Area photos


 HOME  ·  ARTICLE  ·  MAPS  ·  STREETS  ·  BLOG  ·  CONTACT US 
(51.615009 -0.207009, 51.615 -0.207) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
Click here to see map view of nearby Creative Commons images
Click here to see Creative Commons images near to this postcode
Click here to see Creative Commons images tagged with this road (if applicable)
London Transport bus TD104 sits in Mill Hill East station forecourt (1962) Route 240 was introduced in the 1930s between Edgware and Golders Green and replaced the former London General Omnibus Company Route 104. Initially it was split into two sections, the Mill Hill Broadway station to Edgware section being operated by single-deck TDs and the Mill Hill to Golders Green section by double-deck RTs. This was because of the low railway bridge over Mill Hill Broadway which did not permit double-decker operation. The single-deck part was renumbered 240A and extended to Page Street, and then in 1951 was further extended to Mill Hill East station. Route 240A is notable at this time as being the only London bus route that has ever accepted single tube tickets, between Mill Hill East, Mill Hill Broadway and Edgware in lieu of the planned extension of the Northern Line. A ticket for Mill Hill (The Hale) cost a little more than one to Mill Hill East, and enabled the passenger to retain their tube ticket for use on the 240A anywhere in the direction of Edgware.
Credit: Geoff Plumb
TUM image id: 1666360023
Licence:

In the neighbourhood...

Click an image below for a better view...
Finchley Golf Club bathed in brilliant sunshine after snow (2021)
Credit: IG/@seftelegram
Licence:


Officers Mess at Inglis Barracks, Mill Hill East. Inglis Barracks was part of the local landscape between 1904 and 2012 when the site was redeveloped for housing.
Credit: Mill Hill Preservation Society
Licence:


Lidbury Square is a 21st-century upmarket development just west of Mill Hill East station.
Credit: Geograph/Nigel Mykura
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Royal Engineers Way in Millbrook Park, Mill Hill East
Credit: Wiki Commons
Licence:


The 1st Battalion, Middlesex Regiment near Cassel, 25 April 1918. Inglis Barracks in Mill Hill East became the Regimental Depot for the Middlesex Regiment (Duke of Cambridge’s Own) when they moved from the Hounslow Barracks following the opening of Inglis Barracks in 1904. The military presence at the barracks ceased in 2007 and Ministry of Defence sold the site for residential development. The estate is now called Millbrook Park.
Credit: Imperial War Museum
Licence: