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Places of interest in N18
The creature on the shield of the Enfield coat of arms is known in heraldry as an "Enfield" (or colloquially as the Enfield beast), and is used extensively as a logo representing Enfield, particularly by the borough council.
View of the south-west corner of the ground
Bethnal Green ¢ Bruce Grove ¢ Cheshunt ¢ Edmonton Green ¢ Hackney Downs ¢ London Liverpool Street ¢ Rectory Road ¢ Seven Sisters ¢ Silver Street ¢ Southbury ¢ Stamford Hill ¢ Stoke Newington ¢ Theobalds Grove ¢ Turkey Street ¢ White Hart Lane
Looking north from terminating platform 3
On the night of 13 October 1940, a lone German aircraft dropped a single bomb on houses to the north of the station. The destruction of the houses caused the north end of the westbound platform tunnel to collapse, killing or injuring many people amongst those sheltering from the air raid. The train service was disrupted for two months. A memorial plaque (at the north end of the westbound platform) erroneously commemorates "sixteen Belgian refugees and... three British citizens who died" in the attack. The records of the civilian deaths held by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission indicate that in fact sixteen people died at the scene - only three of whom were Belgian - with a seventeenth dying in hospital the following day. Approximately twenty people were injured, but survived.
Information by Wikipedia.com
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