Before the Midland Railway arrived in 1868 St. Albans development largely ran north, south and west from the Market Place. The city fought to get the Midland Railway to change their original route to come closer to St. Albans (at the cost of demolishing the corner of the prison). This created a new commercial centre and, from then on, most of the development was to the East of the old city centre. St. Albans was also on a railway that ran from Hatfield to Watford, so it was very well connected. This spurred on industrial development, including that of Samuel Ryder, a seed merchant – who also founded the Ryder Cup.
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2 minutes
Turn right as you leave the Victoria and follow the road along.
Note also: The surviving gate of St. Albans Gaol (just on the right past the railway overbridge on Victoria Street) – used in the opening credits for ‘Porridge’)
2 minutes
Turn right as you leave the Robin Hood and follow the road along.
5 minutes
Turn left as you leave the Horn and walk the length of Alma Road – halfway along, on the junction with Oswald Road, you will pass a former CAMRA HQ building that’s now a residential property. At the end of Alma Road, turn right and you will see the next pub across the road.
Note also: St. Albans South Signal Box (restored Midland Railway signal box - unfortunately not open during Members Weekend)
2 minutes
Turn left as you leave the Great Northern and follow the road along.
1 minute
Cross the road.
See how Victorian industry and the arrival of the railways shaped St Albans.
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