Isn't the whole "post town" thing a bit archaic?
If you want to pay a cheque into Lloyds TSB by post, you just have to address the envelope:
Lloyds TSB
BX1 1LT
Isn't the whole "post town" thing a bit archaic?
I think 'mainline' is being used here as in on the NR network, it could be argued both Tyndrum stations are on branchlines.
The more the merrier!Bring back City & Victoria i say
Good choice. Guess it depends on how you count population though(city limits/borough/urban area etc).johnnychips said:Off the top of my head, Norwich?
You would be ill-advised to get into an argument with me on any aspect of administrative or postal geography. I will eat you for breakfast.
Not at all a candidate for "The Least Populated Place", but still one which is a little extreme having at least 5 Mainline stations but only a population of just11,000. This must make it the place with the greatest number of Mainline Stations per had of the population.
The City of London.
Yes, I inexcuseably didn't consider Fenchurch St and Farringdon. Quite a record, then, for such a small population.I make it seven?
. . . .
plus five or six LU stations
You very clearly haven't read any of the posts between the one you've quoted and the one you've just made. Still, as long as you've made your point to your own satisfaction and had a good laugh at your own superiority, that's all that matters I suppose.
And why, pray, would 'actual' administrative geography be any more rational than postal geography? Most postal geography predates current adminstrative geography in any event. You would be ill-advised to get into an argument with me on any aspect of administrative or postal geography. I will eat you for breakfast.
Best. Threat. Ever.
I make it seven?
Liverpool Street
Fenchurch Street
Cannon Street
Blackfriars
City Thameslink
Faringdon
Moorgate
plus five or six LU stations