Classroom lesson 路 Tube馃嚞馃嚙 United Kingdom

The London Underground

The world's first underground railway, opened 1863

A black-and-white photograph of a London Underground platform around 1900

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The London Underground - called 'the Tube' by Londoners - is the oldest underground railway in the world. It opened in 1863, when most travel still happened by horse. Today it carries around 5 million passengers a day, in trains running through 400 km of tunnels under the city.

Tell me more

The first underground trains were pulled by steam engines, which sounds strange because steam engines make a lot of smoke. Passengers got covered in soot. There were vents in the tunnels to let the smoke out, but the carriages were still quite gloomy. Modern Tube trains run on electricity, which is much cleaner.

The Tube has 11 lines and 272 stations. Each line has its own colour on the map: the Central Line is red, the Piccadilly Line is dark blue, the District Line is green. The famous Tube map is so cleverly designed that people study it as a brilliant example of how to show information.

Some of the stations are very deep underground - Hampstead station is 58 metres down, deeper than 14 double-decker buses stacked on top of each other. During tough times in the past, people used the deep platforms as safe places to sleep.

The Tube has its own little customs. 'Mind the gap' is the famous warning between the train and the platform. People stand on the right side of the escalator so people in a hurry can walk past on the left. And the round red, white and blue 'roundel' logo is one of the most recognised symbols in the world.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What sort of city would you need an underground railway for? What makes London especially suited to one?
  2. 02Maps of the Tube are very simple compared to a normal map. Why might that make them easier to read?
  3. 03Lots of cities now have underground trains. What city would you most like to take an underground train through?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design your own underground line. Pick five places in your town or city that you would want stations at - your school, the park, a sports ground, a shop, your house. Draw them in a straight line, give each one a name, and give the whole line a colour and a name (Yellow Line, Forest Line, etc.).

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