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The London Necropolis Railway Station.
This was a special Railway Station constructed in the mid 19th. Century by the London Necropolis Company and was opened 13th. November 1854.

The London Necropolis Company and the National Mausoleum Company provided a solution to the problem of a lack of burial space for a rapidly growing population in London.
They purchased two thousand acres of land from Lord Onslow next to Brookwood Station to the west of Woking. They also brought a branch line off London and South Western Railway. The three carriage trains ran between York Street (now Leake Street) and two stations within the cemetery. North Station was for Roman Catholics, Jews, Parsees and other Dissenters and the Anglican South Station.

In 1902 the new building was opened at 121, Westminster Bridge Road.
The horse drawn funeral corteges would turn off the road and report to the office (which can still be seen through the railings). The cortege would then use either the lift or stairs to go up to the waiting train separated into first or third class.The coffin was slid into purpose built hearse carriages and the mourners would be seated in the adjoining carriages.
The Railway carried it’s last coffin and passengers in April 1941 when after several near misses the station was bombed by the Luftwaffe never to reopen.






