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9953 - L1341 - The construction of the tunnels beneath Lords Cricket Ground.
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L1341 - The construction of the tunnels beneath Lords Cricket Ground.
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L1341 - The construction of the tunnels beneath Lords Cricket Ground.
L1341 - The construction of the tunnels beneath Lords Cricket Ground.
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iBase ID
9953
Title
L1341 - The construction of the tunnels beneath Lords Cricket Ground.
Description
L1341 - Much to the annoyance of W. G. Grace and his fellow cricketers, the Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway opted to build their new railway directly beneath Lords Cricket Ground in St. Johns Wood. Eventually the cricketers conceded as they were promised a brand new pitch, and this photograph shows the construction work in progress. The tunnels were built by the 'Cut & Cover' method, rather than boring, and this is shown to good effect here. The wooden centrings are in place and the brick courses are being built up. The scale of the work can be judged by the group of navvies gathered in the bottom right of the picture. When finished, the area would be covered over and the new cricket pitch laid. The work was carried out by J. T. Firbank of London Bridge between 1894 and 1898.
British Railways - S. W. A. Newton Collection
More information about these photographs and the Great Central Railway can be found
here
Maker
S.W.A. Newton
LCC ID. No.
L1341.tif
Image Use
Personal use only unless otherwise agreed
Notes
IM&ICT - RC
Original media type: Glass plate negative
Exhibitions with this image
L1341 - Much to the annoyance of W. G. Grace and his fellow cricketers, the Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway opted to build their new railway directly beneath Lords Cricket Ground in St. Johns Wood. Eventually the cricketers conceded as they were promised a brand new pitch, and this photograph shows the construction work in progress. The tunnels were built by the 'Cut & Cover' method, rather than boring, and this is shown to good effect here. The wooden centrings are in place and the brick courses are being built up. The scale of the work can be judged by the group of navvies gathered in the bottom right of the picture. When finished, the area would be covered over and the new cricket pitch laid. The work was carried out by J. T. Firbank of London Bridge between 1894 and 1898.
British Railways - S. W. A. Newton Collection
More information about these photographs and the Great Central Railway can be found
here
Subjects
Transport
Transport
>
Rail
Working Life
Working Life
>
Industrial
File metadata
File name
3678.jpg
File size
2.23 MB
File extension
JPEG
Width
3609 px
Height
2568 px
Uploaded on
2013-06-05 12:44:16
Date taken
01/01/1896