When you get off at London underground stations you are treated to some historical murals made with tiles. Even if you don't alight, you can admire the sights through the windows or from the open doorway as the train stops.
The decorations also remind you which station is which. Instead of reading a newspaper, given out free at stations - look for the stacks, when you are near your destination, you can keep an eye on the passing stations so that you don't go past your stop.
My favourites include:
Baker Street
Sherlock Holmes
Allow time to admire the Charing Cross tube station panels on the platform coming in from Finchley Road station. This is the station for Trafalgar Square and the National Gallery and National Portrait Gallery.
Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.
You can see:
1 poet and playwright William Shakespeare,
2 one or more of the six wives of King Henry VIII who was father of equally famous Queen Elizabeth I, and
3 Sir Christopher Wren who built St Paul's Cathedral and many more buildings all over London to replace what was lost after the great fire.
Sir Christopher Wren and St Pauls Cathedral. Image at station. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.Piccadilly
Piccadilly underground 'tube' station. Tiles in red and green. Notice mind the gap written on the edge of the platform. Photo by Angela Lansbury. Copyright.Useful Websites
Wikipedia
Transport for London
https://tfl.gov.uk/travel-information/social-media-and-email-updates/
Wikitravel
Wikivoyage
tripadvisor
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