Adapted from a feature that first appeared in July 2025 on Londonist: Time Machine, our much-praised history newsletter. To be the first to read new history features like this, sign up for free here.
A Tube train at Golders Green in 1911. Image: Public domain
Let’s catch the Tube 115 years ago, through the eyes of a newcomer to London.
Kate Evelyn Isitt (1876-1948) cut her journalistic teeth writing for New Zealand newspapers, including a stint as the first editor of the women’s page on Wellington’s Dominion newspaper. In 1910, she moved to London and quickly established herself as a trusted journalist, working in this capacity until the 1940s. Her personal story would be a fascinating one to pursue (a bit more here), but today I’d like to focus on a barnstorming feature she wrote in 1911, concerning London’s Tube network.
She gives us a first-hand account of what it was like to catch the Tube all those years ago, when George V had just taken the throne, William Taft was US President, and the almost-complete Titanic had no word associations with icebergs.










