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Posts Tagged ‘Dickens London’

Giants On Our Walks Of London

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

The secret City London walk that we offer takes in Guildhall, London’s medieval Palace which was built between 1411 and 1440.

Inside are two statues of Gog and Magog, two ferocious giants who belong to the distant, myth filled past of this great City.

In 2003 Richard took part in the History Channel’s “special “Giants Friend or Foe?” For the programme he travelled to Cornwall to talk about Jack the Giant Killer.

But he also filmed inside Guildhall and was, in fact, afforded the rare opportunity of standing alongside the giants, attached to them by a safety harness!

Now, whenever, he leads a London Walking Tour into Guildhall he cannot only tell the story of the two giants, but also he can explain what it’s like to be standing right next to them on their lofty perch.

Whereas we can’t guarantee to get you so up close and personal to these giants when you join our Secret City or Dickens London walks, we can at least give you a unique insight into them.

Dickens Walks In London

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

Charles Dickens loved London and walks that follow in his footsteps and in the footsteps of his numerous immortal characters can be great fun.

As part of our commitment to bringing you some great London Walking Tours that are absolutely free we will soon be adding the ultimate Dickensian London walk.

Following on  with the format of our Harry Potter London Tour, the Journey through Dickens London will take you through one od the capital’s most magical quarters, an area that Dickens knew very well indeed and about which he wrote many times.

We’ve now created the PDF for this particular tour and it will be available as a free download very shortly.

The Walk will feature some of the many locations that have changed little since Dickens knew them. Chief amongst them will be a wander amongst the quiet and cloisterly courtyards of the Inns of Court of which Dicken wrote “you can read on the gates who enters here leaves noise behind.” This description is still as true today as it did in his day.

We’ve got some great innovations for our new tours which we’ll roll out as the new tours begin to go live in May.

In the meantime don’t forget that it is possible to sample one of our free London walks by taking our Harry Potter London Tour. To get this free pdf you just have to send an email to harry-potter-pdf@discovery-walks.com and our automated system will ping it back to you within moments.

So keep a keen eye on our blog as we’ll be announcing the order in which the new walking tours will be rolled out in the months ahead.

Our London walks For 2010

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Well the end of December is almost upon us and the year is entering its twilight hours. Indeed, the first decade of the 21st century is nearly over and as we move into 2010 we thought we’d just give you a heads up about our London walks for 2010.

Our Jack the Ripper Tour will be continuing 7 chilling nights a week. We’ve now got some great guides conducting this, the most popular of all the London walks on offer. Three of our guides are published authors who’ve written books on Jack the Ripper, and six of our guides have appeared as expert interviewees on virtually all the Jack the Ripper documentaries of the past 10 years. No other London walks company can offer you this level of expertise when it comes to the Jack the Ripper Tour.

Our London Ghost Walk will be operating on Friday and Saturday throughout January and February and will almost always be guided by London’s leading ghost walk guide Richard Jones. On last night’s tour Richard was joined by a travel journalist who made an observation that many of our clients have made over the years. No other London walks come close to the level of expertise on Richard’s haunted London tours.

When looking at London Ghost Walks there really is no better measure than just looking at Richard’s output of books and TV programmes. You can either take a standard ghost walk with a guide whose read a few stories in a book, or you can take a expert guided London Ghost Tour with the man who wrote the book.

Richard has written 9 books on Haunted Britain and is currently working on his tenth. In addition he has written books on Jack the Ripper’s London, Dickens London, Oxford, Cambridge, Bath, Chester, York and Stratford. In addition he has appeared on the History and Discovery Channels and was the historian on the cult show Most Haunted Live for several years. He will be travelling throughout Britain researching his new book of true ghost stories throughout January and February and will be publishing a twice daily blog of his journey, with photogrpahs of the places he visits and brief discriptions.

In addition to our Ghost Walks and our Jack the Ripper Tour we are going live with our Free London walks in the new Year and rolling out a programme of step by step walks that you will be able to do yourself. In addition to being able to print them off and taking them you will also be able to watch them online on our series of Walking Tour Videos. Have a look at one of our tasters on Dickens London here, or more Charles Dickens London walks here.

You can also enjoy our Free Harry Potter London Tour which is  PDF that you download, print off and then  follow step by step.

So keep an eye on our site throughout 2010 and see what exciting London walks, both free and guided, will be launching.

In the meantime may we take this opportunity of wishing you all a very happy New Year.

The Top Ten London walks.

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

We get many requests from people asking which of the London Walking Tours we offer is the best. Obviously this is a difficult question to answer since those who explore London on our Walks nearly always go away raving about what they’ve seen and heard.

Much has to do with your interests. Some people love Jack the Ripper Walks around the East End of London, whilst others find the London Ghost Walks that we offer are more to their liking. Indeed we often get questions about these two walks as to which one we would suggest as a must do.

Well, in truth, they’re both great walks albeit both are very different.

The Jack the Ripper Tour tells the full story of the Whitechapel Murders that rocked London in 1888. It is a story that is as much about social history as it is about crime and murder. You are taken through the very streets where the murders occurred and shown the places where the victims of Jack the Ripper lived and which were known to them.

The Haunted London walks on the other hand are a little more light hearted. They combine fascinating history with tales of ghosts and cover the places where ghosts have been seen.  There are two ghost walks that we conduct on a regular basis. On Fridays we offer the Ghosts, Ghouls and Graveyards Tour and on Saturdays we offer the Alleyways and Shadows old City London Ghots Walk.

So these three regular walks are up there on our list of top ten London walks.

So, in closing, here is that list in full.

1. The Jack the Ripper Tour.

2. Alleyways and Shadows: - The Old City Ghost Walks.

3. Ghosts, Ghouls and Graveywards.

4. The London of Dickens and Shakespeare.

5.  The Secret City:- A Walk Back in Time.

6. A Journey Through Dickens London.

7.  The Inns and Taverns of Old London.

8. Clerkenwell:- London’s Secret Village.

9. The London Story.

10. Pirates and Pressgangs:- A Docklands Pub Tour.

London Walking Tours - Walk With Dickens

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

Charles Dickens knew London intimately and Walks around the Victorian metropolis truly inspired his work.

 He had a photographic memory for the streets, buildings and people he encountered on his numerous ramblings around the Capital.

To read his books is to be transported back in time and it is still possible to stand at certain London locations with a Dickens book in hand and see those locations through the eyes of the great novelist.

For example, just off Fleet Street you will find Middle Temple and Inner Temple. These are two of London’s four Inns of Court, the places where Barristers (the wigged and robed lawyers) have their chambers. Dickens wrote of the Temple that you can read on its gates “who enters here leaves noise behind” and that description really does hold true to this day.

Several of our London walks explore this wonderful “time slip” part of London, but you can also explore it on your own by taking the tube to Temple Station, going left and up the steps, turning right at their top, over the crossing, off which turn right, and just keep ahead till you reach the gates of The Temple.

Another location that has changed little since Dickens day is Lincoln’s Inn, another of the Inns of Court. Our Dickens London Christmas Walks tend to explore this area, but it also features on our regular Dickens Tours as it was in Lincoln’s Inn Old Hall that the foggy introduction to Bleak House begins.

These are just two of the many parts of London covered by Richard Jones’s book Walking Dickensian London which is available from Amazon.

A very apt quote for the day

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

We’ve always enjoyed giving you a choice about how you do our London walks. First an foremost we are fanatical about this great city and have a genuine desire to help people to see more of it.

Our guides range from top flight Blue Badge Guides who’ve done the very demanding course offered by the Institute of Tourist Guiding (we’ll be covering the Blue Badge in a future post) to well known authors who’ve published on topics as diverse as Jack the Ripper, Dickens London and Haunted Britain.

As far as our London Walking Tours are concerned we want to make it as simple as possible for you to find what you want. We won’t make you wade through a seemingly endless rant about how are competitors are all wannabes as it is our opinion that you’re simply not interested in childish name calling.  For that matter neither are we. We simply want to offer you great tours with sensible numbers and to that end we’ll highlight the differences (unique selling points to use adult language) that make our tours different and better.

What we will do is offer you a choice of joining us on one of our paid London walks - such as the Jack the Ripper Tour that takes place seven chilling nights a week, and our ghost walk that takes place on Fridays, Saturdays and on selective Sundays - or you can enjoy one of our free DIY walks in London that are provided as print off and do PDF’s.

These latter include our Harry Potter London Walking Tour and our coming soon Riverside London Pub Walk.

Our aim is pure simplicity. Which is why the following quote from Albert Einsteen in many ways sums up our ethos.

Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius - and a lot of courage - to move in the opposite direction.

 

Venus and rags - Walks of London

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Our London walks of Art, or as we like to say London is a walk of art, are going great guns.

We have nearly completed are London Walking Tour around Tate Modern and today have decided to make a return visit to the Energy and Process wing of Tate Modern.

Having nimbly dodged Richard Serra’s massive work Trip Hammer, which consists of two pieces of steel balanced precariously one on top of the other.

Having ducked as you pass Nikki de Saint Phalle’s Shooting Paintings. Having averted your gaze as you pass through a room in which a film showing nudity is constantly playing, you arrive at a statue of Venus that confronts a huge mound of coloured, and colourful rags.

Now we cover a lot of statues on our various London walks, but this particular one is, to say the least, somewhat bizarre.

Venus of the Rags was created in 1967 and then recreated in 1974.

It is a work by the Italian Artist Michaelangelo Pistoletto, a central figure in the Arte Povero movement.

Arte Povero was an Italian art movement of the late 1960’s and early 1970’s.

This was a time of great social upheaval, not only in Italy but also across the reat of Europe and in North America.

This was the era of Vietnam, and age marked by mass protests, riots and strikes.

In Italy a group of artists began attacking the vlaues of the established institutions of government, industry and even of popular culture.

They wanted to create art that was free of the demands of the market place.

Thus the Arte Povera movement was born.

In our next blog we will look at the work of Pistoletto, who was a central figure in this movement.

For now why not take a look at the various and varied London walks we offer.? You can join to explore Shakespeare’s London, Dickens London, or even the London of Jack the Ripper.

A London walk for 50p.

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

We’ve well and truly moved with the times and are really excited about our new and innovative London walks service.

Imagine having your own personal guide who can lead you all over London showing you the sites that interest you and all for just 50p. How’s that for an inexpensive tour of London?

How can this be?

Well, Roger Grant, Mark Ubsdell and Richard Jones have teamed up to take London Walking Tours to their next level.

Being true London tour innovators, talented film makers and with fingers on the pulse of modern tourism they have come up with The Electric Tourist, a new website that enables people to actually download London walks on subjects as diverse as Beatles London, Dickens London, Haunted London and Jack the Ripper London walks.

Within moments you can have a tour guide pop up on your mobile phone screen and have them tell you all about the location you are standing at.

Take Dickens London walks for example. Picture the scene. You’re standing in the very alley where Charles Dickens sited Scroodge’s Counting House in a Christmas Carol.

It’s atmospheric, it’s cobwebbed by time and you are really soaking in the atmosphere. But, now you can quickly download a tour guide onto your mobile phone who will tell you what you’re looking at.

Furthermore, you can also watch a sequence of dramatic reconstructions that spirit you back to how that very spot looked in Charles Dickens day.

Suddenly you are watching Victorian Londoners going about their daily business in the fog bathed streets of the City. You see Charles Dickens standing at the location pondering the creation of Scrooge.

You can listen to the very words Dickens wrote complete with background noises. How absolutely cool would that be?

And now its possible. The most innovative group of names on the London walks scene have put their creative skills together and have made this possible.

A Dickens London walk.

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

When you join Richard Jones on one of his Charles Dickens London walks you are joining the man who wrote the book Walking Dickensian London.

One of the addresses that is covered on this walking tour of Dickens London is 58 Lincoln’s Inn Fields which was, from 1834 to 1856, the home of John Forster (1812–76).

Forster was Dickens’s greatest friend and his first significant biographer. Dickens based Mr Podsnap in Our Mutual Friend (1864–65) on Forster, and later used his house for the residence of Mr Tulkinghorn – legal adviser to Sir Leicester Dedlock and evil blackmailer of Lady Dedlock – in Bleak House.

Dickens was at his lawyer-bashing best when he wrote:

The crow flies straight across Chancery Lane… into Lincoln’s Inn Fields. Here, in a large house, formerly a house of state, lives Mr Tulkinghorn. It is let off in sets of chambers now, and in these shrunken fragments of its greatness lawyers lie in maggots in nuts.’

On the 2nd December, 1844 Dickens, who had travelled especially from Italy for the occasion, gave a private reading at Forster’s house from his new Christmas story ‘The Chimes’. The select gathering included Forster, Thomas Carlyle, and Daniel Maclise.

‘There was not a dry eye in the house’, wrote Daniel Maclise to Catherine Dickens, who had remained in Italy. ‘Shrieks of laughter – there were indeed – and floods of tears as a relief to them – I do not think that there ever was such a triumphant hour for Charles… ’

Maclise also did a pencil sketch of the occasion (opposite), showing Dickens seated at the desk, the book open in front of him, surrounded by his enraptured audience.

Forster considered it an accurate depiction of the event, although he did comment that there was a touch of caricature of which he considered himself ‘chief victim.’

A second reading two evenings later was equally successful, and thus were sown the seeds of Dickens forays into amateur theatricals and, according to Forster, ‘those readings to larger audiences by which, as much by his books, the world knew him in later life.’

This is just one location that features on Richard’s Dickens London walks but it really is a Dickensian landmark and a true time capsule of Victorian London.

A Dickens London walk

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

Richard Jones has written numerous books on Walks around London. They include Walking Haunted London, Uncovering Jack the Ripper’s London and Walking Dickensian London.

Recently we were approached by a client who wanted to know which were the best Dickens London walks for an avid Dickens fan to do.

Charles Dickens can be encountered all over London. Indeed his books an even be used to plot a series of exciting and fascinating London walks that take you in to the lesser known places of this great City.

But for the ultimate Charles Dickens London walk you should begin at Chancery Lane Underground Station. Close by is Gray’s Inn one of London’s four Inns of Court. As a teenager Charles Dickens came to waork here for the solicitor’s firm of Ellis and Blackmore and the first Square you come in to is as it was in Dickens day.

From here you can make your way across Holborn into Staple Inn, a black and white timebered building that admits you to a peaceful oasis that has hardly changed since Dickens featured it in The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

Then making your way along Chancery Lane you can turn into Lincoln’s, Inn another of the Inns of Court where Dickens begin his most scathing attack on the English Legal System in Bleak House.

Across Lincoln’s Inn Fields you arrive at the former home of John Forster Dickens great friend and business advisor. It was in an upstairs room of this house that Dickens gave the first reading of his Christmas book The Chimes.

Close nearby is the Old Curiosity Shop in Portugal Street which, although not the one that Dickens wrote about in his book of that name, is nonetheless worth a look at as it is a very picturesque building that dates from 1567.

So within a few short streets you can enjoy a Dickens London walk that takes in numerous locations that are associated with England’s greatest novelist.