Cannon Street Station
When I was growing up, Cannon Street station was just a shell.
Now it has an office block cradled in its arms.
I hadn’t realised until I read the Wikipedia entry for the station, that the development of the station was involved ion one of the worst corruption scandals of the 1960s; the Poulson affair.
The architect selected to design the new building was John Poulson who was good friends with Graham Tunbridge, a British Rail surveyor whom he had met during the war. Poulson took advantage of this friendship to win contracts for the redevelopment of various British Rail termini. He paid Tunbridge a weekly income of £25 and received in return building contracts, including the rebuilding of London Waterloo and East Croydon. At his trial in 1974 he admitted that shortly before receiving the Cannon Street building contract, he had given Tunbridge a cheque for £200 and a suit worth £80. Poulson was later found guilty of corruption charges and was given a seven-year concurrent sentence; Tunbridge received a 15-month suspended sentence and £4,000 fine for his role in the affair.
Those were the days!
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