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Taking Shelter in Piccadilly Circus Underground StationCrowds seek refuge in Piccadilly Circus Underground Station during a Luftwaffe air raid. 1940
Abdel Kader radio station in Massawa, EritreaAbdel Kader radio station in Massawa (Mitsiwa) on the coast of the Red Sea, Eritrea. Date: circa 1920s
Ataba-el-Khadra (Ataba Square) in Cairo, EgyptTram station, carriages and construction work on a major building at Ataba-el-Khadra (Ataba Square) in Cairo, Egypt. Date: 1910s
Israel. Jerusalem. Via Dolorosa. V Station. Stone with the pIsrael. Jerusalem. Old City. Old City. V Station. Place of encounter between Jesus and Simon of Cyrene, the man who carried the cross of Christ to Mount Calvary
Via Dolorosa street sign. Jerusalem. IsraelIsrael. Jerusalem. Via Dolorosa. Street of Old City, which traditionally Jesus walked carrying the cross, way to his crucifixion. Street sign
Gare St Lazare, Paris, 1868The Gare Saint-Lazare, Paris, seen from the bridge of the Place de l Europe, 1868. Date: 1868
Gare Du Nord, ParisLA GARE DU NORD, PARIS The new facade, completed 1865 Date: 1865
Map of the St Marylebone area, London. Date: circa 1900
Railway strike 1911: Paddington StationSeveral days of the week London lived under the shadow of the seige conditions, deserted rails with crowned platforms at Paddington Station, during the Great Railway Strike. August 1911
Royal Horse Artillery at Waterloo Station, WW1Members of the R.H.A. pose for a picture together at Waterloo Station before embarking for France in August 1914. Date: 1914
Watchroom at Fire Brigade HQ, SouthwarkWatchroom at Metropolitan Fire Brigade headquarters in Southwark Bridge Road, with men manning the switchboard and monitoring the fire alarm control board where calls for assistance were received
Wymans book stall at Paddington Station, 1915An impressive bookstall at Paddington railway station in 1915 with a display of the recently printed Printers Pie, a charitable publication produced in aid of retired printers
Paddington Station, London - Platform 5 - GWR Terminus designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Date: early 1930s
Shell Petrol StationShell filling station, Lund, Scania, Sweden c. 1958. Date: 1958
LCC-LFB Downham fire station, Lewisham, SE LondonLondon was expanding and the London Fire Brigade had to meet the expansion. The Downham Estate, in SE London, was the London County Councils largest social housing development (Council Estate)
London Fire Engine Establishment (LFEE) fire stationAn example of an LFEE fire station building, possibly in East London. The LFEE was created in 1833 and would eventually have nineteen fire stations
LCC-LFB West Hampstead fire station, NW LondonReplacing Hampstead fire station, West Hampstead fire station opened in 1901 at 325 West End Road, West Hampstead, NW London
LCC-LFB Islington fire station stables -- KrugerIslington fire station stables, Upper Street, showing a white horse named Kruger. The station opened in 1899. Horses would remain in use in the London Fire Brigade until 1921
Reopening of the Southwark Training CentreThe Duchess of Kent reopening the Southwark Training Centre. She is standing in a hydraulic lift appliance
London Fire Brigade vehicle repair workshops, Lambeth HQLocated in the Brigade headquarters complex, the extensive workshops built, maintained and repaired most of the London fire brigades fire appliances, staff cars
LCC-LFB Shoreditch fire station, near Old StreetBuilt in 1895, Shoreditch fire station B27 was located at 140 Tabernacle Street, near Old Street. The stations spare escape ladder is parked on the station forecourt
LCC-MFB Clerkenwell fire station EC1The original Clerkenwell fire station built in 1870, located at 42-44 Rosebery Avenue, Farringdon. The station was substantially extended in 1896 and the fire engines pulled out into Farrington Road
LCC-MFB Tooley Street fire station, BermondseyLocated at 164-165 Tooley Street, SE1, this station still stands today although it was closed operationally in 1928 and the building sold off
LCC-LFB Fireman using the sliding poleFollowing a visit to the United States, the Chief Officer (Captain Eyre Massey Shaw) saw these devices in American firehouses, and brought the idea into his own fire stations
London Fire Brigade control room at headquarters. Officers work at computer stations to coordinate fire and rescue operations
LFDCA-LFB Shadwell fire station, Cable StreetShadwell fire station, Cable Street, East London, which marked its centenary in 2010. It is one of nine fire stations across London which are to be rebuilt
LFDCA-LFB Kingston fire station, SW London / SurreyBuilt originally for the Surrey Fire Brigade, Kingston fire station was transferred into Greater London in 1965
LFDCA-LFB Islington fire station, Upper StreetIslington fire station, 178 Upper Street, Islington N1
LCC-LFB Auxiliary Fire Service vehicles, WW2AFS (Auxiliary Fire Service) vehicles. The onset of WW2 brought about a vast expansion of the London Fire Brigade to deal with the anticipated enemy bombing of London
LCC-MFB Red Cross Street fire station, City of LondonRed Cross Street fire station, City of London, built by the London County Council (LCC) and opened in 1900. It was one of four fire stations (plus a river station at Blackfriars)
GLC-LFB Islington fire station, Upper StreetIslington fire station was erected in Upper Street, North London, in 1900 by the London County Council for the Metropolitan Fire Brigade
MFB Deptford fire station, SE LondonBuilt for the Metropolitan Fire Brigade in 1872, Deptford fire station was located on the site of the present Deptford fire station at 186 Evelyn Street, SE8
LCC-LFB new Clapham fire station, Old Town SW4The fire appliances attached to the new Clapham fire station, Old Town SW4, in their appliance bay. In the background is the station watchroom
Kingston fire station, Kingston, SurreyKingston fire station was originally built for Surrey Fire Brigade in 1959. It was transferred into the London Fire Brigade with the creation of the Greater London Council in 1965
GLC-LFB Park Royal fire station, MiddlesexPark Royal fire station in West London was one of the later fire stations to be built for the former Middlesex Fire Brigade. Opening in 1958 it was transferred to the Greater London Council in 1965
GLC-London Fire Brigade, Lewisham fire stationReplacing the old Lewisham fire station, also in Lewisham High Street, Lewisham fire station was the new generation Divisional Headquarters design
New Chelsea Fire Station, Kings Road, LondonOpened in 1965, Chelsea Fire Station was the last fire station commissioned to be built by the London County Council prior to the creation of the Greater London Council in 1965
LFB Knightsbridge fire station, SW LondonOpened in 1907, Knightsbridge fire station stands in Basil Street, Knightsbridge, London SW3
Cheam Borough Fire Brigade, SurreySuperintendent of Cheam Fire Brigade with the winners of a Brigade competition shield. A manual horse drawn pump stands in the rear
LCC- MFB Notting Hill fire station, West LondonNotting Hill fire station (A10) was built in 1868 by the Metropolitan Fire Brigade (MFB), located at 83 Ladbroke Road. The previous year
Appliance room of Cannon Street Fire Station, LondonThe appliance room of Cannon Street Fire Station in the City of London. The horses are not long gone, and their empty stalls can be seen left of centre
LCC-LFB Bethnal Green fire station, East LondonBuilt by the London County Council (LCC) and opened in 1899, Bethnal Green fire station was located at 51 Green Street. It was closed in 1969 with the opening of the new Bethnal Green fire station
LCC-LFB Lewisham fire station, High Street, LewishamBuilt by the London County Council (LCC) and opened in 1898, Lewisham fire station was located at 340 High Street. Lewisham, SE London
LCC-LFB Whitefriars fire station, City of LondonWhitefriars fire station (B36), located at 7 Carmelite Street in the City of London, built in 1896. At the time of this picture
Barnet Fire Station, Hertfordshire, built in 1905
LCC-LFB Brompton fire station, KensingtonLocated at 18 South Parade, station A3 (later A6) Brompton was built in 1892. The escape ladder, covered in canvas, is on the station forecourt
New NFS sub-fire station, Bushey District 34, WW2With the longer lulls in enemy bombing following the Blitz on London, fire service personnel were put to more productive work in addition to their normal training and drills
Shadwell fire station appliance room, Cable Street, E1Three appliances stand ready in the appliance room of Shadwell fire station, London E1. From left to right they are a Pump Escape, pump, and BA van