They are all London Main Line Stations and also London Underground stations.
Type your answer here..waterloo Charing Cross, Euston, Kings Cross, Liverpool Street, London Bridge, Marylebone, Paddington, St. Pancras, Victoria, Waterloo.
The largest and busiest are in London. There are many London Terminals: Waterloo (for South of England) Victoria (for Sussex) Charing Cross and London Bridge (for Kent) Liverpool Street (for East Anglia) Euston (for the West Coast and most major cities) King's Cross (for Scotland and the East Coast) Paddington (for the Southwest of England and West Midlands) Marylebone (for High Wycombe) Fenchurch Street (for Southend) St Pancras (for the Eurostar and East Midlands) Other large maor stations include Glasgow Central, Birmingham New Street, Manchester Piccadilly, Leeds, Liverpool Lime Street, Edinburgh Waverley, Cardiff Central, Glasgow Queen Street, Reading and Sheffield.
There are quite a lot of main terminus stations in London and the one that you would use would depend on where you are travelling to or from. They include London Bridge, Waterloo, Victoria, Paddington. Marylebone, Euston, St Pancras, Kings Cross, Liverpool Street, Charing Cross plus dozens of smaller ones.
Both stations are on the Victoria Line of the Underground railway system so no need to change, just take the Victoria Line southbound.from Euston. If you have to drive then from Euston Station take ... Euston Road, Gower Street High Holborn Shaftsbury Avenue Charing Cross Road Trafalgar Square The Mall ( Through St James Park and past Buckingham Palace) Buckingham Gate Buckingham Palace Road Victoria Station. That's 2.9 miles
Each station was named when it was built: Waterloo - after Waterloo Bridge, in turn named after the Battle of Waterloo Victoria - after Queen Victoria London Bridge - after the bridge itself Blackfriars - after Blackfriars Bridge, named after a former monastery Charing Cross, King's Cross - after road junctions Liverpool Street, Fenchurch Street, Cannon Street - after streets Paddington, Marylebone, St Pancras, Euston, Clapham Junction - after districts
No. Euston station is the terminal for northwest Britain. The nearby St Pancras International has trains leaving for Paris and Brussels.
The Victoria Line.
There are no direct trains from Manchester Victoria to St Pancras. Use Manchester Piccadilly and go to London Euston, then a short walk or one tube stop along to St Pancras. Alternatively you can go from Manchester Piccadilly to Sheffield and change for St Pancras but that needs a ticket routed that way that may cost more and takes longer.
You can't travel directly from Euston Square station to Victoria. If you go to Euston Station - a short walk - it's only four stops on the Victoria line.
== == For ever; Manchester is 200 miles from the channel coast. Take a flight or a train (train is quicker) from Manchester to London Euston; transfer by taxi or tube from Euston to Charing Cross or Victoria; train to Dover; shuttle bus to ferry; ferry to Calais.Total time about 9 hours including 75 minutes on ferry.
Well - it's a distance of about 58 miles - so your best bet would be to phone a London taxi firm and ask for an estimate (but it won't be cheap !)
No, Paddington - to get to Euston, you need to take the Bakerloo Underground line from Paddington to Oxford Circus, and then take the Victoria line to Euston