For as long as I can remember explorers have joked, discussed and cried themselves to sleep over possibility the Post Office Railway could be explored. Those keen to attempt entry desperately clawed at every scrap of information like a starving hobo snacking on bread crumbs. Just the idea of access, let alone the task of traversing the line seemed fraught with impossible obstacles and doubt.

With all the abandoned postal depots now converted or with a foot thick dump of concrete covering what would have been access below, all potential avenues of access pointed solely to the infiltration of live postal depots. In other words, somehow getting into a site and its central building, working your way down an unknown route through a series of passages, locked doors, workers and alarms until you somehow found your way into the basement and with it the depots Mail Rail station. In other words, impossible.

It is without a doubt the Mail Rail sits at the throne of London exploration, laughing maniacally at the puny adventurers unable to even stare it in the eyes without bursting into flames. There is, and will never be anything like it again, its uniqueness forever unrivalled, London’s final unconquered “Grail” now a slain beast.

In a way, it’s with a bit of sadness I write this, when your group has conquered the best location a city or country has to offer, those sites remaining will often seem tame by comparison. Its like fighting the last boss in an RPG, nine times out of ten when you defeat it, the games ends, leaving you little choice but to remember the good times, go out and buy another to spend the next six years of your life playing. However, if on occasion the game doesn’t end, you’re left to venture forth, the world opening for mini side quests and the possibility for 100% completion. This may seem fun and may occupy you for a while longer, but in the back of your mind and in your heart, you know deep down the satisfaction you once gained is gone forever, it packed its bags and moved abroad.

I had the same experience with the exploration of sewers. Back in 2005 I would crawl on my hands and knees squeezing my way up a 3ft, never-ending concrete pipes only to find a dead end or smaller tunnel, but I enjoyed it, going back for more week after week. Yet after discovering some of the Victorian lost rivers and storm drains, this once enjoyable activity instantly lost its appeal, in fact it became frustrating. I could do this now anyway because I’m fatter then I was six years ago and no longer fit in said 3ft pipes, but now I don’t even consider them an option or viable route. I guess I became a ”Sewer Snob”, if there is such a term, spoilt by bigger and better things. In fact it’s been the same across the entire board of exploration. Asylums, mills, bunkers, forts, all things I once enjoyed with equal passion, now nothing more then a space to kill some time. But then there was always Mail Rail, lurking in the background.

I think after time people just gave up with the Mail Rail. Many tried, all failed, it was branded impossible and we all just moved on. That was until last Halloween, when a group of ravers infiltrated the abandoned New Oxford Street sorting office. As with the outcome of most raves, vandals also turned up, utterly destroying the building, smashing windows, covering the walls with graffiti and ripping doors and fire escapes from their hinges.

The following day the Internet was ablaze with images and news articles condemning the rave, yet for explorers three pictures stood out from the rest. One depicting a set of double fire escape doors hanging from the wall, the other two, phone shots posted on Flickr from inside the station slumbering beneath. You’ve got to be joking, the Mail Rail, something which thwarted those who specialise in accessing abandoned structures, conquered by a group of party-goers with glow sticks. To be fair it was the result of extreme circumstances, drunk people, strength in numbers, all without a care. Unless you were willing to rock up on one of the busiest streets in London, several crowbars in tow, you weren’t going to get in anyway.

By the time we had arrived hoping the doors would still be open, they had been fixed, thick sheets of wood sealing them together. Although we had failed to gain access this time it did let us know one thing, that access from the abandoned depots, no matter how impractical, still existed. Quest De La Mail Rail was back on.

Fast forward a few months, Silent Motion and Statler while on a mission elsewhere inadvertently spotted a potential climb into the Paddington sorting office. Now when I say climb I don’t mean a small wall or fence, I mean a five story, rusty drain pipe shimmy of death that few in the right mind would ever think, or have the ability to do. Its the only reason I’m revealing what are effectively access details as I don’t know anyone who will be able to do it. Even standing on the ground I felt nervous as SM climbed, one slip, one loss of grip and the result would be a bloody mess on the roof of the small Peugeot parked below. With a few clangs he was in, those within the area seemingly none the wiser.

We hadn’t heard from our conspirator for over twenty minutes but the guard within hadn’t moved so we knew he wasn’t caught. Time ticked away, theories of what happening running through our minds before we heard a click behind us, SM sticking his house from a fire-escape, a large grin on his face as he simple said, “we’re in.”

For those who don’t know here is a brief history on the Post Office Railway, if you want more I suggest you look up Sub-Brit, their countless years of sitting in chairs has resulted in quite the in-depth collection of historical fact and technical nerdery regarding the place. The following is mainly the interesting bits plucked from theirs and other pages.

Originally designed using a pneumatic system in 1855, after years of testing, tunnel construction and usage its limitation began to show. The Post Office who were already unhappy with its high running costs, coupled with the fact the scheme only shaved four minutes from the delivery time by road decided in 1874 that they would no longer use the line, the Pneumatic Despatch Company being dissolved as the tunnels were closed. The pneumatic line would never reopen, its tunnels and depots being sold off for alternate uses and although the majority of the line was lost, small sections still remain housing cables.

Even before the demised of the Pneumatic line, several plans had been put forward recommending a similar mail delivery system, most promoting usage of electrified lines. In 1909 a committee was established to consider all the proposed schemes, eventually recommending a 2′ gauge, twin electric line to be constructed in a 70-foot deep tunnel running from the Paddington District Office to the Eastern District Office in Whitechapel Road. The line with a length of six miles and total track distance of 23 miles would run through intermediate stations at the Barrett Street, Wimpole Street, New Oxford Street, the main London sorting office at Mount Pleasant, King Edward Street and Liverpool Street.

Construction of the tunnels began on February 1915 from a series of shafts located along the route. The tunnels were primarily dug in clay using the Greathead shield system, although the connecting tunnels in and around the stations were mined by hand. Construction was suspended due to the outbreak of WW1, but was allowed to continue until completion for safety reasons. Further setbacks halted the construction of the stations during 1917 due to the shortage of labour and materials.


It wasn’t until June 1924 that workers began laying the track using 1000 tons of running rail and 160 tons of conductor rail. The remaining electrical installation took place in 1925 with the section between Paddington and the West Central District Office being ready for training. The line was eventually finished in 1927 with the first letter through the system running on February 1928.

In 1954, due to problems with access at the Western District Office and the Western Central District Office plans were drawn up to construct a new Western District Office at Rathbone Place. This meant the construction of a diversion to the line, which was completed in 1958 although the station was not opened until the 3rd August, 1965.

Although the main tunnel was constructed at a depth of 70ft, the stations themselves were constructed at a much shallower depth, for two reasons. One, the mail had less distance to travel to the platforms from the surface, and two, the incline on the track as the train approached the station helped slow the trains, assisting with acceleration on the other side.

Initially the Mail Rail line ran 22 hours a day, its staff working in three shifts. The two hours the line wasn’t in operation it was used by the maintenance team, with larger tasks being carried out on a Sunday when the line was closed. This service was later reduced to 19 hours a day, 286 days a year.

Although initially the system was a success, in its last years of service the line was continually loosing money. On the 7th November 2002, Royal Mail announced the line had become uneconomical with losses of £1.2M a day and that they planned to close it should no alternate uses be found. This was to be the death of the Mail Rail. The line from Mount Pleasant to the Eastern Delivery Office closed on the 21st March 2003, the remaining section from the Western District Office to Mount Pleasant following on the 29th. Now it just sits there buried where light cannot reach, rusting away, the trains sleeping silently in and around the stations waiting to be used again. Sadly a dream which we all know will never come true.

With access acquired we speedily descended into the bowels of the sorting office. The cameras, alarms and PIRs at every corner seemingly inactive. Paddington, which was closed in February 2010 as a result of the sorting office above being relocated to Rathbone Place is still in very good condition, the postal delivery belts still sit in place, the switch boards and power-relays in working condition, seemingly preserved within the damp environment.

As no one had ever explored the Mail Rail we had no idea what to expect, our only frame of reference coming from archive and other images on the sub-brit and unofficial Mail Rail page. So far the cameras and alarms had been somewhat avoidable, excluding the sneaky ones hidden above doors. As the final bulkhead creaked open, a musky smelling darkness greeted us on the other side.

We stepped out torches in hand, checking for further cameras and alarms. Surprisingly, there were none, or so we thought. Presuming the coast was clear we momentarily lowered our guard, stepping out onto the platform. With a bright flash of light the station lit up, a nearby PIR triggering a flood light under which sat a brand new camera. Like a deer mesmerised by the beam of a car’s headlight we stared straight at it, attempting in vain to cover ourselves when we saw the camera.

We hesitated, awaiting a response that never came. No alarms, angry security, postal workers, police dogs, nothing. Were the cameras watched? Maybe, but why? The Mail Rail had been mothballed since 2003 and as far as I was aware, considering there had been no successful attempts at entry outside of the Halloween rave, it was highly unlikely they would employ someone to look at blank screens for months on end.

The floodlight eventually dimmed, plunging the station back into darkness. Concluding the cameras were being recorded at best we threw caution to the wind, covering the cameras with excess items of clothing just to be sure. Flicking a nearby switch kindly labelled ”platform lights” the station buzzed and hummed, its lights springing into life one by one in quick succession.

With over six miles of track and nine stations to see we didn’t hang around for too long, poking our heads into the nooks and crannies, taking some photos before dropping onto the line and venturing into the portals. For the most part the tunnels themselves are standing height, there are a few section that require stopping down. Thankfully, they usually last no more then a hundred meters, where the track splits just before reaching a station.

The sections between stations are fairly uninteresting, once you leave the control area of each the line joins into one straight tunnel until reaching the next with little variance in between. Eventually we arrived at the next station, the Bird Street Western Parcels Office.

The Western Parcels Office was closed even before the mail rail was mothballed, primarily due to a lack of road access to the depot above. Everything had been stripped, the emergency exits bricked and sealed with partitions placed along the platforms.


As I said, little remained of the station bar the tunnels themselves, even the turn around loops and layups for the trains had been sealed off. It is also worth noting that this was the only station didn’t have cameras given the only way to access it would be to walk in from either Paddington or Wimpole. It didn’t take long before we had seen everything it had to offer, venturing off once more along the line.

Next stop, the Old Western Delivery Office at Wimpole Street. With a similar fate to Bird Street, the Wimpole office was closed long before the line and for the same reason of access problems. However unlike Bird Street, Wimpole was replaced by a new sorting office which was to be constructed further along the line at Rathbone Place, but we’ll get to that later.

Wimpole, again due to the early closure was stripped of all its features, a few tools and items suggested it was at one point used for storage. Once more the exits were sealed although this time the sidings and loop remained open, a few locomotives rusting away inside, covered in the fallen paint from the tunnels.

Moving on then.

So far our trip had been fairly casual, the sorting offices we were under abandoned, converted or disused. Next we would come to Rathbone Place, being the newest of London’s sorting office it was very much active. Even as we approached the station the banging and crashing of mail trolleys could be heard.

We edged closed and closer pausing at every sound, judging how far and in which direction it came from. Sitting at the portal we assessed our options, the moment we were to step out we knew the lights would fire up and we would be visible to the cameras. Before now we didn’t really worry as if anyone was watching them they were far away at Mount Pleasant. Having only seen a small percentage at the time, we didn’t want to risk capture for what is essentially one of the bland stations.

Eventually, after twenty minutes sitting in the dark we decided to skip it over, running the platform and continuing onto the next station. 3, 2, 1, Run. We darted from our safety, as predicted no more then two minutes from our hole the lights fired on illuminating our path but at the same time exposing us to both platform cameras. Faces partially covered we ducked into the eastbound portal, continuing at a brisk place until we were well out of the stations view.

Although we didn’t take photos on this instance, as we had to backtrack to our exit point we re-passed it later in the night, the house lights now on, silence from the depot above. Taking the moment as a golden gift we promptly took some photos before continuing our journey out.

Rathbone was unique in its design, its platform sat as an open plan island sandwiched between the east and westbound lines, the steel tunnel at this point replaced with flat concrete walls. It was reminiscent of a New York Subway, I don’t know if this was a good thing or not. Nevertheless the station was completely intact, trains, york carts, post belts, everything remained. This was the one station, with the exception of Mount Pleasant, I could see being re-used for its original purpose without any restoration work.

Yet again we continued, bumping our heads on the ceiling and stomping forward towards our next destination, the New Oxford Street Sorting Office. If you have read what I’ve previously written you’ll know that this is the location of the 2010 Halloween rave, the station that was accessed with the glow-sticks. If not, then your probably not reading this either so continue scrolling.

Given the state of the topside office I feared the station below would be utterly trashed, but no, it wasn’t. In fact I was hard pushed to see any damage at all caused by the revellers, most resulting from natural decay. Actually, excluding a beer can or two and a small tag at the top of the emergency escape, there was no sign the station had even been accessed.

It seemed they left the place well enough alone, returning back to the music above instead. Personally I felt New Oxford Street station was one of the best. It has all its features, trains, signs, only one camera and just enough natural decay that you knew you were exploring something.

With almost half the line now walked, the centre point of Mount Pleasant just around the corner, we decided now would be a good time to have a snack break, taking refuge in the crossovers between the platforms before planning our assault on the Eastern Branch.

With stomachs satisfied, strength in our legs returning we pushed on, 50% still to see. Next along the route, the Mount Pleasant sorting office. Mount Pleasant is effectively the centre of the line, home to the headquarters of Royal Mail and also includes the largest sorting office in London. In other words, a place you do not want to be caught messing around near.

Our vigilance now maxed we checked every corner for cameras and alarms. Unlike the other stations everything was powered, the lights, fans and almost certainly, the cameras. The latter of which there were many, counting at least eight. Previously we had spent time wandering the platforms, taking photographs accordingly, but here something just didn’t feel right. It seemed a bad idea to hang around in the area, let alone stop and crack out the tripod.

Stealth in mind we snuck from portal to portal, taking pictures of the trains and platforms from out protective cover, enjoying the time while we had it. Thanks to information available online we had learnt that the Mount Pleasant sorting office was also home to the maintenance depot, where they fix the broken trains and used to store them.

Pictures taken, we packed away, cutting back the way we came up the central siding and into the maintenance depot above. Although fairly empty in terms of trains, the machinery and cranes did give an accurate depiction on what life would have been like during service. A follow the line trail of rails bobbed and weaved around the hanger, a few locomotives sitting dismantled in the corner.

By this point I don’t even think we were underground, we were in the building’s basement at best, the noise from the depot above louder then ever. We were pushing our luck, one door stood between us and a team of mail workers, every bang, every crash setting us on edge. If they were to arrive we had two options. Give up and face the consequences, or run back into the tunnels, three miles back to Paddington and hope that they weren’t waiting for us at the other side. Neither seemed like fun.

Descending back into the underground we were now tasked with crossing the station, although unlike Rathbone, given the lights were on, we were a little on edge. Nevertheless with the choices of give up or go forward, we chose the latter, tripods in hand running the length of the platform in seconds and back into the relative safety of the tunnels.

By now we were starting to lag, four miles of walking which in itself doesn’t seem like much becomes a whole new ball game underground. That, coupled with the fact however far we walked, we would have to repeat walking back, meant suggestions of turning back now were now cropping up. After all, walking about fourteen miles in one day is the same a short marathon.

But this is the Mail Rail, possibly the best that London has the offer, the idea of leaving only to return to find it sealed depressing. As such we pushed on walking further, deeper into the line, eventually reaching the next abandoned station located underneath the King Edward Building.

Once more as the building above was sold off for alternate use the station below was cleared of anything of use and sealed, the lift shafts and stairwells capped, emergency exit signs now pointing towards Mount Pleasant. Although similar to both Bird and Wimpole, the King Edward station at least had its power-relays intact and for some reason was swept clean. I guess Royal Mail or its maintenance engineers have some special feelings towards this one? Or not.

As quickly as we came we left, our stays in each station becoming shorter and shorter, likely due to fatigue. Two more to go.

For us, the next station, Liverpool Street, held more opportunities then just that of the Mail Rail. As you may be aware our fascination with the London Underground has taken us to places many have never seen before, as such, an abandoned station so close to the main line Liverpool Street station had the possibility to give access to further possibilities and locations down the line. It was not to be passed up.

However it was not to be, like all of the Mail Rail, stations of which the depots and sorting offices above had been sold off, any connection to the surface now sat behind a wall of concrete. That is usually true, but here we saw two possibilities. One was a goods lift at the foot of the station that still appeared to be in operation, the buttons marked basement, ground, and station still glowing red. Yet given we had no clue as to where the lift actually went, who would be at the top and what we happen if we pushed one of the buttons, we left them alone.

The second was a spiralled fire escape which appeared to still have access to the surface. The only problem being where the power had been off for so long the sumps had also ceased to function, said fire escape now sitting across a thigh deep pit of dirty water. With no waders and the postal belts on either side looking like they would fall over if human weight was put on them we gave up. Access to the tube, if it even existed, was not to be given that night.

Time was ticking on, fast approaching 3am. With one station left to see we attained our second wind, charging into the tunnels like a marathon runner for the finish line.

After walking at least 7 miles of track we finally reached the Whitechapel Eastern Delivery Office, the terminus of both the Mail Rail line and also our adventure. So, what is there to be said about the ninth mail rail station that hasn’t already?

Given Whitechapel is the only Mail Rail station on the eastern branch that sits under an active depot, it remains the most intact. All its fixtures, machines and trains sat in a neat order, hoping to be used again. This once more came with a downside – there were workers, and lots of them. We were forced to repeatedly ditch our photograph opportunities and run into the tunnels, the stations lift shafts in constant motion although never actually reaching the station floor.

Although they had no reason to come down given the station hasn’t been active for eight years, we still couldn’t take that chance, knowing the one time we decided not to run away the lift would reach the station and confrontation would no doubt ensue. Caution was the word, creeping about taking pictures the name of the game. The usual.

So far the night had been unreal, Grail busting of the highest order, but what now. With practically everything of interest now stricken from London, visited time and time again, it seemed high time we look further afield. Paris, USA, Australia, all contained possibilities to entertain for the immediate years. But we didn’t have to make any decisions then, we had plenty of think about it on the six miles back to the exit. London Consolidation Crew, out.

  1. nigel

    hi used to work at king edward buildings and mount pleasannt depots occasionally went down the platforms , it was a hard job to get on but they were close knit guys . lots of perks and extra money for working down there . it was only used at nights and closed sundays . the mount pleasant platforms were near the surface as you thought , also at xmas they converted a train into santas sleigh were a father xmas would come out of the tunnel smoke included this was done for the kids . also there was a bruce willis film hudson hawk the vatican have a miniture railway they would not let them film there so mount pleasant it was and a novel The_Horn_of_Mortal_Danger.nice to see those pics . nigel

    Reply

  2. eric whittington

    it was in use when i went down at mount pleasant .in the early 90,s.it was the first fully automatic driverless railway. and was studied when they built the victoria line. tunnels were used to store guvenment papers in the war years. eric

    Reply

  3. Keith Hawes

    I too was taken on a school visit to this fantastic installation in the 60’s, the memories come pouring back when I look at these pics, I love this sort of thing, (surface trolley busses were great too, like a big electric toy bus system) more power to you guys :)

    Reply

  4. Cleo

    Hi,

    Does anyone know if these railways are free to rent/hire for an event??? Or does anyone know a contact for the holborn railway??

    Many thanks.

    Reply

    Otter :

    You can’t be serious….

    Reply

  5. FitchFeed - fitchfeed.com

    [...] The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail) | Silent UK Secret underground system used by the Royal Mail to distribute mail across London quickly. Rumoured to be in existence for decades, it was finally found in April 2011. Unused since 2003 this blog post describes the fabulous story of the people that discovered it in Paddington. [...]

  6. ChristopherBlackwell

    By the way it was a model railroad group http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HOn30/, for guys curious about all things two foot gauge where I located a link to your site. Just thought it might fun to now how far a field you blog is going.

    Some of the comments:

    1a. Re: 2′ Gauge Rail Beneath London Found
    Posted by: “Bernd Beckmann” groups@schmalspur-feldbahn.de berndsf
    Date: Sat Aug 20, 2011 11:55 am ((PDT))

    thanx for this url.

    I was down in that line, when it was in full service around 1975.
    A friend of mine had published a book on that. (Derek A.
    Bayliss - The Post office Railway, Turntable Publications).

    As electrical engineer I was mainly fascinated by the large
    tube-rectifiers to supply the voltage.

    The railway worked like a model railway. Shut-on and off the
    power on track sections.

    This is really a fascinating industrial undergoud railway.

    - bernd -

    Guys,

    There was a blurb in the Yahoo News this morning about an abandoned
    railroad beneath London.
    Nice story with good pictures are located at the following link.

    http://www.silentuk.com/?p=2792

    Al

    Messages in this topic (7)
    ________________________________________________________________________
    1b. Re: 2′ Gauge Rail Beneath London Found
    Posted by: “Bernd Beckmann” groups@schmalspur-feldbahn.de berndsf
    Date: Sat Aug 20, 2011 12:06 pm ((PDT))

    thanx for this url.

    I was down in that line, when it was in full service around 1975.
    A friend of mine had published a book on that. (Derek A.
    Bayliss - The Post office Railway, Turntable Publications).

    As electrical engineer I was mainly fascinated by the large
    tube-rectifiers to supply the voltage.

    The railway worked like a model railway. Shut-on and off the
    power on track sections.

    This is really a fascinating industrial undergoud railway.

    - bernd -

    Guys,

    There was a blurb in the Yahoo News this morning about an abandoned
    railroad beneath London.
    Nice story with good pictures are located at the following link.

    http://www.silentuk.com/?p=2792

    Al
    _______________________________________________________________
    The HOn30 Mail Car mailing list home page: http://www.hon30.org

    Reply

  7. ChristopherBlackwell

    Interesting as I have an interest in everything on rails. I visited England 1968 as well as Wales, Scotland, both Irelands, and the Isle of Man, bicycled 2300 milesusing an three speed bicycle. In the process and I checked out a number of the museum railroads in Wales and in the lsle of Man. I was a bit amused at the idea of 14 miles being considers something of a hike as I routinely walked fifteen to thirty miles a day back home in Los Angeles in my twentys and would have thought nothing of a fourteen mile hike. Even now, using a walker, I have done seven miles one evening, though that did require a couple of breaks at age 65.

    But it sounded like you had a nice adventure and really that is all that matters. The difference between living and surviving is a matter of how much fun you have in the process. As you learned, it has nothing to do with your finances. Nice to know there are still people who like to see and go to places most people have never been. This is where walking beats almost any other for of transportation, because you have time to notice odd things and chances to take off on strange side adventures. May all the hidden passage ways open up to you in life.

    Reply

  8. writer

    Its like you read my mind! You appear to know so much about this, like you wrote the book in it or something. I think that you could do with some pics to drive the message home a little bit, but instead of that, this is wonderful blog. A great read. I’ll certainly be back.

    Reply

  9. agregator zakupów

    Fantastic post, thank you for time and effort while writing this.

    Reply

  10. Kristian

    Have really enjoyed this article. I did my apprenticeship on Mail Rail and then worked on the railway before it’s closure. You’ve really brought back some great memories !! I remember when were used for a part in Bruce Willis’s film “Hudson Hawk” , one of the trains was painted yellow for a scene , pretending to be an underground system under the Vatican !! Thanks again guys for the memories !!

    Reply

  11. Terina Caliguire

    A Waste of their time. When the battery will be dead, I use a pair of small side cutters to open the old electric battery case and use battery terminals for making connections on various battery power operated items. It’s less expensive than buying them in Radio Shack. Terina Caliguire

    Reply

  12. dog

    Super stuff!

    Just to follow up a couple of earlier comments…

    Did you have to switch the lights on at every platform? And it was just ones with still-active sorting offices above you were worried about?

    And I wonder how they twigged you’d been down, but not while you were down there? Did you leave the lights on?! ;-)

    How’s the documentary? And also, i’m going to ‘borrow’ one of your pics for a little online history-kinda-thing i do… hope that’s ok. i’ll send you a link when i’ve done so let me know if you want me to take it down. or just say nowt if it’s ok :-)

    Reply

  13. JohnBC

    Like the bit about the camera snapping them. A bit like the Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy where they trigger a dormant planetary defence system which starts ‘nuking’ them.
    Fantastic pictures and quite an addition to my historical knowledge.

    Reply

  14. Craig

    Absolutely fascinating. Fantastic pictures. I would love to be privileged enough to see it for myself! Would be excellent to see the system in operation again - sad that this will never happen.

    Reply

  15. Post Office Railway « csparrott
  16. John

    You Guys are absolutely amazing. I would love to help you guys, I am a train driver in Sydney Australia, there are heaps of disused tunnels in Sydney’s rail system. contact me if you would like help.

    Reply

  17. Hartelijk maandagmorgen | julesj | blog

    [...] van de week: Het verlaten metro-stelsel dat gebruikt werd door Royal Mail onder [...]

  18. Interesting Links for 01 Apr 2011 - 13 May 2011 · Colin Seymour

    [...] The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail) - Some pretty amazing photos of London's long lost and forgotten (I didn't even know it ever existed) under ground Post Office railway. [...]

  19. Paper Bubble by Jason Wagner » Blog Archive » Post Office Railway - London

    [...] have posted a collection of images showing the adandoned Post Office Railway below the streets of Euston in London. Copyright SilentUK [...]

  20. Good pictures of the abandoned London Mail Rail | Railway 2.0

    [...] object through sites, such as Mail Rail. An intrepid group of adventurers, though, posted on Silent UK a complete photo report of their visit to the abandoned underground, producing one of the best [...]

  21. LASERman

    Excellent selection of photographs. Still looks the same as when I visited there (officially) 2½ years ago and had a ride over the whole line. Don’t try walking the tunnels during the day as I believe maintenance train still operates. A real wasted asset for London.

    Reply

  22. The Mail Rail and Other Abandoned Places « orismology

    [...] I could tell you the rest of the story, but I’ll get to the point, and let the said point take over from me. A gorup of urban explorers managed to find their way into mail rail, and their story is a fantastic read. I suggest you go and take a look. [...]

  23. syncopatedsista

    seriously…. NO ONE!… help! I was in this long dark tunnel..lol

    amazing, love the images you’ve captured, how the light is so important in the dark! how it effects and changes everything…. well done people for scurrying around and not getting caught! :) Immense

    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    going back to the top of the page to check out the text!!

    Reply

  24. Christian

    Half life vibes x 1000! Amazing

    Reply

  25. Odin the Wanderer

    Modern day exploration at its best. Bet the adrenalin rush was as strong as the backdraft from a farting camel?

    Reply

  26. peter

    great review love the photos
    posted to london flickr meetups group

    Reply

  27. Kid In The Front Row

    This is probably one of the most fascinating things I’ve ever seen. I am in awe of all of you. I hope to join you on an adventure sometime soon. Wow. I’m inspired. You knock my socks off.

    Reply

  28. Mike

    Great Adventure - the forbidden shown to the world - great read - great fun - great photos - thanks for sharing it with us.

    Reply

  29. David Davies

    The most fascinating post I’ve ever read on the web - many, many thanks.

    Yours, stuck on the surface at Southfields,

    DD

    Reply

  30. bilei

    Amazing. Would have loved to be part of your team.

    Reply

  31. Outcast

    I tip my hat to you guys that is a fucking sensational report…….Ive done work in Mount Pleasant a few years back…..wasnt even remotely aware of the Mail Rail………

    Reply

  32. World’s Strangest | Link Latte 156

    [...] Eerie London Post Office Underground Railway - [abandoned]Russia’s Crime of the Century, video - [real story]Floating Super-City: Awesome Lotus Shape - [futurism]The Most Beautiful Mountain on Earth, photos - [scroll down]Another Haunting Shipwrecks Compilation - [wow pics]Galaxy Rose: Fantastic Hubble Photo - [wow space]Stylish Chair Made From… Hemp - [design]The Most Polluted Spot on Earth, info - [shocking]Also: Huge Nuclear Accident, (Kyshtym Disaster) - [wow info]Our Place in the Universe - [huge pic, but worth it]Epic Battle of an Ant with a Spider - [wow video]A Dictionary Source for All Languages - [finally published]Download it as one PDF, Nostratic Proto-Languages - [info]Extreme Urban Graffiti Art by MTO - [flickr set]A Star Torn Apart by the Black Hole - [space]Stolen Camera & Photos Can Be Found Here - [cool site]Size of Africa: Quite a Revelation - [infographic]Steampunk Cell Phones, Rubik Cubes - [wow designs]Probably the Craziest Japanese Show of All - [who watches it?]Perhaps the Ultimate in Animated GIFs - [wow art]Ladies Do Bicycle Stunts: Impressive - [wow video]All in a Day’s Work: Feeding the Sharks - [wow video]Humans in Flight - [artistic, weird video]Getting Airborne in NASCAR - [wow video]Whacked by a Tornado! (inside car) - [wow video]Real Life Mr. Magoo Gag - [fun video]Self-Sufficient Dog: Perpetuum Mobile - [fun video]Hamsters’ New Way to Roll - [fun video ad]Avalanche Cliff Jump! (Watch in HD) - [wow video]Amazing Views from Other People’s Windows - [travel]Some of the Most Dangerous Spiders - [cool photos] [...]

  33. Paul

    Brilliant Photos and article well done…..just another waste of an asset that could be making money from tourists and rail fans….bet the excuse for not doing it would be the Health & Safety Bopllocks….I hope you get another chance to go and take some more photos…. :-)

    Reply

  34. London underground « It's something worth dying for…
  35. Tom

    Just saw this on the Make Magazine website. Interesting stuff.

    Reply

  36. Jo

    It was interesting that the day after I had gone on a tour of our site offices for Crossrail and found out about this railway that I stumble across this blog. Working for an engineering firm they all seem to think that building new is better and when the railway was mentioned there was sign about the annoyance that it was there in one of the new station models and that they had to preserve it.

    Reply

  37. Corky

    I still work for Royal Mail at Rathbone Place with the POR several floors below me. Back in the day I actually got to travel through the tunnels on one of the trains. Great fun if a little dirty. Given the interst it’s a shame we don’t make it a tourist attraction.

    Reply

  38. Angus

    Vancouver, B.C. Canada has its history of a Post Office tunnel, not a railway, but read about it here:

    http://www.sarahefron.com/stories/tunnels.shtml

    Reply

  39. Dave

    Good work that you did this and pulled it off! My memories of the Mail Rail are from a school visit to one of the stations back in the late 1960′s. Our whole class went down there and watched while trains came and went in a buzz of activity. Shame to see it lying derelict now, such a huge asset wasted. Just like all those Beeching-closed railways. But a great place for an illicit adventure none-the-less! Hopefully one day a more enlightened society might see value in restoring it.

    Reply

  40. Sam Green

    Great article ,Great pics! Have you and the Guys ever encountered anything Paranaormal on your trips? I have a least one story from a couple places I have been which you and your guys I suspect would like a crack at exploring! But places you are unlikely ever to get into due to military security.The first place Dean Hill ,near Salisbury ,Wiltshire ,England .A large Royal Naval amminition depot with miles and miles of tunnels (with their own railway in them)set in the large chalk hill sides with huge blast doors.Used for storage of Cruise/Tomahawk missles.Tight security.Mobile phones ,matches,lighters,transitor radios left in box at front entrance!Although I had heard recently Dean Hill been closed and privatised,being used now for commmercial storage! So you would stand more chance now of illicit entry.The other place Gibraltar! Miles and miles of Tunnels within the Rock.I have spent many hours exploring the areas not open to the public.I expect illicit entry could be gained if one knew what one was about .public can pay for a tour with the military musuem at the northern end of the rock.Which was absolutely fascinating .But very short ,One doesnt get to see the main tunnels running north to south on different levels,full of old WW2 war equipment .One place we came across2 vast areas with two huge I MEAN HUGE generators just abandond.This areas have little military use except for the occassional training exercise and are only sealed by unmanned locked steel gates.The tunnels which I wento which you guys would NEVER acess to ,aredeep beneath Gibraltar from East to west running and again store Cruise and Tomahawk missles.Very heavily guarded .locked gates patrols etc!

    Reply

    M :

    Hey, what were the paranormal activities that you experienced in those tunnels. And how the hell did you get in em?

    Reply

  41. NeQo

    A.M.A.Z.I.N.G !!!!

    Reply

  42. SuspiciousMinds

    Truly epic explore! Respect, guys.

    Reply

  43. Subrahmanua

    nice..

    Reply

  44. The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail), UK | poindexter, WHO?

    [...] Sealed off for nearly a decade, the folks at SilentUK have finally uncovered London’s secret ‘Mail Rail’, first opened in the 1920s after extensive and complicated construction. Closed down due to lack of use and high costs, the elaborate underground system became an urban legend for adventurers. For more photos, history, and the full story of the find, see: http://www.silentuk.com/?p=2792 [...]

  45. A round-up and an announcement | things magazine

    [...] by Robert Dawson / Post War Buildings, a resource for the UK / exploring under London: the Mail Rail, conquered (via MeFi / Invincible Cities, America’s changing urban landscape, photographed by [...]

  46. The Mail Rail (and a little light trespass…) | Ali's Li'l Place on the Net
  47. Trainspotter

    This is fantastic-it was forwarded it to me, and I promptly forwarded the link to several people. A highly placed source reports back:

    ‘There’s lots of good pictures which I have not seen before. [There's a useful Capital Transport book on the Post Office tube and other "secret" tube tunnels which are less well known, such as the short remnants of the never-finished express tunnels to duplicate the District and Northern, and the Borehamwood tube tunnel for the Northern extension to Elstree. I don't think these are at all easy to visit; the Northern tunnel at Goodge Street now forms part of the Eisenhower Archive (?)]. There’s also of course bits of the original 1890 C&SLR tunnel between Borough and King William Street - presumably also inaccessible these days. Down Street, on the other hand, which is listed in the original email, is still there and can be visited if you know the right people, but the reversing siding there is operational and my spies tell me that the terminal has been used as a lavatory by incontinent motormen for the last century or so, so it may not be a case of vaut la visite… Other challenges of a similar nature should include trying to visit the sealed off stub of the Waterloo and City under the Eurostar platforms which was blocked when the International station was built - wonder if the Armstrong lift which was used for bringing up the W&C stock is still there?’

    Do with this info what you will!

    Reply

  48. Dave in Baltimore

    AMAZING STUFF, mates! Very intriguing! I am an quite interested in tunnels and the underground - and history. I recently moved here to Baltimore and I have heard there are tunnels galore here. I have heard of ones used during prohibition, ones used as The Underground Railroad, ones used during the Civil War and then some. I have been trying to find a way in for the last 10 months and I doubt I will stop until I find one. Does anyone have any info on Baltimore tunnels?

    Reply

  49. FloridaExplorer

    Great adventure……what camera gear did you use for these exquisite pictures?

    Reply

  50. pudlmom

    Wonderful read, though had to do it in installments over 2 days! Would love to have been there.

    Regarding future places to explore, mention of the Pima Air Museum and Titan Missle site near Tucson, Arizona, put me in mind of something just a few short miles from where I sit, near a lot of currently functioning observatories, owned by a local university and some private institutions, an intact missle silo with a similar look, as if they had just walked out of the control room and locked the door, I’m told, by one of the employees who was fortunate enough to have seen it.

    Hoping to see photos like this of that place of it one day! And thank you so much for leaving it undisturbed, but well documented and for sharing with all of us armchair adventurers!

    D

    Reply

  51. anniesparks

    Came across your website via a link from the Word Magazine.
    Old derelict buildings etc really interest me - fascinating to read your adventure! Can imagine how thrilled you must have been to finally get inside.
    Living in London, I had heard about the Mail train tunnel and, oddly enough, I had been to a previous small squat party about 8 years ago in the basement of the New Oxford Street sorting office and never thought about the tunnel being under there!

    Reply

  52. News and etc. of the week « macckids

    [...] Mail Rail explored: The legendary railway that took a long time to build and a short time to close down was finally explored. Pictures here: http://www.silentuk.com/?p=2792 [...]

  53. montanafan

    Well done. Reminds me of my youth exploring the steam tunnels underneath The Univ. OF Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, USA.

    Reply

  54. Kyle

    I would like to get in touch with someone who did this. Not going to say too much online but my E-Mail is attached.

    Thanks

    Reply

  55. Martin

    Loved reading this. Reminded me of back in my day exploring the Rail Road tunnel that goes from Detroit, Michigan USA to Windsor Ontario, Canada… The trains actually ran through the tunnel and still do today. Gosh, does this bring back a flood of good memories. Thanks for writting this. The pictures are priceless… You will appreciate them more as you all grow older and reflect back on the fun you had that night.

    Reply

  56. Monday Links from the Easter Bunny's Secret Underground Lair Vol. LXIX

    [...] Posted by NickFitz [*]The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail) - The Post Office's private underground railway in London has long been the unattainable goal of [...]

  57. American Mike

    Hey guys, Great read, and awesome pictures. makes me wish I could still take the risk and continue urbex. I was going to ask why you didn’t aquire one of the trains for the mission, but I guess that would probally draw all kinds of attention, not to mention the fact that the power to the rails was probally out.

    Being a railfan myself, that place would be a dream to explore! Thanks for the Article!

    Reply

  58. PostalGeek

    I worked for RM for a number of years and was always fascinated by the history. This article has been a joy to read. You guys are like an urban famous five minus the dog and ginger beer!

    Reply

  59. Daniel McCarty

    Very interesting adventure. I used to explore the local sewer pipes when I was a young lad myself. I have been working as an assistant and tour guide for the Portland Shanghai Tunnels for the last year and a half now. I’m envious of your escapade. Hopefully, some enterprising person will have vision enough to obtain the rights to give tours. It is important to start that work now while the place is in relatively decent shape. Good luck with your future endeavors and stay safe!

    Reply

  60. Mike

    Unbelievable, how long ago did you venture down there? Did you attempt to return at all before posting this? Someone’s watching those camera after they get wind of this.

    Reply

  61. TheBard

    Chicago, Illinois also had an extensive freight delivery system underground. It closed up in the 1950s. It did not get so effectively closed off as MailRail, though a flood in the 1990s pretty much did in a significant portion. The city of Chicago still uses some of the freight tunnels, about 60% are underwater, and the rest, well….I suppose if you really wanted to, you might find a way in.

    A replica of the tunnels was used at the end of the movie “The Blues Brothers”, when carrie Fisher shows up to try and blow away John Belushi.

    Reply

  62. Esther

    fun! thank you…very enjoyable reading on your adventure!

    Reply

  63. Terence

    Does anyone know who the writer of this story is? Moreover, how I can get in touch with him? One of the pictures he used in this piece is perfect for the cover of a novel I’m writing and I’d like to get permision to use it. Thanks!

    Reply

    dan :

    nice try.

    Reply

    Terence :

    ?? I am serious. I am a published author of several novels, and I am currently writing a supernatural thriller that involves the unused transit tunnels in the city of London. I really will appreciate if someone can let me know who is the owner of this page. I was unable to find it anywhere on site.
    Thanks

    Reply

    Pete :

    Just use it, and then he will come forward if he objects, which would be unlikely considering he was trespassing.

    Reply

    Otter :

    If its for non-profit, non-professional use i usually have no objection. Given the circumstances here, email me at the email address on the about page.

    Reply

  64. Warren Ellis

    What a superb piece of work.

    Reply

  65. homealone777

    I know where quite a few caves are that the oldtimers would tell me about, but every time I tried I got threatened with the law being called about it, so I did’nt get to go see them. I know thier where abouts, and I also know what will happen to me if I try anyway. I’m to old and out of shape now, so I like to see people getting to see a piece of history not meant to be seen and respectfully not disturb it. Life is short. live it! There’s a big difference between looking and taking or vandelizing. There’s more secrets out there to find. What struck me funny, was the fact that a certain part was still active and alot of it preserved. You may have stumbled onto more than you think! Thanks for the pictures. And the guts to go get them. Always keep Jesus in mind, because you never know what you’ll find; And if you’re not supposed to be there anyway; If you disappear, where are they going to look? sometimes hideaways have their catch 22′s!

    Reply

  66. Callie

    Very enjoyable, your story and the photos reminded me of the tunnels at Ft. Hood, Texas. There is a mountain on West Ft. Hood that from a distance is a normal looking tree covered hill. But driving on the road around it, you see numerous truck sized reinforced entrances with concrete guard houses. Its rumoured that it stored nuclear weapons during the cold-war era. When I had access to it, I was an employee for Coca-Cola and Pepsi. There were bicycles at the entrance that we would use to ride down into the heart of the mountain, we would check our vending machines, then ride back topside, and push a cart with the drinks back down to fill the soda machines. It appeared that the tunnels were being used as office space. It was great finally seeing them as an adult, growing up in the nearby community I had heard stories about the tunnels as a child.

    Reply

  67. Chris

    Great story and pics… I am from Washington, DC , USA. Have you ever heard of the rumored tunnels under DC? Supposedly built to house treasures during the civil war, some were never recovered. Rumors have them filled with gold and silver bars, along with other treasures, such as paintings and such. The records for them were lost, according to what I heard, so they should still be there, if there were truly ever built.
    Could be just an old wives tale that old explorers tell or could be true, just wanted to see if you’ve ever heard of them?

    Reply

  68. Cemil

    A well done job at that times..tunnels seems very fixed and a nice construction. I think this system can be used for some purposes today. its very clean.

    Reply

  69. joseph

    With todays economy and scrap metal so high there is a fortune to be made scraping the metals out of those tunnels

    Reply

    David :

    Absolutely incredible. I went on an official visit to the PO railway at Mt. Pleasant in the 1970s (It wasn’t called MailRail then) and seeing it working was fascinating- like a gigantic model railway- but we only saw that one station. I dread to think how much extra pollution the vans that have replaced it are pumping into London’s atmosphere.
    There’s a lot of rubbish in the comments about this being some kind of state secret but there’s never been anything in the least secret about the railway. It was just well hidden.

    Reply

  70. Denn!s

    very interesting pictures … but I see the most of trains have leave the system. only the old green Carriage at Mt. Pleasant stands here and I think he dream for a display at a museum …

    Reply

  71. Mortis

    Very cool. Reading that whole article reminded me of my friends and I exploring the “steam tunnels” beneath the University of Idaho back in the 1990′s. Wish we’d taken some photos.

    Reply

  72. LEE

    Way cool and would have traveled from Alaska to attend. Years ago back in Colorado I would venture into some of the old coal
    mines in the Grand Junction area with a spool of thread in hand to make sure I was not getting into a drift with dead airspace the deeper I went in. Also plenty of batteries and new bulbs for the flashlights. Never had a problem with the dead airspaces because back in the day the miners would have in many instances another portal mined in to maintain ventilation. Spent much time in these exploring, especially in the room that had the donkey in them for winching the ore cars along the tracks. The person manning the donkey would spend his shift there and because of this would bring his lunch, a newspaper and I also would find a good number of old whiskey bottles. My time in that room a lot of times was sitting down and reading the newspapers that had been brought in, especially the ones written in times of war. Made you feel as though you were living in that day. I never did take any out with me but would lay them back down where I found them. That time of adventure was truely an exciting time. Thank you so much for sharing your adventures. It brought back memories.

    Reply

    Some Guy on the Innernets :

    Ben is right. You were lucky. Others were not. From Wikipedia:

    “Three Grand Junction teenagers were suffocated to death while exploring the Book Cliff Mine on August 13, 1989. Following the incident the mine adit was permanently sealed.”

    A surprising number of people have suffocated in Colorado mines in recent times.

    Reply

    Ben :

    As an engineering student I think you were out of your mind. I have friends on a mine rescue team, and they hate dealing with people exploring mines. Unless the mine is in operation, there is little air circulation,. tons of radon, and possibly methane build up, potentially hydrogen sulfide (which will incapacitate under these conditions before being detectable without instruments.) And the basic fact, that the supports are not being maintained.

    Not to sound like the worry wort, but it is really fun, but I have done with a group with serious gear including portable gas detection units, respirators, hard hats, and a ton of spare batteries.

    Reply

  73. Troy

    Your article was very well written, I’m glad you weren’t caught. I used to be a temporary employee at Coors Brewing Company located in Golden, Colorado USA. There are literally miles of tunnels and huge storage areas where the hops and barley were stored, and exploring all those areas was like stepping back in time, much like your adventure here. Thank you for writing about your excursion and taking the quality pictures, very interesting!

    Reply

  74. Pasquinnel

    Hey guys, here’s more info on our castle adventure. The castle was real at one point. We were all knee deep into Dungeons and Dragons at the time. I had two rogue cousins who lived near Granite City / Alton Illinois. One of my cousins swore they had crossed the mote years before while deer hunting and found a plywood covered hole. He then stated it contained a spiral staircase leading to a locked dungeon door. Once we heard that, we were bent on finding it. We knew the dungeon had existed years before, but had forgotten about it. The first night we spent hours walking and never located anything. We regrouped, did some more research and set out some months later with ropes and tools in hand. After walking a few miles,we found it! The “Holy GRAIL” of motes. It had a half moon concrete slab on our side of the mote with two bricked pillars marking its borders. The old slots for torches still in the brick. We crossed the mote by leap frogging from the partially submerged stone slabs. The slabs once supported the wooden beams on the draw bridge that would rise and lower from the other side. Our last friend across, Mark, lost his balance on the middle stone, bent over and one of our two flahlights popped out of his vest and lit up the bottom of the mote. We finally made it across and there were two concrete lions guarding the trail (spooky). We found a concrete lilly pond, gazebo and an old well. We had a blast and the adventure was over before it began. We went back the next weekend with more guys, home-made torches and plenty of weapons (machetes). We found more items and found a hugh patch of marijuana in the back part of the property. We found a portion of the mote that had been filled and walked out that way back up to the highway. We returned once more during the daytime and it was not nearly as fun. Wow! what a great memory that is.

    Reply

  75. Pasquinnel

    Hello guys! Jay here from across the sea. My friends and I went on a similar journey back in 1994. There was a rumored old castle near Granite City, Illionis. We found the mote and alot of old stuff, but the castle had been torn down. Love the story and adventure is worth the price. I loved the fact that you guys were there to conquor, record and did not destroy anything.

    Reply

  76. Troglogdytic Yank :-)

    I forgot to mention the funniest sign of all — think it was in or near the Liverpool St. Station: “Please keep tea bags, etc., in the bins, not on the tracks. Thank you.” :-) Love it! “If you are performing an urban exploration, and come across a sign warning against littering with *tea bags* . . . you *might* be in England.”:-D [to paraphrase Jeff Foxworthy's famed "You might be a redneck if . . ." observations]

    Reply

  77. Q.

    Congratulations from an old timer!

    When I was young (12 -25) I used to go exploring all the time. I’ll never forget the time I discovered a disused padlocked door behind some very thick bushes leading into a large chemical plant when I was maybe 13…a place I could reach completely through the woods from virtually my front door. A couple of days later I brought some bolt cutters and MY own padlock and explored the place. My friends and I played manhunt in that factory every Sunday for months. I wonder if my padlock is still on the door? I don’t think I could get near that plant these days, since it sits right by some major passenger train lines.

    As I got older my friends and I looked for cool abandoned buildings to play paintball in…places where we wouldn’t get noticed. It was exciting having a point besides just exploring. I used to have a couple dozen places I could play in…half collapsed meat processing plant, old cement form factory with a maze of cement blocks in the yard, abandoned munitions facility etc.

    Ah, to be young and not afraid of a trespassing charge, especially in the days before there were cameras everywhere (c:

    Reply

  78. Joseph Gerard

    This kind-of reminds me of the Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike over here in the states. Yinz should come here and check it out!

    Reply

    Q. :

    They filmed parts of “The Road” there.

    Reply

    Joseph Gerard :

    Yeah I know, I’ve visited there both before and after they filmed it there. They actually took the time to restore the exterior to one of the tunnels there.

    Reply

  79. Kim

    What an awesome adventure! You really should have used a copy editor though. Oh yes I did read your entire piece on the Mail Rail and I enjoyed it very much. I guess you didn’t notice you used the wrong form of “your” in that sentence which also mentions the 2010 Halloween rave. (See? Proof I was still reading.)

    I laughed at the sign at New Oxfords Street, “Trains may move without warning.” Hmmm, trains may move and computers may crash — all without warning. My, how far we’ve come.

    Thank you for sharing your most-humorous piece with lots of interesting factoids and photos. This story could have turned out much differently. Remember Geraldo Rivera opening Al Capone’s vault? Oy.

    Kim

    Reply

  80. Robert

    What a great source of revenue for the postal system! Restoration of the Mail Rail for tourism with modified actual rail cars would be quite profitable.

    Reply

    Adam :

    I’ve just had a most enjoyable 1/2 hour reading this piece.What is not generaly known is
    that some of the”waggons” were adapted for moving MailRail workers.They had to lie almost
    flat to use them and I’ve seen photographs of the modified waggons and staff riding in them.
    So the idea of 4p tours would indeed have been viable. Adam (tunnel rat)

    Reply

  81. Mike

    Awesome work, people. Simply incredible. Wish I’d a’been there. Best, M

    Reply

  82. Doug

    Excellent adventure! I know the regular tube was used for raid shelters but were there any clues for the same use in the mail rail system? Just curious. Again, Well Done!

    Reply

  83. Edly

    Awsome Story what eles can be said ?
    i myself did a few explore some areas back in my youth this one was in the cleveland ohio area and is the old subway station at w25 & detroit ave , we also had to climb up a 18″ steel drain pipe about 30 feet to gain axcess to the lower deck of the detroit bridge where we gained axcess to the under decking used for the subway trains back in the day ,1st we ventured out on the bridge decks over the cuyahoga river , myself being scared of hieghts we decided to go west towards the tunnels…we entered the tunnels on the west end of the bridge and proceeded down the tubes towards the station only axcess was the doors on the west end of the bridge withen cuyahoga county engineers offices so we ventured past not seeing anything resembeling cameras ,we ventured father and found ourselfs in the acutual station W25 …WoW was it wierd nobody had been down their in 50+yrs station walls still had the white tiled walls i found a pedestrian underpass to go from the westboud platforms to the eastbound platforms and a old switch/powerhouse connection room but it had been stripped of everything … we ventured a lil farther west only to find it capped with cement we went back to the station and followed the w25st tunnel to its capped and about a 1/2 mile south under w25 was like something outta planet of the apes movie …freaky but u wanted to see more we exited the same place we went in and returned to explore the east side found a place by the bridge to get in @ the old SAMMY’s but was blokked off so we never got in the east end lots of old abbandoned tunnles under the Terminal Tower from back in the days when it was a main train station …since then ….they have had tours a couple of times done by the county engineer…. the same guys i did this with also we did some exploring in the tunnels dug when they did the intorceptor sewer line from Center Ridge to the Crown Filtration Plant on the lake , we climbed down the drillingsite of the main hole just on the other sid eof the N&W train tracks we climbed down the shaft to the bottom where they had the narrow gage electric mine train they used to move the ground from the drilling site south of the hole , i found the jumper key for the battery and fired it up me and my friends decieded to take the lil train to the drill sight their was nobody around and it was a holiday weekend …so we did when we got close to the site we saw “CAVE IN CAMERA”S ” the closer we got to the drill site their where lites on thruout the tunnels and the vent fans were on 24hrs …when we saw the cams we freaked out reversed the train and headed for the exit site …we thought that every rocky river police officer would be at the top waiting for us …to our surprise not a one was in sight we hurried up and ran back to a house of one of the guys nearby …they musta know we where in their cause after that they had a 24 Guard on duty till the job was done … we also explored the old post office on the lakefront off of W3rd just befor it was tore down and checked out the Old Mt Siani Hospital befor it was torn down and the old attached school buildings on e105th
    they had a all axcess open to the public GARAGE SALE to luiquidate assets …i spent 2 days just poking around the hospital every nook and cranny frome the morge in the basement to the phyco wards and lepper wards i saw it all it was pretty creepy but i couldn’t stop looking and exploring did some of the old foundrys also locally and also later in years i worked for LTV Steel and would slipp away to go explore the old BOF” Bessie” at one time was the biggest BOF in the world and it was shut down peob 20+yrs befor i ever was their , everuthing in the control room was on “stanby” as if it was going to be fired up any minute all the lights thouout the site where on and everything was jsut waiting to start (not that it could if it wanted too) well theirs some of my exploring i did as a kid/youngadult/adult if i find a place of intrest i would go thier now but my age (almost 50) limits my travels… enjoy what u see if u can’t photograph it and leave it just as its untouched as it was for years maybe other will someday be able to enjoy it as well GREAT STORY >>>I LOVED IT & all the comments thanks keep up the good work !!!!

    Reply

    Fred Glock :

    Having been a member of the National Speleological Society with more than a few caves under my belt and an engineer fascinated by abandoned factories, as well as a resident of Northeast Ohio, the original article and your post are fascinating and get the (very) old juices flowing. Thanks!!

    Reply

  84. Brian

    This is very cool! Thanks so much for sharing!

    Reply

  85. franga

    Well done to you guys on an excellent piece of documentary. It is nice to know that young people like you still have a great sense of adventure but at the same time taking safety and responsibility to yourself and others seriously. My sincere advice to many of our younger generations, wherever they may live - break away from the the shackles of ipods, iphones, ipads, alcohol, drugs etc., clear your mind and let your imagination and sense of adventure teach you about the excitement and wonders of the world.

    Once more, thanks for a facinating piece of work. I enjoyed it very much.

    Reply

  86. Michelle

    Thank you for an adventure of a lifetime. I was only able to visit the wonders above ground years ago. What a fabulous journey beneath! The narration with the pictures had me feeling as though I was among the explorers exploring and I felt the tingle of excitement and fear of being caught would raise the hackles of anyone’s neck.

    Reply

  87. Ross Guldenbrein

    WoW! What a cool write-up! Thanks so much for your bravery, with such beautiful photographs. I will not soon forget your inspiring journey.

    radio

    Reply

    Terry T Walker :

    How interesting. I have always loved anything to do with trains and when I saw this, my curiosity was aroused. I really enjoyed looking at the pictures and yes….I did read what was written. Thanks for your interest in doing this for others to see and read about. What a shame we have this and it’s not being used. And…..it was an inspiring journey!

    Reply

  88. Stan in Oklahoma

    I wonder what the time lapse is between photos #5 and #11 and I wonder if this photo was staged for that purpose or if it was just a wonderful coincidence?

    I applaud your inquisitive and adventurous souls. Your photography and literary description has enable all of to be there with you on this wonderful discovery.

    Thank for transforming an a dark and rainy day stuck at the computer into a adventure!

    Reply

    penny :

    I agree with stan in ok
    This is what I needed today it kept my thoughts away from my troubles and the nasty weather

    I feel like i was there with you almost
    you did a good thing here hope you never stop looking for new adventures as long as thier for good as this one seems to have been.

    when I was younger I loved exploring new and strangely different places i only wish I had a camera at that time

    all in all THANK YOU for the story and pictures and time away from my sorrows Penny

    Reply

  89. The Post Office Railway « Literary London

    [...] can be seen on their adventure by visiting their blog. On the PopPressed Radar Print Magazine's New Visual Artists Saint Petersburg Unveils [...]

  90. HasaClue

    WOW, that place is cleaner than some of the tunnels presently. Definately cleaner than New York’s stations………

    Reply

  91. jeffshorey USA

    this is great it shows that our young people do care about there history

    Reply

  92. jeffshorey USA

    I think that this is great, just think of the history that would have been lost and of the people that it took to build this gu ho job well done

    Reply

  93. John

    Excellent work to all concerned-well done. It makes our visits to Rhondda & Bolsover last year seem quite tame in comparison! You should have a look at the King William Street tunnels under the Thames for your next adventure :)

    Reply

  94. Jim

    I am inspired and impressed by your adventure. Being too old to do it now myself, I’m hopeful that one, two, or all three of my children might one day be involved in such activities. There is so much to see and do in the world. I appreciate that you did this with care and no malicious intent. Thanks!

    Jim

    Maybe there is something to explore here in Arizona….. :)

    Reply

    Mark Rogers :

    What an amazing documentary. I’ve been to many places most of them either in California or Northern Virginia. This underground system is something you’d never find in the states, they ruin so many historical places without any regards for historical interest and preservation. I am very angered by the people who destroy our route 66, they also destroy old Drive in Theaters. We had a theater on Route 66 here in California. It was in Azusa, even though it was protected as a historic landmark, it was sold to a religious college who in turn challenged it’s status in court. Even though it was under federal protection, they had the protection modified so it would read “Just the Sign is Historic” so they razed the drive-in and used it for parking. I saw Town Mayors, Celebrities, Rich and Influential cinemaphiles, and just fans in general try to stop this, the college was able to remove it’s protected status despite other lawyers and financial backers doing their best to stop it. At least the Mail Rail will have a fighting chance, usually once something is sealed off they forget about it. My main reason for writing this comment was to applaud the explorers for showing us the Mail Rail and also to tell the guy in Arizona about a place to explore. Note that this is now a museum however you can sometimes slip away from the guide and find some neat things. Go to the TITAN II Missile Silo on Duvall Mine Road in Tucson, it looks like a science fiction movie and if you can get far below, the battery rooms have other things which are worth checking out, being an in ICBM silo is awesome, they let you simulate a launch and close the blast doors too.

    Reply

  95. Little Tommy Tuttle

    Gosh! Sealed for nearly 10 years! I’m only 7 so that is a very long time!

    Reply

  96. Cool

    Thanks for the pictures! Now that you’ve made it in, they’ll find a way to seal off remaining access. If it were the USA, they’d rent out the space for shops and small restaurants! Or perhaps they’d sell off the remaining cars for larger, theme restaurants.

    There were several places where tunnels branched off. Did you explore any of those or just follow straight along your mapped route?

    As to those complaining about your spelling or grammatical errors, they can do their own blog if they find it so objectionable!

    Reply

    Otter :

    Yes we had a look into most of the nooks and crannies of the line. The branches your referring to are either where the tunnel divides just before a station, each tunnel leading to either the westbound or eastbound platforms, or where the tunnel meets a layup or loop (where the train can be switched to the opposite direction)

    Reply

  97. Dave

    Hey DICK!
    Although I don’t condone breaking and entering, at least these kids were not there to do damage.
    Seems like some innocent mischief at worst.
    I found the pics and story interesting and very well written.

    Reply

    Dave :

    Looks like the nasty post from “DICK”, which I was referring to, was removed.

    Also, thanks for the clarification regarding “trespassing”.

    Reply

    Otter :

    Yea, sorry about that, by the time I get round to moderating people who are only here to cause trouble others have already replied to them!

    Reply

    Otter :

    In England “Breaking & Entering” (What we did not do) and “Trespass” (What we did) are two different things, the first being a criminal activity, the second being civil one. Its important not to mix the two up.

    Reply

    Sam Green :

    Becareful here because Trepassing on the railway IS a criminal offence! Trepassing anywhere else is a civil offence .But if you tresspass on the railway youwill be charged with a criminal offence automatically .I not sure what the distinction is been an un-used railway and one that is operational.If a railway is mothballed and wouldnt take to much to get it up and running it is probably deemed in the eyes of the law to be operational.So therefore a criminal charge would apply!

    Reply

  98. Matt F

    Excellent photographs! I’m sure someone already mentioned this, but that fact that you took the risk, took the photographs, and even took the time to detail as much as possible - while leaving everything exactly as it was - shows that you have a huge appreciation for historical finds. Cheers to you all from the U.S.!! :-)

    Reply

  99. Dentatus

    Excellent post. Big thanks to all of you for such a cool adventure.

    Reply

  100. Latindragon

    First off, learn how to spell dumbass, the second letter of welfare is with an E, not an A, and second, I think it was very cool what they did. You say leave history alone, well Einstein, how the hell do you think America came to be…EXPLORATION…that’s ALWAYS been the name of the game in our country (USA), even something as mapping routes for GPS systems.

    To the London Consolidation Crew—VERY GOOD WORK :-) I wish I was there to explore the Mail Rail with you, but to see the pics was great. I hope you can find other legendary, mysterious, and above all, cool places to explore. With all the history that Mother Earth has to offer, I’m sure it won’t take long before you find something else to explore and the fire and passion in your heart is reignited.

    Long live exploration….LONG LIVE THE CHASE!!!!!

    Reply

  101. ToddK

    Wow. Amazing photographs. Nicely explored. I am amazed that you got all of those tunnel lights turned on.

    yahoo.com news has picked up on this post. That’s how go here. http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/London-Underground-Mail-Rail-Discovered/ss/events/wl/042211ldnmailrail

    Todd, USA

    Reply

  102. Blenda

    This just ROCKS so cool!

    Reply

  103. missallen

    Brilliant, just bloody brilliant. Gave the old lady quite the thrill today!

    Don’t be jaded; I’m sure that there are plenty of tunnels left to find…

    Reply

  104. Nick

    Great bit of work! Cheers to all of you. I would love to join in the adventure some time.

    Warm Regards,
    Nick

    Reply

  105. Christoph

    What a great read! Down a third of it I decided to start listening to the soundtrack of Resident Evil. Very fitting!

    I’m actually not at all sure if I’d have had the guts to go through with something like that. But at least now I know that there are more photographic opportunities to be discovered than just those above ground level. ;)

    Reply

  106. BeVar

    How cool….. Great adventure. I kept reading til the end wondering if you were going to fire up one of those locomotives. The picture where you were all on and over the train, too cool.

    A ride down and up those tracks would have been awesome for you all.

    Cheers to you all from an old adventurer * USA *

    Reply

  107. Jon

    This made my week. Brilliant pics, brilliant story… just wish I could do something like this too. Really well done!

    Reply

  108. Jeff

    Were you not afraid of zombies???

    Reply

    Otter :

    Thankfully the large bulkheads you see in the pictures above were designed with the sole purpose of keeping zombies contained. As such the zombies that gained access during the 90′s simply starved to death, so posed no threat.

    Reply

    Sam Green :

    The large Bulkhead Doors you see in these photos were built in the days before the River Thames flood barrier was constructed.When an extreme high tide was forecast with a strong wind from the East behind it, there was a danger the River Thames could burst its banks. So these bulkhead doors were closed to stop the tunnel flooding.Some can still be seen on the London underground subway system today.Many thanks for an excllent article. I was transfixed!I worked as a Conductor/Guard on the main overhead railway in the 80s and 90s on Mail trains and passengers trains carrying mail into Liverpool street station.Although I had nothing to do with the Royal Mail underground rail system I always remember the post men (post women ) throwing the mail bags down the chute which droppped down in the underground mail railway sytem at Liverpool street.If I remember correctly it was on Platform 10 or was it 11? Anyhow on the longest right hand side platforms looking toward the Great Eastern hotel!

    Reply

  109. JackAssin

    I seen the overhead lights on. Somebody at the Ministry Of Electric is in huge trouble. Or else this is a total fake gonzo exploration that was rather a VIP invite event hosted by Prince Harry.
    This has to be where Churchill’s real bunker was.

    Reply

    Cool :

    I wondered about that (and forgot to mention it in my comment.) WHY is the power still on in all these tunnels? So the rats and other rodents don’t have to feel around in the dark?

    Reply

    homealone777 :

    Well; Anybody hear of GOV. underground bunkers? Why would any GOV. waste a good tunnel system? The reasons could go on forever. There’s a definite reason it’s left intact. Glad you found it though. Great PIC’s. I sure would like to have been there. It does make you wonder how many things like that there are underground that were not supposed to be known about!

    Reply

    Adam :

    Those who are suggesting alternative or secondary use of the MailRail tunnels
    should look carefuly at some of the later tunnel photographs.The are some seriously
    heavy duty cables hung from the tunnel roof.It isn’t easy to be certain what they are,
    possibly telephone/signalling cable.One thing is certain though they are vastly in
    excess of those needed for MailRail.It was common practice to hide cables like this
    between the wars and during WW2.Almost invulnerable bomb damage,cables would
    be very difficult to sabotage because of existing security arrangements.Also to install
    more or new cables could be done without digging up the roads and out of site of the
    public this was (and still is) done in the Underground.(I was at one time in the ’60s
    and early’70s a Government tunnel rat)

    Reply

  110. ant

    Brilliant bit of work guys, well done for sharing this with us, really enjoyed the pics and reading the text .
    Big thanks to all involved.shame it all just lies abandoned.

    Reply

  111. Bill D

    Thanks for taking me on this adventure, the photos are great and I appreciate your explorer’s attitude! I look forward to your next adventure!

    Reply

  112. Conan

    Wow! Looks like something out of Submachine. Well done!

    Conan
    Baghdad, Iraq

    Reply

  113. jonathan

    Fascinating and superbly documented. Something many of us would also love to do.

    It is a shame that there is a lot of short-sightedness in that treasures, practical ones, like these are no longer used in favour of the gas-guzzling road vehicles that are going to get held up in traffic jams.

    Again, well done you lot ! and thanks.

    Reply

  114. Banana Republic

    Good to see that Balls still exist in our youth…. Growing up when I did, we would often explore and search things out… Today, kids are afraid to go outside and play.

    So good to see that you still adventure in your blood and willing to “bend” the rules a bit for your passion in life.

    The pictures were fantastic… And so many of them… Not just a couple random shots. I very much enjoyed reading your story and the pictures you presented to the world……

    Keep the faith…

    Adventure lives on…

    Banana Republic

    Reply

  115. Linda

    Fantastic pictures of a by-gone time. I can see these tunnels featured one day on The History Channel in the US. Some of the shots are eerie, yet seductive. Great work in recording them for posterity.

    Reply

  116. Rich Bergeron

    Amazing work. There were a ton of stories at my college (Norwich University in Vermont, USA) about old civil war tunnels underneath the campus that were clearly cemented shut. We all used to talk about what it must be like down there, but nobody was able to find their way in that I know of. A secret society called the Night Riders used to take poorly performing students down there and haze them incessantly until they would ultimately leave the school. One such student reportedly disappeared and wound up in Washington, D.C. where he killed three hookers in a hotel room and claimed insanity brought on by the hazing in the tunnels. Strange but true.

    Reply

  117. Jon

    Thanks for sharing that adventure. Nice photography, not just snapshots. The subway tunnels under El Lay (Los Angeles) look much like that. In the locomotives light, much like creepy worm holes. Not really that crazy about being under ground. But the sense of it was well captured. Thoughtful of them to keep the lights working for you. My spell check does not seem to be working so, I’m sorry.

    Reply

  118. Joe M.

    Great pictures! This is the kind of adventuring I’d like to be able to do myself. And like you did, take pictures for posterity, not vandalizing but creating a record. Congratulations on your discovery.

    Reply

  119. madeline

    Was this where parts of Neil Gaiman’s 1996 BBC mini series “NeverWhere” was filmed?Watching the special interview with Gaiman he mentions that parts of the show were filmed in an abandoned train station used for mail{something about churchhill..?}and that it had its own postal code,many of the pictures bring to mind scenes from the show{i have never seen a real england train station so Im basing it off of that..}But is this it?

    Reply

    Jenna :

    As far as I’m aware, that was either Aldwych or Down Street station.

    Reply

  120. Ian C

    Nice. Excellent work, and excellent photographs. Came here from a transportation website, and excellent work. Hats off!!!

    Reply

  121. Jim

    Great pictures and great adventure. Thanks for bringing this to us.

    Reply

  122. raj sharma

    Amazing pictures. You did not say how you all came out of exploration.

    Reply

  123. Andrew

    “Rathbone was unique in its design, its platform sat as an open plan island sandwiched between the east and westbound lines, the steel tunnel at this point replaced with flat concrete walls. It was reminiscent of a New York Subway, I don’t know if this was a good thing or not. Nevertheless the station was completely intact, trains, york carts, post belts, everything remained. This was the one station, with the exception of mount pleasant, I could see being re-used for its original purpose without any restoration work.”

    I’m glad that you under stand that mail rail still has potential.

    Reply

  124. Ishtar

    Looking for more tunnels? Beijing, China is a rabbit warren of tunnels large enough for armies to march. Created in Paranoid times.

    Reply

    Lawrence :

    As is Shanghai…

    Lots of Nuclear bunkers (although lots got turned into bars or storage areas).
    Tequila Mama’s mid 90′s anyone?

    Quite a lot of the malls here have interesting bits where they’ve gone down deeper than you’d think, and have the big blast / flood doors on huge hinges.

    Hell, the whole of XuJiaHui lu used to have a river, now there’s a thin park above where that flowed.

    Most interesting for me was under the Garden in Ruijin park lots of tunnels, and it appeared to be full of plates last time I wandered down there back in the late 90′s

    Sadly most of the cooler stuff has been razed to the ground and built over. The whole center of Shanghai disappeared for the most part 90-2000 for Xintiandi et al.. Interesting things could be seen during the excavation periods for that, and for yan an lu.

    Mostly now its all concrete i suspect. Pudong has some interesting sewers I’d suspect, all built to large scale, but its all recent. Lots of forgotten overground stuff though once you leave the big cities.
    Eg trains yard etc etc, especially when you get up north towards the russian ends of China.

    Beijing used to do tours of the underground bit near the canal, but unfortunately I never got to go before they shut it down. Wierd opening hours and all that sadly.

    Lawrence.

    Reply

  125. Sean Morgan

    A really interesting experience. Now that it is in the open it will probably not be repeatable. I would suggest the people involved speak to National Geographic. See their latest episode about the re-use of an old freight line in Manhattan. They would do a professional job of documenting this site with official sanction before officialdom concretes it up for ever.

    Reply

  126. Mike

    I noticed in one of the photos there were some file cabinets, and in others there appeared to be desks. Did you look in them to see what might be there?

    Also, it appeared that in some places the ventilation ducting went down into the floor. That makes me wonder if there was another level under the one you explored.

    Thank you so much for posting these photos-they’re simply amazing. Great work, and congratulations from Alaska!

    Reply

    Tom Black :

    Yes, I can confirm there IS another level - I visited it about 10 or so years ago - and it houses various equipment etc. It certainly would be a good tourist attraction. Having ridden on a train through the tunnels, it’s very much liek a rat-in-a-drainpipe in the smaller single-bore tunnels. However, under British rules, you’d never get it passed as a passenger railway, due to the control systems. Having visited on three occasions, I can confirm it’s a remarkable place and system.

    Reply

  127. TommyC

    Sure caught my eye. Thanks for sharing, with great depth too. :-)

    Reply

  128. PETE WATSON

    There are earthen tunnels under parts of Portland, Oregon used to capture drunks from bars to be shanghaid and sent to sea. I’ve been down in them and seen the trap doors that suddenly opened to drop drunken men to the tunnels below. There were cells, and they would take the men’s shoes (there are still piles of old shoes down there), and pave the tunnels with broken glass to prevent escape. The men were hauled down to secret tunnel endings at the Willamette River and hustled aboard outgoing ships. This went on for many years, only ending after WWII, as I recall. I saw all this about 12-15 years ago, and there was some interest in cleaning and opening them to tourists, but I haven’t seen anything since.
    There are also tunnels and living quarters under Pendleton in Eastern Oregon, used by Chinese workers for many years. These are open to tours now, since the 1990′s. I lived in Pendleton for 5 years in the 70′s and never heard a word about them.
    Great work, folks. And fantastic photos. Thanks for leaving it all intact, we have enough vandalism and theft in the world; it’s really nice to find some folks with integrity.

    Reply

    Troglogdytic Yank :-) :

    Hey, Pete — thanks for the info on the “shanghai tunnels” in Portland! I’d heard of the “lost world” in underground Seattle, up the coast from you (was featured in the old Night Stalker TV series), but didn’t know of anything like this in Portland. Man, that must’ve been some profitable business, “encouraging” people to serve in the maritime trades *chuckle!*, to have made it worthwhile to construct such an elaborate tunnel system!

    Reply

    Jesse :

    I live not too far from Portland, they have opened some of the tunnels for tourists now and have a guided tour that you can take. It is fascinating and they even have one of the drops from the above restaurant/saloon working so you can see how they dropped people below. Unfortunately there is quite a large amount of the now legendary shanghai tunnels that have never yet been found as they were supposed to have a direct connection to the old docks on the Williamette. Some I am sure could be found if someone poked around carefully, but a lot of existing businesses use storage etc down below and we are even cautioned on the walking tour to be careful because they businesses have given grudging permission to do the tours and if anything happens they will shut them down. The amount of tunnels on the tour is very minimal compared to what I know from accounts must exist it doesn’t even come close to reaching the river. There is also some kind of weird tunnels over by the old city hall; they have some very old 1900′s looking entrances that are blocked off I have been told originally it was a old sort of subway tunnel, but have been unable to confirm that or not. The entrances do look like what I expect a subway entrance would look like from that time period and they are pretty ornate with incorporated (now non functional) water fountains. Here is some info on the tours: http://www.portlandwalkingtours.com/tours/underground_portland.php

    Reply

    Cool :

    This was the ONE sight in Portland I wanted to see, and I couldn’t find a thing on it anywhere, just the entrance with a “closed” sign and no hours of operation posted. I’d seen it on the Travel Channel.

    Reply

    PETE WATSON :

    Thanks for your confirmation, so I don’t look entirely crazy. There are also some tunnels on the east side of the river, but I haven’t seen any of them. Fascinatinating stuff, and thanks for the info about the tours.

    Reply

  129. Jackie

    I’m so glad to have stumbled onto this! I would have so loved to been there to see this. Fantastic story and pic, truly fantastic! Congrats for pulling it off and looking forward to your next adventure! Good hunting!

    your newest USA fan!

    Reply

  130. Slawek

    An amazing trip! Thanks for sharing :)
    Seems like every city has underground secrets.
    … and Rail line better than sewers…

    Reply

  131. Troglogdytic Yank :-)

    You’ve made an “old” man feel “young” again! (I’m pushing the half-century mark pretty hard) Reminds me of a couple of adventures of my own, in the ’70s and ’80s, one not-so-tricky but “in the spirit”, the other very much like your adventure with the RM-R.

    The first was an on-going lark — I lived on a low hillock overlooking a very large cemetery in Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA, and a very good buddy of mine and I, who were both freaks on the history of WWII (I have the Marshall Cavendish Ltd. magazine version, all 96 parts. in the binders) would sneak into the cemetery at night with bicycles and blinkered flashlights as a “planned rendezvous”, imagining what it must’ve been like to be a resistance-fighter in the SWW.

    The second was *exactly* in-character with your exploration of the RM-R: It was through the utility tunnels connecting the buildings at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater, OK. Not really “encouraged”, and with the possibilty of coming-up into an “occupied” area where our presence would be frowned-upon, and with the additional complication of having many, many side-branches and having to navigate by “dead-reckoning”, since we had no map with us and compasses wouldn’t work down below-ground, probably due to all the metal in the steam-pipes. We “supplemented” our navigation by popping-up into grill-covered ventilator shafts in the middle of campus, never knowing when we might find some very suprised (and possibly constabulary) above-ground face staring back at us.

    I salute your wonderful article on the RM-R — you have exactly the right spirit: Not to harm, nor to vandalize, but simply to explore something interesting, arcane, and esoteric (at least, nowadays) and bring back a wonderful view of a “lost world” :-) . In this oh-so-safe-and-over-regulated modern-world, it warms my heart to see that some of us still have the thirst (and the daring, against possible legal consequences) to explore “hidden realms”, in this case, one of our very own making :-) (HM’s Government’s, that is).

    Finally — I *could* take issue with much of your grammar and syntax *chuckle!*, but your photography, and most of all your *hearts*, are first-rate! I salute you, again, and wish you great success in similar quests in the future! To borrow the old mountain-climbers’ adage — “Take nothing but photographs; leave nothing but footprints, and memories” :-) .

    Steve Dinges
    Mesa, Arizona (by way of Tulsa, Oklahoma and Houston, Texas)

    P.S. I keep thinking what a great “location-shoot” the RM-R would make for an episode of Doctor Who :-) . Then again, maybe you weren’t beneath London at all, but simply found your way into some back corridors of a certain Type 40 TARDIS :-) ) . . .

    Reply

  132. Marty

    Thanks. Wish I was young enough (and thin enough) to try stuff like that. Really enjoyed the pictures.

    Reply

  133. US Marine in Texas.

    I love a good adventure. Thank you for sharing it. The pictures that you took were awesome. Only wish i had friends like you to go aventuring with. Congradulations on the find.

    Reply

  134. Buz Allen

    Salute to you all. Very interesting. I started this in the A.M. and had things to do…and finished it @ 9:11 P.M.!

    VERY Intriguing…

    From the USA…Mississippi

    :)

    Reply

  135. Doc Hilliard

    Good job! Thanks for leaving undisturbed what you explored.

    Reply

  136. Mary

    What a great story. I love it. The pictures were great.

    Reply

  137. Leigh

    Impressive!

    Reply

  138. Gary

    This is such an amazing story. When I was young, about 14 or 15, which was awhile back, my Dad took us out into the Mojave Desert to some deserted copper mines. They are located between the Innerstates 15 and 40, and west of the Caverns located out in that area. We would spend hours and hours exploring these mines. There are miles and miles of tunnels. Wish I new the exact location but it has been years since I was there, about 1964/65.

    Thanks for all the pictures, I have forwarded this link to some of my friends that love history.

    Reply

    troy :

    i live in this area and have been all over the mines and the description you give sounds like Coolgardie. here is a link to a few paragraphs about it. http://mojavedesert.net/desert-fever/coolgardie.html

    Reply

  139. Ian

    Thank you very much for sharing your pictures and the explanation the history. Not much of this sort of interesting stuff he in Los Angeles California. Bravo.

    Reply

    reverto :

    “Not much of this sort of interesting stuff he in Los Angeles”

    Having explored the following before it was sealed, I beg to differ:

    Pacific Electric Toluca Yard and Belmont Tunnel
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRonX_WLxP4&feature=related

    Pacific Electric Hollywood Subway
    http://www.erha.org/pewhs.htm

    The colorful saga of Los Angeles’ first subway tunnel
    http://articles.latimes.com/2009/feb/08/local/me-then8

    Reply

  140. Brian
  141. Ducksoup

    Amazing and Epic!!! Thank you for the incredible chronicle of your adventure…

    Reply

  142. Richard

    Great job, and glad you had the chance to do it. The only London tunnels I’ve been in (besides of course the Underground) are the passages in Churchill’s secret Cabinet War Rooms underneath Whitehall. A great tour, but you only go down a couple of levels. There is supposed to be at least one more below that, although it may be flooded. Anyway, have fun, be careful, and don’t get caught!

    Reply

  143. Gina

    You guys rock!

    Reply

  144. Brian

    Absolutely awesome! I too - in the days of my youth - was an explorer. Since I grew up in the Pacific Northwest (USA), I was able to explore many of the caves and lava tubes created by the volcanic activity in the region, the most famous being the Ape Caves up near Mount St. Helens. I was also able to explore many old and abandoned buildings of the old Kaiser Shipyards (from WWII) along with the surrounding buildings and tunnel works along the Columbia River in Vancouver, Washington, USA. Great stuff! However, we never had anything such as what you have there in London… I’m somewhat envious. Like another poster, I too went to the Seattle Underground but it’s more of a tour… there no real excitement like that found in going where nobody else does… into long abandoned territory. I would encourage you all to look up the underground tunnels in Chicago, IL, USA. There’s a rich history there, it was designed to transport goods between buildings in downtown Chicago along the lake. It was also shut down due to a lack of use and escalating costs to use the tunnels. Trucks and street traffic just became so cheap, the tunnel was largely abandoned. Like your Holy Grail, the Chicago tunnels were considered to be the pinnacle for city explorers for those living in that region. While the tunnels there were flooded at one time… the breach was sealed up and the waters drained. It would be quite a thing to get in them… to see what most never have. In New York City, there are also many tunnels that have been abandoned, once used in the mass transit system. While there are some very old transit employees that know about them all, accessing them is an entirely different matter. Oh… to be able to get in and seek out those dark, quiet places that haven’t seen the hands of man for decades… to experience those magnificent sights. To be able to breath in the aroma of the past… of history itself. It stirs the heart and the imagination. Thanks to all of you for sharing your journey. For allowing all of us to see some of what you all did, to be able to know of those places long buried and mostly forgotten. High praise for the effort… and for keeping where you were intact, unscathed and to a certain degree, sacred. Again, excellent work to all of you, especially that sporting lass who was there… there’s no woman like a woman with a serious sense of adveture! Peace & good vibes from the USA!!

    Reply

  145. Judy

    I am always looking for stories about abandoned places especially if they are well documented, and love anything about England & London. This was a great read & the pictures awsome. It is such a shame that the Mail Rail couldn’t be used for something. What great fun you had doing this story and your documentation is undisputed. You should make a book of all your excursions. Look forward to the next one. Thanks

    Reply

  146. Steve

    Weren’t you afraid of zombies?

    Reply

    chichirica :

    or mimic?

    Reply

  147. psychoholic

    Absolutely fascinating! Thanks so much for sharing, although in doing so, you have no doubt made it near impossible to return. Your sacrifice is greatly appreciated.
    From the greater Los Angeles area, thanks once again

    P.S. - we do have the Red Line Subway system in LA.

    Reply

    Otter :

    Even before sharing we discovered a return was impossible, the security team had cottoned on and sealed our only means of access.

    Reply

    Fred :

    Hi Otter:

    Since there is no longer any means of access, would you mind posting a photo of the five story drainpipe? Is the drainpipe visible from the street? Was the drainpipe taken down?

    Reply

    Otter :

    I didn’t take any pictures of the drainpipe as I was filming Silent-Motion climbing it, said footage will likely be in the documentary were making.

    Reply

  148. Equality 7-2429

    Great story. It reminded me of Ayn Rand’s masterpiece, “Anthem.”
    If you liked this story, you will LOVE this book. Even if you don’t like Ayn Rand!
    Please check it out - you won’t be sorry. I used to read it aloud to my middle school English students at the end of every school year. You can read it all in one evening. And if you like abandonded subways…

    I have some major disagreements with Ayn Rand, but this is my all-time favorite book. And I think the people who read through the London subway story are the PERFECT demographic.

    Reply

  149. Paul Law

    What a adventure. You did not get caught and you did not vandalize anything.

    Done the original underground in Glasgow yet?

    Reply

    Adam :

    I haven’t done the Glasgow underground and to the best of muy knowlege nobody
    has tried or will try for a long time to come.Virtually all of the old tunnels were
    incorporated into the new system.I don’t fancy being run down by a train,as there is
    only clearance of 3 or 4 inches between tunnel and the train.I was living in Glasgow
    when the system was expanded Adam (tunnel rat)

    Reply

  150. Oldman

    I was in the Met Police in the 60′s and we often had access to the line. I was based at the Tottenham Court Road Police Station (ET); it’s now a Marks and Spencers. For years I have mentioned this underground system to people only to be sneered at and told to ‘get real’; now I feel justified and wonder where those ‘doubting Thomas’s are now. Now back In Australia I can prove the facts. Thank you kindly.

    Reply

  151. Rev John W Turner

    Have enjoyed your pictures and your commentary. Not knowing that first thing about England or London, this article was very interesting. You made mention of perhaps looking for new places to explore—-allow me to maybe put a bug in your ear. I went to and graduated from Holmes High school in Covington, Kentucky. Before it was a public school, supposedly was at one time part of the underground railroad. I have no hard fact about the underground railroad part but while attending school there, we discovered some tunnels under the school. We never found the end of the tunnels{ there was no lighting} since the only light we had was by flashlight and had to be prepared for the possibility of the batteries giving out. Please understand—I graduated in 1956 and have no clue as to whether the tunnels are still there, have been closed off or the school may even deny their existence. Either way, thank you for your very interesting article. God bless you.

    Reply

    Leon W Walls :

    Hello Rev Turner,
    I enjoyed your story. I went to Holmes High School in the seventies and always heard rumors of underground tunnels. Many of my classmates and I searched but never found an entrance. we heard that an entrance near the Junior High building had been sealed off in the late fifties but we never found it. I’m glad to finally hear that the tunnels did exist. Thanks.

    Reply

    Rev John W Turner :

    Thanks for your return answer. Was took back by the fact that out of the thousands of people in our world, I would stumble on to someone from my home -town and went to the same school. In reference to the entrance to the tunnels—-I don’t recall going through the Junior High building to access the tunnels. As I recall, we went through the ventilator fan under the stage area in the main auditorium. We were in the marching band and as such had time to roam and explore before the band director arrived. You have to remember that in the 50s we did not have ac and the fan[s] were used for ventilation. But at night or other times, they were shut off. The main auditorium used to have big iron doors that led to shafts that went straight down. Never knew how far straight down but also never pressed my luck. After you went through the blades, there was an iron door that led to the tunnels. There were no lights in the tunnels, so flashlights and extra batteries was always the order of the day. Maybe one day, if the Lord allows, you may be able to return to Holmes and continue to look for the tunnels. Since they would be part of history, I doubt that the state would allow the school to do very much to close off or damage those tunnels. Happy hunting—God bless you.

    Reply

    Leon W Walls :

    Rev Turner, Thanks for your responce. It was strange that we ran accross one another on a UK web site. Maybe the fact that we both went to Holmes High ingrained a facination of tunnels? Did you ever hear the stories of the abandoned Cincinnati Subway? In case you’re interested, here’s a link to one of many web sites on the subject. http://queencitydiscovery.blogspot.com/2009/03/cincinnati-subway.html .
    Thanks, and God Bless.

    Reply

    RS :

    Check out the baker hotel in Mineral Wells, Texas. It’s said to have underground tunnels.

    Reply

  152. Fred

    This was a great tour of the Mail Rail, I’d pay, pay a lot to be able to experience this first hand.

    One thing though, I’d really like to know more about the photographic equipment and the lighting methods used to capture these most impressive pictures. The clarity and level of detail is astounding.

    It is almost like the photos were taken professionally with a story line wrapped around them.

    Without doubt, this could an awesome tourist attraction. Perhaps someday, eh?

    Exactly where was the starting point for the five story, rusting drainpipe shimmy? Surely there others who would like to attempt this adventure. Perhaps using your description, they will be able to find the access point. Or a photo of the drainpipe, that ought to be obtainable at most any time I’d guess. You didn’t say, but did you leave some marker of being the first to conquer this underground Everest?

    You know kind of like those ‘Climber’s Logs’ found atop high peaks around the globe. That would be really cool.

    Regards,

    Fred

    Reply

  153. DK Wight

    absoluely facinating! We dont have anything so fun and historical here in america. History has been a constant topic of wonder for me. With all the documentation of the past one would think that we on this planet could learn to get things right by studying what went bad for us and simply retrace our steps and correct what started the problem in the first place. This underground system could be useful in many ways that were simply not even considered in the recent past as doable that could be done today! Dan in Washington state USA

    Reply

    Kev :

    To Dan in Washington.. check out the area around Whidbey Island, there were tunnels and underground facilities there during WW2 and previously, although mostly blocked off now. My brother and I got dirty down there one summer back in the 80′s.

    Wonderful work documenting this underground adventure! I applaud your team for leaving no trace!

    Kev in Oregon

    Reply

    H. Marie Lindsey :

    have you never been to Seattle and in the underground city there?
    not nearly as well done as the Mail Rail, but nonetheless fascinating

    Reply

  154. Tom

    Far out. What a fantastic stealth exploration. I’m amazed that after 8 years, the lights are still working down there; and the ventilation too. I hope this doesn’t give terrorists ideas now. There should definitely be practical uses for these tunnels: Storage? Tours, at least for all the commentators? Testing? A new running-ducking marathon? Pneumatic freight carrying tubes? Something. …………

    Reply

  155. Snug

    I’m so jealous!

    Reply

  156. London’s Secret ‘Mail Rail’ Passages Have Been Revealed | Batangas Today | Breaking News, World News And More News

    [...] Recently, a group of urban explorers have documented their exploration of the tunnels through their webpage ( ‘silentuk‘ ) . Detailed photography revealed that the rail is still in good [...]

  157. Ron

    Awesome! Totaly awesome! This is what dreams are made of! And to have it come true..WOW! Great work guy’s!

    Reply

  158. RJW

    The photographs are so well made. Can you comment on your technical procedures? It seems in some areas you were fortunate to have still-electrified lighting to use, but along the tunnels it must have been totally dark. Did you tripod the camera, leave its shutter open and then walk through the dark tunnel and set off a quick flash from time-to-time with another device (portable flash or other camera) to create multiple exposures that might even have surprised you upon viewing them later? Advance thanks for comments you can make.

    Reply

    Otter :

    For the most part we only took pictures in the lit tunnels. We were pushed for time, so spending it lighting darkened sections when we could just walk to another part wasnt high up on the list. Those that we did light were done on 30- 60 second exposures. We used various light sources from torches to LED light panels placed statically around the tunnels or the subject, no flash guns were used. All the pictures were taken on a tripod. Hope that helps.

    Reply

    RJW :

    Thank you Otter. The whole event, your excellent and thrilling methods, and the documentation form a wonderful addition to the world’s body of performance art.

    Reply

  159. Irene

    Amazing. Would have loved to be part of your team.

    Reply

  160. Richard(USA)

    How exciting !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Thanks for the trip !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    Happy hunting.

    Best Regards,
    RS

    Reply

  161. MADDMAXX

    THAT WAS SO SUPER COOL . I LOVED IT. I LOVE EXPLORING NEW THINGS. I FELT THE EXCITMENT OF THE HIKE.

    Reply

  162. james campbell

    nice story,very good pics.ever thought of all the tunnels in veitnam.i saw quite a few of these while on tour.we didnt take pics and i didnt have a light.only a kbar and a 9mm.and not much time to enjoy it.

    Reply

  163. Kumar

    what an adventurous tour. Nice write up and excellent photos.

    Reply

  164. Tweaker

    Wordz escape me. Awsome Jurney .. Spent an Hour reading and drooling over the pix and imagining the whole expeirience… Time well spent, and would never want back.. Thank you for pushing to the end.

    Reply

  165. noddingoff

    This would make a nice documentary.

    Reply

  166. Notorious Kristin

    Fascinating!!! Enjoyed the article and pictures very much, thank you for sharing your adventure.

    Reply

  167. Leslie in KY, USA

    Amazing story! Saw a link on the top headdlines on Yahoo! this morning. That’ll get your story told all over the world. Congrats on an incredible find, an amazing adventure, and a pat on the back for such a great write-up. Without the writeup and photos, the world would never know. I hope the nexttime I’m in your AMAZING city of London, we’ll be able to learn more about it. In the meantime, we’ve got some great spelunking in Kentucky, come and visit! Rock on!

    Reply

  168. Wild Wm of the West

    Stunning treasures. Thank you. Wonder if the big fin’l loss was more labor, physical part replacement, or electricity? Wonder if economics could turn to make this viable again…. The details of the justification for the closure should be interesting.

    Reply

  169. Dimitri

    I now of the Abandoned Stations Rosavelt Station (underneath Rosvelt Hotel Opening secret Door Brings you out to the kitchen of the hotel.

    ALso the old 92 street station on the IRT broadway line..

    But this is much more beautiful

    Reply

  170. Tommy J.

    Hi !!

    Tommy J. from St Paul, Minnesota.
    What an amazing adventure !! Great pic’s and great write-up !!

    Reply

  171. markafee

    Terrific article & photo documentation! Being from Orange County, California, we don’t have such artifacts to explore. I only wish I was there to participate! Marvelous reporting on a fascinating topic. I suggest you assemble your various expeditions into a book format - describing your exploits in a topical or chronological fashion… What Balls!! FASCINATING EXPOSE!!

    Reply

  172. Jakob

    Can I Come I Think It Would Be Amazing to go down and explore!

    Reply

  173. Laurence

    Very nifty! Nicely composed photos and interesting commentary.

    Reply

  174. Kay Johnson

    Fantastic reading chaps ! Having spent the years 1969 to 1989 in a mail related business in the West End where posting to the main railway stations could be a nightmare until ‘after hours’ I have thoroughly enjoyed reading this. Use of the tunnel would have saved me a lot of time I think ! Is it possible to get a small Fiat 600 or a Mini down there ?

    Reply

  175. Randy

    New possible life for it as money maker; revive it by operating tour trains through the system or general transportation system. Rent it out for independent private train operation.

    Reply

  176. Stephen B.

    Urban Spelunking at it’s best, I wish I had been in the group! Thanks for sharing!

    Reply

    capt3503 :

    Dude, read the article. You are a total idiot!

    Reply

    Kevin Richardson :

    does anyone really believe these stories? Sure, the information has a bit of truth, but the whole concept is in believing the spirit of the old line itself. They people in the pictures do not have air tanks, masks or filtering devices for breathing…therefore…air has access to these areas. Where there is air, there is also mold spores. I am talking living creatures! I see none of this in their whole excursion. Perhaps in the dark rail sections, but poor lighting. The abandoned rail cars would be caked with dust after 150 years of not being used. This has been a very interesting article and I would love to have been with these fine young people on their journey through time. Nice job people ! ! ! Maybe you guys could join me and accomplish such a run through Hitlers tunnels in Germany, if I could only find an entrance. Kevrichard1979@yahoo.com

    Reply

    Conan :

    Dude, they were built 150 years ago and shut down less than 10 years ago. The article says that. Epic Rage Post FAIL.

    Reply

    Kevin Richardson :

    Thank you for enlightening me on the article factual evidence. The first line States: ” For as long as I can remember…” Either you have a short memory or you are very young. I see that my second choice is much more likely to be true. The initial system was designed in 1855 and not placed in active duty til after WW1. Yes, the new branch was started in 1954 and opened in August of 1965, however in late 2002, the whole system was figured to be costing more money daily to operate than the trucks above ground. By 2002 it was ruled uneconomical. It closed in March of 2003. This is the way I read the facts from your article. Save your pictures and if you took video, it will be worth a lot of money to the country or the city as you turn 100 years old. Hold on to the video for as long as you can. Your grandchildren will benefit from it much more the longer you wait to release the information. Good Luck !

    Reply

    momok :

    think before you write…

    Reply

    Mobust :

    150 years? They only closed 8 years ago!

    Reply

  177. dawn

    i love it

    Reply

  178. Geezer68

    Having done a little urban exploring myself (nothing like this) I think I understand some of what you feel. A great read and I thank you for it. Definitly a story about the Holy Grail.

    Reply

  179. First Light | adam

    [...] few miscellaneous links worth reading today: this is pretty awesome - urban explorers finally get into the disused Royal Mail railway under central London, I have to mention this (as I’ve neglected to so far) as it really is quite an impressive [...]

  180. Tim

    Fantastic pictures, very well documented given the circumstances. I really enjoyed reading this. A great piece of history today …

    Reply

  181. USA

    WOW great viewing, thanks for posting.

    Reply

  182. Selectism Links for Friday April 22, 2011 | Selectism.com

    [...] 03. The Post Office Railway (above) “For as long as I can remember explorers have joked, discussed, cried themselves to sleep over possibilities the Post Office Railway could be explored. Those keen to attempt entry desperately clawing at every scrap of information like a starving hobo snacking on bread crumbs. Just the idea of access, let alone the task of traversing the line seemed fraught with impossible obstacles and doubt.” (silentuk) [...]

  183. Tarkaman

    Fantastic stuff
    So, now the Oxford underground railway?
    Does anyone know of it even?
    Been there done that, but had an escort so no pics :-(

    Reply

  184. momochi

    Keep posting stuff like this i really like it

    Reply

  185. Jon

    This is fascinating. It’s such a shame that there isn’t some alternate purpose that the Mail Rail lines could be put to use for. More waste…

    Reply

  186. Stefan

    OMG that is so amazing. Thank you so much for this. I read it devotionally and soaked up every picture. A Dream!

    Reply

  187. Dave

    It’s nice to see these photos, I worked at whitechapel po
    For ten years and often took the work down to the station.
    Great job guys.

    Reply

  188. k

    Very impressive. These photo’s will record this hidden gum for history.

    :)

    Reply

  189. Luk

    Awesome! I wish I had the guts to explore these.

    Congratulations!

    Reply

  190. The Beauty of Urban Decay 2 « Wow Cool

    [...] heck super efficient in land use here in the West, I would like to send you to this report on the UK’s Post Office Railway. You will want to read all of it and take in every [...]

  191. Andrewzy

    Excellent! I saw the railway in operation during a visit to Mount Pleasant in the 1980s and had pretty much forgotten about it until I read this and had no idea that it continued to operate until 2002. Perhaps, one day, when the oil has run out….

    Reply

  192. Betsey Owens

    I read it all including the comments. I would have loved to do this when I was younger. I probably won’t encourage my grandchildren to see it or it will give them more ideas for risky exploration! Thanks for posting!

    Reply

  193. Exploration of London’s Mail Rail | The Pirates! In an Adventure with the Stock Market

    [...] Here is an interesting article with numerous photos of London’s mail rail system that finally closed in 2003. Some of the photos are just crazy looking. Definitely would be a cool place to explore. [...]

  194. bob

    wow…. just- wow….

    Reply

  195. lilou

    Great read & great timing, i think you were the first and will be the last possibly. with the royal wedding coming up and terrorism paranoia, i bet they are going to want to lock the place down proper. on the other hand how they can do that… oh how i miss a world where our freedom is not thwarted by other people’s fear!

    Reply

    Winch :

    When they accosted us outside 3 days later they dropped a big warning about the royal wedding, told us not to fuck around and to not come back.

    Reply

  196. norker

    Utterly brilliant.

    Reply

  197. Rob

    Great work guys, you’re documenting history ;-)

    Reply

  198. Moffty

    Superb article - nice one

    Reply

  199. Explore the Abandoned Mail Rail Underground Railway Line in London - This is Awesome! | Londontopia

    [...] Read on here. Filed Under: Facebook Feed, History, Londonism, Pics, The Tube, Transport About jonathanJonathan is a consummate Anglophile who launched Anglotopia.net 4 years ago to channel his passion for Britain. Londontopia is a new site dedicated to everything London based on the same model. [...]

  200. Stu

    Nice, I remember a picture in a old train book of this railway also! Can anyone say if there is any truth in the rumour that there is another secret underground line connecting the MOD, Downing St. and Northolt? Has anyone been round the secret bunker in Box Hill tunnel near Bath?

    Reply

  201. Gaspar

    I live above the route of the line, near one of the sorting offices still in use. Every night at 0.45 we hear what sounds like a train come through. It’s definitely not a tube line. From your pics the tracks look clean and complete even if the stations aren’t. Are they still running trains nightly just to keep it ticking over somehow? But you were there at that time and didn’t meet a train. So perhaps not.

    Reply

    Otter :

    I dont think trains have been run along the line in a long time. In each section between the stations air ventilators have been bolted to the tracks, there would be no way for a train to pass. The sections further away from Mount Pleasant probably havent been accessed by anyone in years, the calcium icicle deposits mostly blocked the way as we walked.

    Reply

  202. Alice

    Stunning.
    Best read in weeks, months. Thank you.

    Reply

  203. Walkywalk

    Screw Jeremy Kyle! Awesome pictures and great text with atmosphere of excitement. Thanks!

    Reply

  204. Exploring an abandoned underground mail railway line « Quotulatiousness

    [...] Royal Mail system had a dedicated subway line of their own. It was eventually abandoned, but not destroyed, as some illegal trespassers were able to [...]

  205. Binky

    Any chance of getting the full-rez photography up anywhere? Even if it’s just the ones without any personel in… would be so awesome.

    Reply

    Otter :

    Maybe in the future. At the moment with the high traffic my hosting server is barely coping with bandwidth demand from low res images, so anything bigger isnt really an option.

    Reply

    Binky :

    Don’t have to be on your bandwidth tab… Flickr etc. Hell, even a torrent.

    Reply

  206. sheridan

    Awesome! I live not too far from Whitechapel and Liverpool Street and have always wondered what it’s like down there. I remember when the line closed down a few years back ir seemed like such as waste.

    What an amazing city London is. History all around us and beneath us. Great job.

    Next stop the Wapping Pump Station?

    S.

    Reply

  207. Paul

    Nice work. I had the great fortune to be invited to an open night on the Mail Rail back in the 80s, to see the network during its maintenance period. It’s good to see it again in such detail, but a shame it’s so run-down.

    Reply

  208. Tristanjay

    At last its been documented by an explorer. Those pics of the rave were a good spot.

    Reply

  209. Dan

    Wow! How badly do I want to go there!?

    It looks like a god damn particle accelerator!

    Reply

  210. Jack

    Great work guys, a very thorough and enjoyable account of a wonderful adventure

    Reply

  211. Martin

    Wow! Someone has finally managed to get in there!

    Amazed that everything is still intact and mostly still in good nick, and frozen in time - looks like when RM closed it in 2003 they just left everything as it was, locking the door behind them.

    Agree with the comments that this would make a great unusual tourist attraction. From reading the narrative, probably the best place for a museum and running line on which to carry passengers would be the New Oxford Street site, which would be handily placed at one end of London’s busiest shopping street, pretty close to the Tube (Holborn) with a piece of London’s Tramway history also close by (the entrance to the Kingsway Tram subway). It also wouldn’t bother Royal Mail as its not near any of their operational sorting offices.

    Sadly, I’ve heard that when construction of Crossrail starts in earnest parts of the PO Railway tunnels are likely to be breached so this might be the last look at the complete system.

    Reply

  212. olog-hai

    So there are no plans to convert this for tourist use?

    Reply

    Otter :

    Not with the UK’s current health and saftey policies, i hear its hard enough/near impossible for Royal Mail staff to even get access. The cost that would be required to bring the tunnels up to an acceptable standard would be astronomical, as such not financially viable.

    Reply

  213. Ruth L

    Wow, you guys are MAD!!! Great photos. Amazing.

    Reply

  214. Rookinella

    I’m taking these photos to bed with a latex glove a bottle of baby oil. Amazing as always!

    Reply

  215. The Transportationist

    The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail)…

    From Silent UK – Urban & Underground Photography write about London’s quite extensive other Underground : The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail) : “For as long as I can remember, explorers have joked, discussed, cried themselves to sleep over……

  216. Leila

    Really interesting

    Reply

  217. exl

    I understand there was a plan by LUL to buy the system and use it as the site for their tunnel cooling system

    Reply

  218. didn’t know this existed « just a load of tosh really

    [...] Urban explorers get into London’s, now abandoned, underground post office railway [...]

  219. Grant

    Wow! What a great expedition and brilliant photo’s!

    Reply

  220. Greg

    Fantastic performance, a really great report to read with state of the art pictures!
    My hat off to you all!!

    Reply

  221. Used To Work There

    I worked on the closure of the Mail Rail in 2002-3 and had the good pleasure of spending quite some time down there, mostly at MP. You were right not to go too much further at MP, as that time of night it would’ve been very busy and youw ere not far from actual staff. I have fond memories of there. Is most odd to see somewhere I used to work regarded as a Holy Grail for UrbEx. Well done. Brave fools!

    Reply

  222. These were the night trains, taking the mail. : bonaldi.me

    [...] The Mail Rail: [...]

  223. раскрутка сайта

    Интересные посты - читаются на одном дыхании. Пишите больше. От души респектую.

    Reply

  224. Flavorwire » What’s On at Flavorpill: The Links That Made the Rounds In Our Office

    [...] objects. We had our longtime fear of mannequins validated. We got a rare glimpse inside of London’s underground Post Office Railway. And finally, we bookmarked our new favorite Tumblr: gay captions, which pairs vintage [...]

  225. The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail) | Silent UK – Urban & Underground Photography | Int News

    [...] See the original post here: The Post Office Railway (Mail Rail) | Silent UK – Urban & Underground Photography [...]

  226. Matt

    Fantastic pics, I’m so jealous! Is there any way you might consider releasing some of the full-size photos under a free license for the Wikipedia article on this (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Post_Office_Railway)? The photos on there right now are pretty average while some of your shots are fantastic - really well composed with great lighting!

    Reply

  227. tumbles

    This might possibly be the best fucking explore/report I’ve ever read. Sick work.

    Reply

  228. Six of the Best 151 | Henry Abraham

    [...] Silent UK has some marvellous photographs of the disused Post Office railway under London. (I am sure I used to have a Blue Peter book with an article about it.) You will see that I have appropriated one of those photographs. [...]

  229. DarkDog

    Having seen Alastair’s shots I wondered when a report would surface. Wonderful shots, excellent write up, quite rightly this can be called epic. Hats off to you all.

    Reply

  230. Squirrell911

    Fuck yeah, fantastic shots there and a top explore.

    Reply

  231. Patch

    Cheers for confirming that we did in fact do this and it wasn’t just the lead up to yet another sticky mess on the sheets. The culmination of a seriously mental last few weeks, although I disagree with the idea that we’ve sucked London dry just yet ;)

    Reply

  232. King Al

    Fantastic, absolutely fantastic!

    Reply

  233. Speed

    EPIC! (word used in context for once!!)

    you have officially got your own back for the lack of burly invite too :)

    Reply

  234. dhl

    Well done lads looks wicked you did the community proud !!!!!!!!

    Reply

    Anon :

    What community?

    Reply

    Otter :

    I’m guessing an exploration one :D

    Reply

  235. Userscott

    Its funny, cos my heart says noob but my brain says pro.

    Well done, son. I shall call Yaz tonight and see if we can get you a membership card for the pro-league.

    Reply

  236. Tim

    When I was about 6, I had a book on trains and tunnels and things from around the world, including the Mail Rail, and it fascinated me as a little boy.

    19 years on, this blog reconnected with that 6 year old boy. Great, great stuff.

    Reply

  237. Greg

    Did you consider using a cart for some of the way back?

    Reply

  238. Xan_Asmodi

    Simply brilliant! There are barely any other words for it!

    Reply

  239. True_British_Metal

    This is the coolest explore I have ever EVER EVER SEEN. What I have just seen and read is beyond words. Magnificent is a SHEER understatement.

    11/10

    Reply

  240. biff bifferson

    utter aceness. pics are amazing, the tunnels are a bit alien-esque.

    Reply

  241. Styru

    Cracking read - cracking work!

    Reply

  242. urbanity

    Unreal, cutting edge urban adventure in a place that deserved to be seen - but only by the best!

    Reply

  243. BillyWhizz

    what can i say? WOW, i had never heard of the mail rail before but your writeup and pictures had me gripped till the end, fantastic work thank you for sharing the experience

    Reply

  244. Dimi Ironmonger

    That’s incredible - amazing photographs and what a record of something most Londoners know absolutely nothing about!

    Reply

  245. Tommo

    Great work by all involved, one of the best things I have check out on the net for ages, great story to go with some wicked pics, well done all and great to see inside, beats the subbrit visits any day ;)

    Reply

  246. Yojim

    I;m in awe. Not just that you got in, or that you explored everything, but that you chronicled it so thoroughly. This is gold-dust for anyone with even a passing interest in London’s subterrainia. Best of luck finding new and greater challenges-they’re out there.

    Reply

  247. Rigsby

    Respect to all you guys who pulled this off. Your hard work and dedication yet again paid off.
    Brilliant write up and photos.

    Reply

  248. Secret London: the Mail Rail | The Great Wen

    [...] the lot here - it’s an extraordinary [...]

  249. Rat

    Awesome write up, awesome pics and an awesome explore, nice one.

    Reply

  250. Winch

    As gutted as I was to not experience this as I’d desired, I’d delighted you’ve done the system justice with this excellent report. Don’t ‘retire’, it’s your passion for the subterrannea alongside the rest of the Consolidation Crew that’s allowed this place to be experienced and shared. I feel priviledged to have seen what I did see, and have nothing but love and respect for those friends that worked hard and took the risks to make it happen - You’re the ones that earned the right to see this Holy Grail!

    Reply

  251. Goblinmerchant

    The true marathon was this write up! Fantastic work Otter, you guys have inscribed one for the history books here, another Holy Grail, brought into the light by London’s finest explorers. Cheers all around for the consolidation crew!

    Reply

  252. David

    I’ve never had such an exciting journey - I was scared throughout. Fantastic stuff. The photography/lighting is as brilliant as ever - I might have to choose one, demand a larger pixel count and have it blown up 4 feet wide and framed.

    Reply

  253. yaz

    Very fucking lovely, well done to all the friends and acquaintances in London of mine who tore this place a new arsehole!

    Reply

  254. Dicky

    Good read T… Bloody good work to all involved :D

    Reply

    Dave :

    Good work that you did this and pulled it off! My memories of the Mail Rail are from a school visit to one of the stations back in the late 1960′s. Our whole class went down there and watched while trains came and went in a buzz of activity. Shame to see it lying derelict now, such a huge asset wasted. Just like all those Beeching-closed railways. But a great place for an illicit adventure none-the-less! Hopefully one day a more enlightened society might see value in restoring it.

    Reply

Name :

 

R.O.C Post R.O.C, Royal Observer Corps. A large group of people who...
Crack The Surface - Episode II - Teaser Trailer Episode two is on its way, this time featuring and focusing...
Ardingly Weir After the visit to Bewl Water's Overflow, myself and Snappel...
Transocean Explorer Oil Platform Even today, this still remains one of the most unique and...
London 2012 - Olympic Stadium Remember the Beijing Olympics in 2008? The stadiums that...