Baker Street London Escorts
Baker Street station, as it looked in 1863 at the establishment of the world's first underground rail service, the Metropolitan Railway. Today the area pictured is the unfashionable end of the circle line platform, where this architectural plan is displayed alongside other historical images. The Tyburn Estate, listed in the Domesday Book, extended to the south and west of modern Baker Street station. At the far side it handed on the name to Tyburn Street (now Oxford Street) and Tyburn Lane (Park Lane), and at the crossroads where the two met, the infamous three-legged gallows known as the Tyburn Tree. Our Baker Street Escorts will guide you through this area more details with having fun and interesting way. So steeped in blood and treachery did the name become that both streets continue to travel under aliases, and 15th century residents began to refer to their village by the name of the new parish church of St. Mary. In the 17th century, St. Mary-on-the-[Ty] Burn underwent a further whitewash of fashionable French to become Mary-le-Bone.

