
Paragon Station
Plaque in Paragon Station, Ferensway, HU1 3UQ. Grid B2; also the Tigers Lair pub, 64-68 Anlaby Road, HU1 2NR. Grid B2
Paragon Station was designed by G.T. Andrews and opened in 1847; it was often described as “Hudson’s Folly”, because of its huge scale. The station was the terminus of the York and North Midland Railway and the Hull and Selby Railway. There was a specially built emigration platform, which was the first stop for up to 1,000 people a day who were on the way from mainland Europe to the USA; 2.2 million people embarked at this platform between 1850 and 1904. The platform is now disused with no platform number, and stands outside the main station building, behind the emigrant waiting room, which was built by the North Eastern Railway in 1871. The emigrant waiting room is now the Tigers Lair pub, facing onto Anlaby Road. The separate platform and waiting room ensured that the emigrants were kept away from the other station users, to minimise the risk of disease spreading.


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