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By comparison with other underground stations built at the beginning of the 20th century, the station's surface building is nondescript and unremarkable. Unlike many other central London underground stations, Essex Road was never modernised with escalators and access to the platforms is by lift or a spiral staircase. The station also lacks the automatic ticket gates present at most London Underground and many National Rail stations.
Central: Blake Hall · British Museum · Wood Lane ? District: Hounslow Town · Mark Lane · Osterley & Spring Grove · Park Royal & Twyford Abbey · South Acton · St Mary's · Tower of London ? East London: Shoreditch ? Metropolitan: Hammersmith (Grove Road) · Lord's · Marlborough Road · Swiss Cottage · Uxbridge Road · Wood Lane ? Northern: City Road · South Kentish Town · King William Street ? Piccadilly: Aldwych · Brompton Road · Down Street · York Road
In September 2002, the gallery was one of the eighteen cutting-edge, art galleries with international reputations to be selected for The Galleries Show at the Royal Academy, an exhibition curated by Norman Rosenthal and Max Wigram to highlight the role played by galleries in an artist's creative progress, as well as putting work on sale and re-aligning the Academy with a greater involvement in current art.[2]
Charterhouse early established a reputation for excellence in hospital care and treatment, thanks in part to Henry Levett, M.D., an Oxford graduate who joined the school as physician in 1712. Levett was widely esteemed for his medical writings, including an early tract on the treatment of smallpox. Levett was buried in Charterhouse Chapel, and his widow remarried Andrew Tooke, the master of Charterhouse.[8][9]
Information by Wikipedia.com
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