Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Kilburn

 This is the 19th station I have visited on the Jubilee Line. The station opened as Kilburn and Brondesbury in 1879 as part of the Metropolitan railway, which later became the Metropolitan tube line. Originally it was just a two track line through the station but that was quadrupled in 1913. As with other previous stations the Metropolitan line services were transferred to the Stanmore line of the Bakerloo line in the 1930s and then transferred again to the Jubilee line in 1979. 




The station has an island platform and only serves the Jubilee line. The Metropolitan tube trains run through the station on the outer tracks. The height of the platform wasn't changed when tube trains began to use the station and consequently instead of stepping down onto the platform you have to step up to the platform as you exit the train.

The platform is enhanced with some raised flower beds. These ones contain herbs.








The station was extensively rebuilt when it was transferred to the Bakerloo line and then refurbished in 2005 but the 1930s buildings remain.




The station entrances look as though they have been squeezed into the spaces between the railway bridges.

 
The blue railway bridge has the name 'Metropolitan Railway' and the year 1914 emblazoned across it, the year the extension to the track and this viaduct would have been completed.
The station brings you out onto Kilburn High Road. The road is part of an ancient roman road which runs from the north-east side of Hyde park to St Albans. In Anglo-Saxon times the road became known as Watling Street. It started at the ports in Kent, going through Canterbury, London following an almost straight path to Wales. In the 12th century Kilburn became a popular resting point for pilgrims on their way to the shrine at St Albans. A priory was developed here which provided food and shelter for the pilgrims but under the Dissolution of monasteries by Henry VIII in 1536, it closed and nothing of it remains. The earliest industries in the area were tile and brickmaking. Tile making in Kilburn was first mentioned in the early 16th century. By the late 19th century there were coachbuilders, bicycle manufacturers and a railway signal factory in the area. The developing town of Kilburn was centred around this road. By  the 1880s, Kilburn High Road had more than 300 shops. Foreign nationals, some of them Jewish immigrants owned a number of the shops. There was considerable poverty and overcrowding in Kilburn in the 19th century. By 1890 20% of families in Kilburn were classified as living in poverty. After the 2nd World War much of London needed rebuilding.  In Kilburn, this meant a reduction in industry and the replacement of overcrowded slums with flats. Many of the labourers were Irish leading to Kilburn being given the nickname 'County Kilburn'.  Today it is a very diverse area. In the 1970s a number of people from the Caribbean and Asia moved to Kilburn. The 2011 census showed that almost half the residents were not born in the UK.

The road connects several stations including two underground ones. Kilburn Park on the Bakerloo line and Kilburn on the Jubilee line. 
Beneath the Kilburn station bridges are a couple of fading murals. These were part of the Signal Project in 2004 to bring together graffiti artists and the local community. The murals included characters from the works of Kilburn residents George Orwell's 'Animal Farm' and  H.G. Wells's 'War of the Worlds'. The murals also include the Gaumont State Cinema as well as representation of Kilburn's Irish and Black communities. At the time it was the largest public graffiti art ever commissioned in the UK and was voted Best Mural by Time Out magazine in 2006.




This is Folkies, an independent music shop near the station. Looking in through the window I could see a large range of stringed instruments.


At the last count there were 16 pubs on Kilburn High Road and this was one of the biggest. The Black Lion is a Grade II listed building built by R A Lewcock in 1898. The pub was closed when I visited but I managed to take a few photos of the interior through the windows.
One of the main reasons for it being listed is the plasterwork ceiling and the several gilded bas relief plaques by Frederick Callcott (sculptor).




Another pub from the same era is the Sir Colin Campbell. The pub was named after the first Baron Clyde (1792-1863) most famous for his campaigns during the Crimean War and his service in India. His leadership inspired a group of his former soldiers to open a pub in his honour. The pub now has an Irish following with traditional Irish folk music  performed here at the weekends.




Across the road from the pubs is this building from 1929. The building has had many different uses during its lifetime. It was built as a meeting place for the local branch of the Foresters' Friendly Society which provided financial and social support to its members. In the 1930s the building was also used as a music hall.  When war broke out in 1939 it was used as an air raid shelter and a food distribution point. The society continued its work in the 1950s and 60s helping West Indian immigrants now known as the Windrush Generation. (The Windrush generation is the name given to around 500.000 people who moved to the UK between 1948 and 1971 from Caribbean countries. Some of them arrived on a ship called the Empire Windrush.)
In 1979 the building was sold by the Foresters' Society to a  theatre group called the Wakefield Tricycle Company. The Society continued to operate from a small office nearby. The theatre company established itself with political and thought provoking plays. In 1987 the building was destroyed by fire and took two years to be rebuilt.
 In 1998 a new cinema was opened next to it which provided more rehearsal space. The entrance to the cinema is around the corner.  Another project in 2018 improved the facilities once again and the Tricycle theatre re-opened as The Kiln with a new cafe, rehearsal rooms and a flexible stage. The Kiln also has a 300 seat cinema. 

The most well known building on Kilburn High Road is the Gaumont State Cinema which opened in December 1937. It seated 4000 people and had a separate dance hall and restaurant. It was the largest cinema in Europe at the time. The 37m high tower appears to have been inspired by the Empire State building in New York hence the inclusion of the word 'State' in its name. The tower housed the theatre's own radio station and could be seen for miles around becoming a local landmark. The building houses the Wurlitzer organ and is the largest working organ of its kind in Britain. It is one of the few cinema organs than remains in its original location. It seems that the organ is now in a poor condition and has not been played for several years.
Here is a poster from Brent Museum advertising the organ and its music.
Gracie Fields, Larry Adler and George Formby performed at the opening ceremony which was broadcast live on BBC radio in December 1937. From the 1950s to the 70s live concerts were held here with stars such as Frank Sinatra, Buddy Holly, The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, The Who and many others. As was the fate of many cinemas and theatres in the 1980s it became a Bingo Hall before closing in 2007. In July 2010 it was reopened by the Ruach Ministries church and still functions as a church today.


Another large building on Kilburn High Road is The Grange. Once the site of the Grange mansion  it opened as a 2000 seat cinema in 1914. The cinema closed 60 years later and the building became the National Club in 1976 and was a popular music venue for the large local Irish community. As well as Irish showbands it also featured other well known performers including Johnny Cash, Simply Red and David Bowie until it closed in 1999. It became a listed building in 1991. Now the building is used by the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God.





Behind the old Grange Cinema is Kilburn Grange Park. Once part of the Grange estate it opened as a park in 1913 and is looked after by the London Borough of Camden and includes a children's playground, tennis courts, garden and outdoor gym equipment















I walked through Grange park and came out onto Kingsgate Road. This building is the Kingsgate community centre and embedded in the wall is this decorative foundation stone laid by Lucy Baldwin. From 1892 until her death in 1945 she was the wife of Stanley Baldwin, three time Prime Minister and, as with this plaque, was known as Mrs Stanley Baldwin.


Opposite the community centre is this old Victorian factory which is now a multi use art space providing workspace for a mix of artists and designers.


On my way back to the station I came across, quite by chance, Maygrove Peace Park. A small park but one that struck a chord with me today. Today, began the third week of fighting in the Ukraine.  A war that has shocked the world. A war where thousands will lose their lives, millions will lose their homes and for what? Just so one paranoid bully can claim to be all powerful.  


On the 27th April 1983 Camden Council agreed to designate Maygrove as a peace park as a reminder of the council's commitment to peace. The opening of the park was timed to coincide with the 39th anniversary of Nagasaki Day on 9th August 1984 with a thousand white balloons released over the park.
At the Maygrove Road entrance is Hamish Black's 'Peace Crane' which represents a Japanese origami crane which is linked to the story of a little girl called Sadako who survived the bombings of Hiroshima only to fall ill ten years later. To help her get well, she started to make 1000 paper cranes because it was said to bring good luck. Sadako died just before her task was complete. Her friends were devastated. In her honour a statue of a girl holding a golden crane was built as the Children's Peace Monument in Hiroshima Peace Park.
Winding through the park is Peace Walk with seven stones inscribed with messages of peace from famous people over the years.









At the top of the park sits Antony Gormley's 'Untitled (listening)' statue on top of a granite block which symbolises 'part of the old deep history of the planet and sculpted by time..'

The world is listening to the cries of the Ukrainians. Peace in our time seems a very long way off.

12 comments:

  1. I can't see anything nice about the station but the bridge is nice enough.
    Sixteen pubs in one road must be fun a times.
    I see the point about the Gaumont State Cinema.
    It's a shame about the organ. They can be quite expensive to repair to near perfect.
    Kilburn seems like a pleasant and interesting area.

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  2. Another very interesting walk and I see that I also must give some attention to some pubs as they have an interesting inside. Also nice that the design around 1900 in the construction of the bridges and the platform buildings around 1930 are still standing. Wonderful information again.Thanks.

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  3. Thanks for another interesting and detailed account, containing much fascinating information. Sixteen pubs on one road must make the whole area primed for St. Patrick's Day celebrations today. I have often wondered how an obscure Irish saint, from a tiny country, came to be celebrated the world over. Here in North America it has become an occasion for public intoxication, throwing up on the sidewalk, property damage, disturbance of neighbourhoods, confrontations with the police, vandalism, and general civil disobedience. I will be sure not to go anywhere near downtown or the university campuses today! Thank goodness the Antony Gormley statue is not here as an irresistible lure for some enlightened citizen with a can of spray paint. Enjoy the weekend ahead.

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  4. In the late 70s I lived round the corner in Willesden Lane.
    Too busy working to notice the name on the railway bridge!
    All pubs at that time played Irish Country and Western music, all of them!
    A good reason never to enter.
    Another good history lesson, good pictures and brought back memories, of work!

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  5. An interesting read, thank you.
    Though faded, I did like the murals.

    All the best Jan

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  6. I love the peace park. This seems to be a little bit more downscale area than some of the places you have taken us in the past but still packed with history.

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  7. I think it's fascinating your countryt has so many roman roads, we don't have anything like that here cos NZ is still a relatively new country.

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  8. Not an area I really know. The station does look squashed in there. Yes peace seems a long way off at the moment. I wonder if Putin even understands the concept.

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  9. You find such interesting stuff at each station. Love the Peace Park.

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  10. That is a fascinating and diverse neighborhood -- and points out to me what an amazing City yours is with so many little known areas to "the rest of us" ... the real London that only experts and those who live there know. I could spend years visiting just following your footsteps and trying to see half of what you know. The Peace Walk is lovely and one can only wish that we could reach that goal. It was interesting to see all the repurposing of the historical buildings in the Kilburn neighborhood. The "Mrs. Stanley Baldwin" dedication plaque made me smile -- my mother was a remnant of that generation I guess because she was very proud to be referred to by Mrs. followed by my dad's name. I can't imagine that now!s

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  11. I love the station. It is not grand in the simple sense, just so nicely designed.

    I've never heard of the labyrinths. Very interesting.

    The high street looks nice and it must be busy enough sometimes as there aren't closed shops that I noticed.

    The library, 3D facadism and it works!

    Your walk demonstrates that immigrant areas can be attractive and not all about being 'multi cultural interesting'.

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  12. The waiting room looks to me to be very edwardian/art nouveau I think, one of my favourite time eras, so decadent and intricate

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