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    What Stations Are Served By The Circle Line On The London Underground System?

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    The Circle Line is a continuous circular line which serves 27 stations around Central London. If we pick Notting Hill Gate as a starting-point and a terminus, the Circle line serves the following stations in between: High Street Kensington, Gloucester Road, South Kensington, Sloane Square, Victoria, St. James's Park, Westminster, Embankment, Temple, Blackfriars, Mansion House, Cannon Street, Monument, Tower Hill, Aldgate, Liverpool Street, Moorgate, Barbican, Farringdon, King's Cross, St. Pancras, Euston Square, Great Portland Street, Baker Street, Edgware Road, Paddington and Bayswater.

    The Circle line track runs for around 14 miles, but it shares almost all of this route with District Line and Metropolitan Line trains.

    The line was built gradually, with sections operating from 1868, but the final 'circle' wasn't completed until 1884.

    The Circle Line carries approximately 218,000 passengers per day and 68 million passengers per day. It has also been responsible for the infamous Circle Line pub crawl, where people have a drink from a pub near each station on the Circle Line.

    answered 2 years ago

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