626 men of the Southern Railway who died in WW2.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Southern Railway, 626 men who died in WW2
Commemorated ati
Victoria Station - war memorial - east
The names are grouped by department: General Office, Coaching Department, Goo...
Victoria Station - war memorial - west
"... and of whom those whose names ..." - we just don't write English like th...
Waterloo WW2 plaque
To the memory of the 626 men of the Southern Railway who gave their lives in ...
Other Subjects
Kindertransport
10,000 unaccompanied mainly Jewish children fled from Nazi persecution in 1938 and 1939. This was organised mainly by World Jewish Relief, but many Quakers helped the children at stations on the jo...
Event, Children, Transport, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Poland
Keith Hill
MP, In 1999 Minister for London bringing London's Red Route Network into full operation.
The Great Northern, Piccadilly and Brompton Railway
Formed through a merger of the Brompton and Piccadilly Circus and the Great Northern and Strand Railways. It is now part of the Piccadilly tube line.
Lance Corporal Charles Albert Still
Charles Albert Still was born on 26 April 1899 in Shoreham-by-Sea, Sussex, a son of Harry Still (1865-1932) and Elizabeth Still née Charles (1859-1933). His birth was registered in the 2nd quarter ...
Paul Atterbury
As this is a fairly unusual name, we are presuming he's the same person who is one of the experts on the BBC television series 'Antiques Roadshow'. He has also written about railways.
Previously viewed
Surrey Docks Manager's Office
SE16, Surrey Quays Road, Dock Offices
EU Today writes: "The first bomb of the London blitz landed on the Dockyard Offices on the periphery of what is now the car park for Surr...
Claylands Chapel
Built as a Congregational church and opened on 29 June 1836, this building is at the north corner of Claylands Road and Claylands Place (just south of the Oval). In 1845 it was renovated and capaci...
Spoons
EC1, Warner Street, public stairwell to Rosebery Avenue
The Great Wen suggests that these spoons first appeared in about 2000 and that they refer to the use of the stairwell by heroin addicts.
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