A
network of disused underground tunnels, that were once used to transport rail
across London, have been given the go-ahead to open as a tourist attraction.
Mail Rail first opened in 1927 and in its heyday used a series of driverless
trains to transport post beneath the capital's streets from the East End's
Whitechapel to Paddington in the west. Islington Council has approved plans to
allow tourists to descend beneath the city and ride the trains that sit below
some of the London's most iconic sights. From 2020, visitors will be able to
ride the 'secret Tube', departing from Mount Pleasant, in Islington, which was
once one of the largest sorting offices in the world.
The original track was
6.5 miles long and had a total of eight stations and at some stages narrowed to
just 7ft wide. Tourists will ride the miniature trains for a total of 0.6 miles,
while learning about the history of the Post Office. A new postal museum will
also open on the Mount Pleasant site in 2016, displaying artefacts from British
postal history, including telegrams from the Titanic, original evidence from
the Great Train Robbery trial and pistols used to defend mail coaches in the
19th Century. The Mail Rail was finally closed in 2003, after Royal Mail built
a new hub in Willesden, west London and it was decided it would be cheaper to
transport mail by road instead of using the tunnels.
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