Living on a 30 Bus
One of my friends has commented that I always seem to be on a 30 bus. It’s just that it’s so useful to get to and from the Angel, Islington, Kings Cross, St. Pancras, Euston and the Selfridges end of Oxford Street, especially as the stop is just around the corner and has one of those displays which tell which buses will arrive soon.
Yesterday on my trip to see Ipswich at Barnsley, the journey didn’t start with a small step, but it started and finished on a 30 bus.
A 30 bus was involved in the London bombings and 13 passengers tragically died in Tavistock Square. But it isn’t the only tragedy connected with the route.
This picture shows the memorial garden at Highbury Corner. The plaque commemorates the 26 people who died in a V1 attack on June 27th, 1944.
But the route isn’t all about sadness, as at Islington Green, you pass the statue of Hugh Myddelton, one of those who shaped our city.
Every time, you use water in the city, there is a chance that some of that water has arrived courtesy of the New River; Myddelton’s project from the early seventeenth century that transformed London’s water supply.
From the Angel, I then travelled down Pentonville Road to Kings Cross, getting off just before the station and crossing the maze of roads into Kings Cross.
Hopefully, when they create the new public square in front of King’s Cross station they’ll make this pedestrian access a lot better.
At least though work inside the station seems to be progressing well, with the pedestrian bridge and the associated lifts seeming to be taking shape under a newly restored roof.
Coming home too, I was lucky in that I walked through the station after buying a Cod Mornay for my supper from Marks and Spencer in St. Pancras and had to wait just two minutes before a 30 bus appeared to take me home.
Related
February 13, 2011 - Posted by AnonW | Sport, Transport/Travel | Barnsley, Buses, Football, Ipswich Town, Trains
No comments yet.
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
About This Blog
What this blog will eventually be about I do not know.
But it will be about how I’m coping with the loss of my wife and son to cancer in recent years and how I manage with being a coeliac and recovering from a stroke. It will be about travel, sport, engineering, food, art, computers, large projects and London, that are some of the passions that fill my life.
And hopefully, it will get rid of the lonely times, from which I still suffer.
Why Anonymous? That’s how you feel at times.
Charities
Useful Links
Top Posts
- Jamie Oliver's Fish Pie
- Where Should You Travel On An Elizabeth Line Train?
- Development Consent Decision On 3 GW Dogger Bank South Project Postponed
- What Are Gail's Like For Gluten-Free Food
- Taking A Train From Platform 1 At West Croydon Station
- German Wind Tender Awards 3.46 GW Amid Record Demand, Lower Prices
- Could Doncaster Sheffield Airport Become A Hydrogen Airport?
- Stratford Station Secures Funding For Plans Set To Relieve Overcrowding
- Are Transport for London Planning For The Future In The West?
- A Message To All Customers Of Currys/Dixons plc
WordPress Admin
-
Join 1,883 other subscribers
Archives
Categories
- Advertising Architecture Art Australia Banks Battery-Electric Trains BBC Buses Cambridge Coeliac/Gluten-Free Construction COVID-19 Crossrail Death Decarbonisation Design Development Docklands Light Railway Driving East Coast Main Line Electrification Elizabeth Line Energy Engineering Entertainment Floating Wind Power Flying Football France Freight Germany Global Warming/Zero-Carbon Good Design Gospel Oak And Barking Line Greater Anglia Great Western Railway Heathrow Airport High Speed Two Highview Power Hydrogen-Powered Trains Innovation Internet Ipswich Town King's Cross Station Law Liverpool London London Overground London Underground Manchester Marks and Spencer Network Rail New Stations Offshore Wind Power Olympics Phones Politics Project Management Religion Research Scotland Shopping Solar Power Stations Step-Free Stroke Television Thameslink The Netherlands Trains United States Walking Weather Wind Power Zopa
Tweets
Tweets by VagueShot



Leave a comment