{"id":144197,"date":"2023-10-13T18:34:36","date_gmt":"2023-10-13T18:34:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebritywshow.com\/?p=144197"},"modified":"2023-10-13T18:34:36","modified_gmt":"2023-10-13T18:34:36","slug":"unexpected-items-left-on-tubes-and-buses-at-tfls-lost-property-office","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebritywshow.com\/world-news\/unexpected-items-left-on-tubes-and-buses-at-tfls-lost-property-office\/","title":{"rendered":"Unexpected items left on Tubes and buses at TfL's lost property office"},"content":{"rendered":"

Lost and found on the Underground: From sex toys and breast implants to a judge’s wig, a prosthetic leg and human skulls – the unexpected items left on Tubes and buses which have found their way to TfL’s lost property office in the past 90 years\u00a0<\/h2>\n

From sex toys to breast implants and a judge’s wig to a prosthetic leg, Londoners leave all kinds of unusual items on the Underground, Overground and buses.<\/p>\n

Other strange goods which have found their way to Transport for London (TfL)’s lost property office include urns with cremation ashes, a carpet and a lawnmower.<\/p>\n

Further items to have been found include a wedding dress, a lawyer’s robes, a 14ft boat, a briefcase with \u00a310,000, a park bench, a stuffed eagle and a kitchen sink.<\/p>\n

Rolex watches worth more than \u00a3250,000 have also been left on public transport in the capital, as well as a drum kit, bottles of gin and cash totalling \u00a315,000.<\/p>\n

And last year 17 sex toys were found on buses, the Tube or the Overground – three on their own and 14 in bags with other items. Two were reclaimed by their owners.<\/p>\n

The list of bizarre items comes as TfL’s lost property office celebrates its 90th anniversary this month and moves to a new location in West Ham, East London.<\/p>\n

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An attendant at Transport for London’s Lost Property Office at 200 Baker Street in 1983<\/p>\n

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An employee helps a woman to find her umbrella at the Lost Property Office in November 1933<\/p>\n

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Storage at TfL’s Lost Property Office in 2019, the year the office moved to South Kensington<\/p>\n

The office was based at Baker Street station for most of its existence from 1933 until moving in 2019 to a temporary base at South Kensington.<\/p>\n

What are the most unusual things left on trains and buses in London?<\/h3>\n