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The area of King's Cross has witnessed a dramatic transformation,
with a new city rising above, alongside and within some of the
country's most compelling railway heritage. The former Railway
Lands remain extraordinarily rich in historical features, yet those
who now reside, work, study, dine or play in this new world will
find their origins hard to decipher. The Great Northern Railway,
with its stations, goods depots, locomotive sheds, coal yards and
stables at King's Cross, served the needs of the ever-growing
metropolis, experiencing growth in the nineteenth century,
competition for trade, weakness between the wars, and the high age
of steam. After the demise of steam, the decaying industrial
landscape was colonised by a variety of new enterprises, invaded by
clubbers, contested by developers and the community, and captured
by artists and photographers. In The King's Cross Story Peter
Darley explores and illuminates the fascinating history of the
Railway Lands over the last 200 years, tracing the evolution of its
historical features through time and space.
The London & Birmingham Railway was the major project of its
day, designed by Robert Stephenson, one of the great railway
pioneers, who also supervised its construction and its opening in
1837. Camden Goods Station became the goods terminus and Euston
Station the passenger terminus. For a few years trains were hauled
by rope from Euston up the incline to Camden before the
intensification of both passenger and goods services rendered such
technology obsolete. The L&BR left a strong footprint on the
landscape from Euston to Camden Town and Primrose Hill. The story
moves from rapid economic growth to eventual decline and then to
the recent regeneration. The historic features around the former
Goods station are providing the basis of Camden's transformation
through its markets, media, music, food and entertainment into a
global brand. Join Peter Darley in unfolding this story from 1837
to the present day.
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