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Snaresbrook Station, London E11
Opened in 1856 by the Eastern Counties Railway, Snaresbrook station is on the Epping branch which was converted to become the underground Central Line in 1947.
Image: © John Davies
Taken: 15 Dec 2005
0.07 miles
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On Snaresbrook station
Looking south 'westbound' on the Central Line.
Image: © Robin Webster
Taken: 9 Apr 2011
0.07 miles
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Snaresbrook: Station Parade, E11
Station Parade is at the north western end of the High Street and the image was taken from the pedestrian footbridge over the road next to the Underground railway bridge.
Image: © Nigel Cox
Taken: 14 Sep 2007
0.08 miles
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Snaresbrook Underground Station
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 8 Apr 2018
0.08 miles
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Snaresbrook Station
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 7 Nov 2021
0.08 miles
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Snaresbrook station
On the northbound platform, looking towards Epping. There are some nice cast-iron canopy brackets.
Image: © Robin Webster
Taken: 9 Apr 2011
0.09 miles
7
Snaresbrook Underground station, Greater London
Opened in 1856 by the Eastern Counties Railway, later part of the Great Eastern Railway, on the line from London Liverpool Street to Loughton, this station became part of London Transport in 1947.
View north east towards South Woodford, Loughton and Epping. Like 55% of the London Underground network, this part is actually overground.
Image: © Nigel Thompson
Taken: 6 Sep 2018
0.09 miles
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Snaresbrook Underground Station
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 8 Apr 2018
0.09 miles
9
Snaresbrook Underground station
The Eastern Counties Railway Loughton branch line opened on 22nd August 1856. It ran north-east between the small villages of Leyton and Leytonstone, reaching the Roding Valley at Wanstead. It then followed the west side of the valley to reach Loughton. An eleven and a quarter mile extension beyond Loughton was opened as a single line extension from Loughton through Epping to Ongar on 24th April 1865. Snaresbrook & Wanstead station was about midway between those two places.
At the opening of the Loughton branch most trains terminated at Fenchurch Street, but from 1874 most trains were diverted to Liverpool Street. With the growth in residential traffic, the Great Eastern Railway (which now operated the line) rebuilt stations on the inner section. In addition a double track was completed as far as Epping in January 1893. Snaresbrook received a bay platform for up trains in 1893, and ten years later an entrance for ticket-holders was added on the same side. Despite this there was no large-scale suburban building between Snaresbrook and Loughton until the early 1900s when new villas and shopping parades started to appear near the stations. Until the mid 1920s almost every house built near these stations was in the higher price range.
By the outbreak of the Second World war much of the land between Epping Forest and the River Roding was covered with houses as far as Loughton but there was much discontent with the LNER steam service. Tube train operation of the branch was first mooted in the early 1930s and a major objective of the 1935-1940 London Railways New Works Programme was to give the eastern suburbs of London a more direct link to the West End. The Central line would be extended beyond Stratford to Leyton where it would take over the working of the Ongar line. Work resumed in 1945 and Tube trains reached Leytonstone on 5th May 1947 and Snaresbrook, South Woodford and Woodford on 14th December 1947. For the extension of the Tube, Snaresbrook, South Woodford and Woodford received new ticket halls. Electrification was carried through to Epping on 25th September 1949.
This is the view of the station from the down platform looking in the direction of Leytonstone. An Epping bound train is just approaching the platform.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 8 Sep 2015
0.09 miles
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Snaresbrook underground station
Image: © Stacey Harris
Taken: 21 May 2011
0.10 miles