Welcome to London Discovery Tours

Posts Tagged ‘East End of London’

Jack the Ripper’s London walk

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

An intriguing point was raised on the Jack the Ripper Tour last night. One member of the group, who has done several London walks with us, asked  how the rest of London would have viewed the East End of London in 1888?

The truth is that in 1888 this area consisted of some of London’s worst slums. One of the great things about joining our Jack the Ripper London walk is that we start the tour right in the heart of the district where the murders occurred and, as a consequence, participants get a genuine “feel” of the character of the area.

One of the tragedies about the victims of Jack the Ripper is that they all came from a class of women that, whereas certainly not middle class, were, what could be described as “respectable” working class. But they all shared a common trait that consisted of a downward, drink-fuelled spiral that had seen them separated from their families and living transient existences in the Common Lodging Houses that peppered the East End of London at the time.

Meanwhile the Middle class citizens in the west end of London had plenty to fear about the massive under class that dwelt to the East of the City of London. There was a general fear that a revolution was iminent and that, were it to come, it would come out of the East End of London. Jack the Ripper, although being a danger to a certain class of women, i.e prostitutes, in a very small part of the vast Victorian Metropolis, became in many ways a physical embodiment of the nebulous fears that the Middle classes had about the vast underclass in the East End of London.

You can learn much more about this by joning us for our nightyl Jack the Ripper Tour which departs at 7pm from Aldgate East Underground Station. Booking is essenital as, unlike other London walks, we limit the number on our Jack the Ripper Tour.

Walks in London - Jack the Ripper

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Today is the anniversary of what has come to be known as “the night of the double murder.”

It was in the early hours of 30th September 1888 that the body of Elizabeth Stride, Jack the Ripper’s third victim, was found in Dutfield’s Yard, off  Berner Street; and the body of Catherine Eddowes, Jack the Ripper’s fourth victim, was found in Mitre Square in the City of London.

Our London walks will be following on the trail of Jack the Ripper tonight at 7pm, and will tell you the full history of this series of East End murders.

The Jack the Ripper Tour is a fascinating look at the social history of a quarter of London that has its own distinctive feel and even flavour.

At the time of the Jack the Ripper murders it was a melting pot for many different nationalities, many of whom were low class Eastern European Jews fleeing persecution in Russia and Poland.

In addition it was also home to a huge criminal underclass who had a vested interest in lending as little assistance to the police as possible.

But the night of the double murder had another impact on society as a whole in Victorian London.

Many of the more “respectable” middle class and upper class citizens of London, who lived a good distance away from the district where the murders were occurring, had long believed that a revolution was inevitable. Furthermore they believed that if that revolution occurred it would come out of the slum districts of the East End of London.

On our London walks that explore the streets where the crimes occurred we explain how, up until 30th September 1888, these middle class citizens might gaze nervously towards the East End of London and the events that were occurring there, but it didn’t impact directly on their lives because there was a very district boundary between the East End and the City of London.

But,as we point out on our City of London walks, in the early hours of 30th September, not only did Jack the Ripper murder twice in less than an hour, and right under the noses of police officers who were searching for him, but he also crossed the boundary and murdered Catharine Eddowes in the City of London.

Thus, in the minds of the middle and upper classes, he became a manifestation of all their nebulous fears that they had about the east End of London. Because if the ripper could cross into the City of London and strike at the heart of polite society, then what was to stop the great mass of dispossessed, poverty stricken East Enders doing likewise.

So the 30th September was a turning point that saw the fear of the unknown miscreant spread all across London and into the national consciousness in a way that no lone killer had done before and would never do again.

So why not join us on one of our Jack the Ripper Tours, or enjoy some of our other East End London walks?

Jack the Ripper walk

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

Our Jack the Ripper’s London walk is a journey through the old thoroughfares of the east End of LondonJack the Ripper - London walks that have changed little since 1888 when a lone murderer held the area in grip of fear and panic.

The Jack the Ripper tour is probably one of the most popular London walks and many companies are on hand to offer walks around the area. There are some very good one’s, but there are a lot of absolutely terrible one’s.

Our walk is constantly led by experts. Richard Jones, who founded the tour in 1982, is the author of two highly acclaimed books n the subject, Uncovering Jack the Ripper’s London, and Jack the Ripper: The Casebook.

He was also the writer of the universally applauded Jack the Ripper drama- documentary Unmasking jack the Ripper.

Our guides Philip Hutchinson and John Bennett are both experts on the Jack the Ripper mystery as well as being published authors in their own right.

Philip wrote the book Jack the Ripper’s London Then and Now, for which he uncovered previously undiscovered photographs of the Jack the Ripper murder sites. He also recently unearthed a never before seen photograph of Dutfield’s Yard where the murder of Elizabeth Stride, the third victim of Jack the Ripper, was killed. Such an important find was this that Philip was invited to be a guest speaker at the Jack the Ripper Conference in Knoxville, Tennessee in 2008.

Needless to say these photographs are shown on our Jack the Ripper Tour, making us the only one of the London walks to show you never before seen photographs of the murder sites.

John Bennett is the author of  E1 - A Journey Through Whitechapel and Spitalfields, which takes readers on a fascinating tour through the very streets  explored on our Jack the Ripper London walk.

This degree of expertise is without equal on the London walks scene and that is why ours is THE Jack the Ripper Walking Tour.

In addition  we start our tour at Aldgate East Underground Station, right in the heart of Jack the Ripper’s London. Within two minutes of starting our walk you will be taken in to the old, cobbled alleyways that are just as they were in 1888. You will also have visited the sites of two murders within the first 15 minutes of our tour beginning.

Our walk not only starts in the old alleys that have changed little since Jack the Ripper’s day, but we also limit the number of participants to a sensible and manageable number of around 34 participants per guide.

That is why we are the ONLY Jack the Ripper tour to operate a booking system.

With much smaller groups on our London walks we can actually get in to the old alleyways where you can really experience the atmosphere and get the measure of the Jack the Ripper mystery.

So when you are planning which of the Jack the Ripper London walks to join, be sure to choose wisely. Ensure that your tour is led by an expert who knows the subject inside out, who is willing, and able, to answer any questions you might have. And be sure that you choose a company that cares enough about your enjoyment to limit their numbers. In short choose the walk that’s heard and not herd.

We’ll be waiting for you at Aldgate East Underground Station

THE ONLY PLACE TO BEGIN A JACK THE RIPPER WALK