversial closure in 2003.
You can follow Katie's work at: https://lookup.london/
At the turn of the 20th century, the streets of Victorian London were congested, polluted and dangerous. This was a problem for the Royal Mail, which was relied on to deliver the capital’s letters and packages on time. Their solution was to transport it underground.
Construction began on a six mile network of underground railway tunnels in 1915, stretching from east to west, connecting Paddington to Whitechapel. It would become the world’s first fully automated driverless railway, and at its peak, would carry 4 million letters around London every day.
In the first episode of History Hit's 'Hidden London' series, author and London tour guide Katie Wignall heads 21 metres underground to explore these spooky tunnels, which were abandoned two decades ago.
Later in the episode, Katie speaks to Chris Taft, Head of Collections at the Postal Museum, to find out why the Royal Mail's underground network was shut down.
You can follow The Postal Museum at the links below:
Twitter - @thepostalmuseum
Instagram - @thepostalmuseum
Tik Tok - @thepostalmuseum
Facebook – The Postal Museum
YouTube - @thepostalmuseum
Up Next in Victorians
-
The Secrets Of London’s Oldest Streets
In this video History Hit presenter Alice Loxton takes us on a tour of some of London’s oldest and most fascinating history.
From the grisly association between Whitechapel and Jack The Ripper, to the surprising origins of Piccadilly Circus, Alice tells some of London’s most interesting stories...
-
The Trial of Jack The Ripper?
In 1888 and 1889, a vicious serial killer haunted the streets of London. Five women were brutally murdered in Whitechapel, and all except one of the five victims - Elizabeth Stride - were horribly mutilated. And those are only the murders officially linked to the killer; it’s likely he took the l...
-
Could You Survive On the SS Great Bri...
What was working on SS Great Britain really like? Isambard Kingdom Brunel's SS Great Britain is undoubtedly one of the most important historic ships in the world. When she was launched from Bristol by Prince Albert in 1843, she was called 'the greatest experiment since the creation'. No one else ...
2 Comments