What did Borough Tube Station brown plaque do at Borough High Street?

Borough High StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# Borough Tube Station Standing at this corner of Borough High Street, you're positioned at the exact threshold where London's underground revolution began—the very entrance that welcomed the first passengers stepping into the world's first electric underground railway on November 18, 1890. This precise spot transformed from a modest Victorian entryway into a portal of modernity, channeling over five million eager Londoners annually through its doors as they descended into the revolutionary deep-tube tunnels that burrowed beneath the Thames itself. When the Blitz descended on London during World War II, the tunnels directly below where you're standing became a lifeline for up to 14,000 desperate Londoners seeking refuge from aerial bombardment—a subterranean sanctuary carved from the very engineering marvel that had electrified the city decades earlier. Today, standing at this corner after the 1922 reconstruction relocated the entrance to this present location, you're witnessing the fixed point where Victorian ambition met modern survival, where millions passed through seeking escape, speed, and sanctuary across more than a century of London's tumultuous history.

Location

Borough High Street

Discover more stories across London

Download on the App Store