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Cryptic clues = station name

Calthrop

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6 Dec 2015
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3,319
Titanic Quarter
Ding ding -- we have a winner. Explanation of my original clue (in the unlikely event of anyone being interested <D): the convention in war, in the old days, of the surrendered or potentially-surrendering losers, pleading with the winners, to be granted "quarter" -- i.e. treatment which was on the side of leniency, rather than harshness. Imagined accordingly: a very kind-hearted victor who acts extremely decently toward the vanquished -- so, giving them a quite titanic degree of "quarter".

Sir Dale: as per the usages and customs of the wars, prithee set the next one.
 
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DaleCooper

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Mulholland Drive
Ding ding -- we have a winner. Explanation of my original clue (in the unlikely event of anyone being interested <D): the convention in war, in the old days, of the surrendered or potentially-surrendering losers, pleading with the winners, to be granted "quarter" -- i.e. treatment which was on the side of leniency, rather than harshness. Imagined accordingly: a very kind-hearted victor who acts extremely decently toward the vanquished -- so, giving them a quite titanic degree of "quarter".

Sir Dale: as per the usages and customs of the wars, prithee set the next one.
Thank you.

Next clue:

The home of Rodney's classmate?
 

Calthrop

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Trying with "something" -- though am pretty sure it's ridiculously wrong. Thinking famous 18th-century naval bods; Admiral George Brydges Rodney (Lord Rodney), and Lord (Horatio) Nelson. By a considerable alternative-history exercise (the former was, factually, forty years the senior of the latter); they might have been classmates at the naval academy -- an extremely small intake that year? Answer-station thus Nelson (Lancashire)...
 

DaleCooper

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Trying with "something" -- though am pretty sure it's ridiculously wrong. Thinking famous 18th-century naval bods; Admiral George Brydges Rodney (Lord Rodney), and Lord (Horatio) Nelson. By a considerable alternative-history exercise (the former was, factually, forty years the senior of the latter); they might have been classmates at the naval academy -- an extremely small intake that year? Answer-station thus Nelson (Lancashire)...
Nelson is correct, Rodney and Nelson were the two Nelson class battleships. Your turn...
 

Calthrop

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6 Dec 2015
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Nelson is correct, Rodney and Nelson were the two Nelson class battleships. Your turn...
Good grief -- as told of, I thought my suggestion was ludicrous (and I know less than nothing about warships). However; following on, with thanks:

In more opulent times: it would have been appropriate for there to be in this station's waiting room, an American-type sofa or couch.
 

RDP

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1 Jan 2023
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Location
Kent
The first word would suggest Ayr although a DMU shuttle is now running from Prestwick Town..
 

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