Place    From 11/7/1848 

Waterloo Station

Categories: Transport

Opened by the London and South Western Railway on 11 July 1848 as ‘Waterloo Bridge station’. Built to extend the line from Nine Elms closer to the City, with the expectation that the line would eventually be extended into the City itself. October 1882 it was renamed Waterloo station, reflecting common usage.

We cannot discover the architect of that first building, nor find a satisfactory image of it. Gaugemaster have a drawing but we find this 1888 plan more informative, also from Gaugemaster, who provide a good intro. to the station, including a photo of Abba (who else?) on a photoshoot.

For half a century the station expanded piecemeal, each development thought temporary, while the extension to the City was planned, negotiated and failed to materialise. Meanwhile the ever-more complex and confusing station became the butt of jokes. e.g. from Jerome K. Jerome's 'Three Men in a Boat': "We got to Waterloo at eleven, and asked where the eleven-five started from.  Of course nobody knew; nobody at Waterloo ever does know where a train is going to start from, or where a train when it does start is going to, or anything about it."

During this time the London Necropolis & National Mausoleum Company opened, in 1854, a private station inside Waterloo providing a link to Brookwood Cemetery; and Waterloo East was built, opening in 1869 as Waterloo Junction.

Eventually in 1898 L&SWR opened the underground Waterloo & City line, connecting Waterloo station to Bank-Monument station. Accepting that Waterloo would remain forever a terminus, they finally redesigned and rebuilt it, larger than before.

The new station was built and opened in stages starting in 1909 and, delayed by WW1, the whole station, including the war memorial Victory Arch, was finally declared open on 21 March 1922 by Queen Mary.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Waterloo Station

Commemorated ati

Waterloo Station - 175 years

{In the circle, with line drawings of an early steam engine and a current ele...

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Southall rail crash

Southall rail crash

An InterCity 125 high speed passenger train from Swansea failed to slow down in response to warning signals and collided with a freight train crossing its path. Seven people were killed and 139 inj...

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3 memorials
City and South London Railway / Northern Line

City and South London Railway / Northern Line

The world's first underground electric railway, the world's first deep tunnel railway, and the first purpose-built railway tunnel under the Thames. This became what we know as the Bank branch of th...

Group, Transport

4 memorials
Lord Nuffield, William Morris

Lord Nuffield, William Morris

Motor manufacturer and philanthropist. Born Worcester. Began work in a bicycle shop and designed the first Morris car in 1912. Founder of the Morris Motor Company and founder of the Nuffield Fou...

Person, Engineering, Philanthropy, Transport

1 memorial
Waterloo Bridge

Waterloo Bridge

The first bridge at this site was built by John Rennie and named following British victory at the Battle of Waterloo, 1815. The 1831 demolition of the old medieval London Bridge caused changes in t...

Building, Transport

4 memorials
London General Omnibus Company

London General Omnibus Company

Transport company. It was originally an Anglo-French enterprise, also known as the Compagnie Generale des Omnibus de Londres. It became the largest omnibus operator in London, buying out hundreds o...

Group, Transport

3 memorials