Other known 1665 plague sites include: Finsbury Fields, St. Bride’s, Goswell Street (now Seward Street/Mount Mills), Moorfields, St. Martin in the Fields, Tothill Fields (now Vincent Square, Westminster), Pitfield Street in Hoxton, Golden Square in Soho, a large pit under Aldgate tube station and several in Stepney (including large areas around St. Dunstan’s churchyard).

Edgware Road and Gloucester Road both have a Circle line platform, but the District line also uses them when needed.

One of the most famous is an elderly ghost who may have even saved a life. There are so many sightings here, the station allegedly has a "ghost log book" dedicated to supernatural situations unfolding at the station.

... Aldgate Station. [Overcrowded, dirty and awash with sewage… it’s hardly surprising that the bubonic plague flourished in the crowded streets of London. So here I am at Aldgate station which serves the Circle and Metropolitan lines.

Aldgate Station London. Pits were dug as burial sites for large numbers of bodies. Daniel Defoe, the author of Robinson Crusoe, wrote a book called A Journal of the Plague Year.He said of the Aldgate pit:. Author, Daniel Defore, mentions the Three Nuns in the same location almost 300 years later to reference a large plague pit in Aldgate.

Ghosts on the London Underground: ... Line, built in the late 1960s ran into trouble when the tunnel boring machine went straight into a long-forgotten plague pit at Green Park.

The stations history is rather plain unfortunately, with little happening within the tunnels and the last major extension was in 1882, which connected Aldgate to Tower Hill. It opened in 1876; it was built at the site of a plague pit containing 1,000 bodies. The Aldgate tube station is a London Underground station located near Aldgate in the City of London, London, England. There are endless stories of ghosts haunting the London Underground but perhaps one of the most ‘electrifying’ tales of supernatural activity has to be the strange case of Aldgate and the spectral lady who made a shocking appearance in the twentieth century.

Just better. Quite the same Wikipedia. Aldgate station was opened on 18 November 1876, with a southbound extension to Tower Hill opening on 25 September 1882, completing the Circle (line).

Aldgate tube station. Almost as soon as the trains began rolling in and out, the stories of spooky shenanigans began. Aldgate station opened on the 18th November 1876 after several years of very expensive construction. In 1876, many of the timber framed buildings in Aldgate were torn down to accommodate building the Metropolitan Line and Aldgate Station.