The train operates on the "mail rail" line - a
6.4-mile underground train track that once transported letters
and parcels 70 feet below ground to and from sorting offices on
the east and west sides of the city 22 hours each day.
The line, construction of which began in 1915, ceased operations
in 2003. It will be opened to the public next month as a tourist
attraction, part of the new Postal Museum in the city's
Clerkenwell district.
"Mail rail originally came about because mail was being delayed
in London due to congestion in the streets above us," Adrian
Steel, director of the Postal Museum and mail rail told Reuters.
Visitors can now ride a section of the old track in specially
built trains, and explore an engineering depot turned exhibition
space.
"One of the biggest jobs we've had is finding a way of taking
people through these narrow tunnels that were never meant for
people to pass through in a way that's not completely
uncomfortable or dangerous," Steel said.
Apart from their role in delivering mail, the tunnels played a
useful role during the World War One and World War Two.
Construction of the line was halted when war broke out and the
space was instead used to store valuable artefacts, and was
relied on heavily to avoid mail disruption during the blitz of
World War Two.
Aside from its unique history, another aspect of the mail rail
line sets it apart from other London underground train lines -
an absence of rats.
"It's a rodent free terminal and under London which is unusual",
Steel said. "Because there were no people on the trains, there
is no food for the rats and mice".
Rail mail at London's Postal Museum opens to visitors on Sept.
4.
(Reporting by Pedro Caiado; Writing by Mark Hanrahan; Editing by
Alison Williams)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|
|