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Mitcham Eastfields railway station

DfT Category E stationsLondon stations without latest usage statistics 1415London stations without latest usage statistics 1516London stations without latest usage statistics 1617Rail transport stations in London fare zone 3
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 2008Railway stations in the London Borough of MertonRailway stations opened by Network RailRailway stations served by Govia Thameslink RailwayUse British English from August 2012Vague or ambiguous time from March 2018
Mitcham Eastfields railway station, Greater London (geograph 3937977)
Mitcham Eastfields railway station, Greater London (geograph 3937977)

Mitcham Eastfields (initially known as Eastfields during planning and construction) is a railway station in London, United Kingdom, which opened on 2 June 2008. The station is located at Eastfields Road level crossing, in an area previously poorly served by public transport. The nearest station was Mitcham Junction, which along with Mitcham tram stop, was over 1 mile (1.6 km) from the district. It is in fare zone 3.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mitcham Eastfields railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Mitcham Eastfields railway station
Grove Road, London Mitcham (London Borough of Merton)

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Wikipedia: Mitcham Eastfields railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.4077 ° E -0.1547 °
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Address

Mitcham Eastfields

Grove Road
CR4 1SD London, Mitcham (London Borough of Merton)
England, United Kingdom
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Mitcham Eastfields railway station, Greater London (geograph 3937977)
Mitcham Eastfields railway station, Greater London (geograph 3937977)
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Nearby Places

St Barnabas' Church, Mitcham

St Barnabas' Church, Mitcham, is a church in the Graveney ward of the London borough of Merton, in SW London. It is located on Gorringe Park Avenue in Mitcham. The church is dedicated to Barnabas, one of the disciples. In his day, he carried out missionary journeys & had a great ability to encourage - Barnabas means "son of encouragement". The dedication was chosen, due to the missionary nature of the church set up on this site. The local area in the early 20th Century was a Mission District (specifically, from 1906), where the church aimed to establish & foster a local religious community. This was at the aegis of Christ Church in Colliers Wood, along with old boys from City of London School. The initial missionary building was a basic building, housing a single room; it was known as the "tin church". The current building that we know was designed by H. P. Burke Downing, the foundation stone being laid on 17 May 1913 & the church was completed on 14 November 1914. The church was Grade II listed by English Heritage on 2 September 1988.No images of this early "tin church" are available, but we can ascertain how it might have looked with images of other churches which shared a similar arc of development, starting in newly populated areas in the greatly expanding cities of the late 1800s and early 1900s. Possible examples being the "tin hut" church at Mile Oak or the tabernacles of the Methodist ChurchRecently, the church has been used as a polling station for elections; it was used as a polling office in UK General Election of 12 December 2019, with the polling booths and election officers being located near the main door.