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Jack the Ripper Tour - London walks

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Of all the fantastic London walks we offer none is as popular on a worldwide basis than our celebrated Jack the Ripper Tour.

We really do strive to ensure that our walking Tour of the London haunts of Jack the Ripper is the best on offer.  For a start we are constantly trawling photo archives to come up with original Victorian photographs that give our clients the measure and feel of what the area our walk goes through  was like at the time when the ripper roamed its shadows.

Secondly, we have planned our route to ensure it is the most atmospheric of the routes taken by on of the London walks on their Jack the Ripper Tours.

From the moment (which occurs about 2 minutes into our tour) when we step beneath the cobbled archway that leads to Gunthorpe Street the participants on our Jack the Ripper London walk are confronted by buildings that are still standing and which are, more or less as they were in 1888, the year when the Jack the Ripper murder occurred.

Let’s be honest about this no one signs up for a Jack the Ripper Tour to be taken through modern, well lit streets lines with soaring modern sky scrapers. Well, some might, but what people want on these types of London walks is dark, sinister Victorian alleyways and those who join our tour are not disappointed!

In addition we have a team of guides who are in fact experts on the murders and are able to put across the information in a way that is educational, informative but, at the same time, entertaining and dramatic.

So why not enjoy the welcome difference of a tour that stgarts right in the heart of the area where the Jack the Ripper murders took place, and enjoy a fascinating, albeit slightly chilling, encounter with the streets, alleyways, dark thoroughfares and buildings of the Victorian Metropolis on one of the leading Jack the Ripper London walks.

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.

Why Not Try a Jack the Ripper London walk?

Friday, August 7th, 2009

Are you looking for something to do tonight which is a little bit different?

Why not try something that is chilling, atmospheric and yet at the same time truly fascinating?

Our Jack the Ripper London walks tick all these boxes.

Step by step you wend your way through the old streets of London’s East End on a Walking Tour that leads you round the sites where the Jack the Ripper murders took place in 1888.

The great thing about exploring these streets is just how little they have changed since that long ago autumn when and unknown killer stalking their shadows succeeded in terrorising not just this area but the whole of London.

Walks are a great way to explore these streets as, if you want to get the full atmosphere you have to stray away from the busy main roads.

We have been conducting our jack the Ripper Tour since 1982 and have really got to know the back streets of Whitechapel and Spitalfields.

Our walk not only offers you an expert guide, but also the opportunity to view contemporary photographs of the very streets through which you are walking as they were in 1888.

A Jack the Ripper London Walking tour offers a great way to spend an evening as it will both educate and entertain you.

You can book places on the tour at our Jack the ripper tour website.

But be careful… the shadows will most certainly get darker!

Back to out London walks page.

Jack the Ripper Walks London

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

The Jack the Ripper murders occurred in the autumn of 1888. Over a period of around 12 weeks five prostitutes were discovered in the streets of Whitechapel with their throats cut and their bodies horribly mutilated.

On our Jack the Ripper London walks we tell the story of those 12 weeks when an unknown killer stalking the shadows of one of London’s most densley populated and crime ridden quarters really did send shock waves reverberating around the civilised world.

Each of our Jack the Ripper walking tour guides is an acknowledged expert on the subject and is not only able to bring you the information about the murders but is also able to answer any questions you might have and discuss any theories you might wish to air or discuss.

When the murders began the general consensus in the area was that the crimes were gang related. It was widely believed that they might be the work of one of the hi-rip gangs that were preying on the prostitutes of  Whitechapel.

However, as we explain on our nightly London walks that explore the streets of Jack the Ripper’s East End, this theory had largely been abandoned by September 1888 when Inspector Abberline, a detective with many years experience of the streets, layout, and criminal community of the area, was put in charge of the on the ground investiagtion.

Abberline quickly concluded that he was up against a lone assasin. The problem was how to catch him. With no clues to go on the police simply increased the presence of uniformed and plain clothed officers in the area in the hope that the next time the murderer attacked a victim there would be a policeman on hand to catch him. But since this didn’t happen the murderer remained at large.

It is only by walking the streets of London where the crimes took place that you get the measure of the problems the police were facing in 1888. Our tour is the only one of the Jack the Ripper London walks that starts in the heart of the district where the murders actually occurred. We follow a chronological order to the crimes that helps you understand how the fear and panic gradually increased in the area and how the murderers confidence and ferocity increased with each killing.

So join the experts on a thrilling and historically accurate journey through the East End and enjoy one of our nightly Jack the  Ripper London walks.

London Criminals and Walks.

Friday, July 10th, 2009

Ask most people on our London walks to name a famous London criminal associated with Whitechapel and the chances are that they will come up with the name Jack the Ripper.

Indeed out Jack the Ripper London walks go every night through the streets and alleyways of this atmospheric part of London’s East End.

But there is another famous character associated with Whitechapel who turns up, not just on our East End walking tours, but also on our Chiswick and Hampstead London walks. His name was Dick Turpin and he is without doubt the most famous highwayman to ever have rode across the pages of London legend.

Dick Turpin (1705 –1739) is one of those larger than life figures whose legend contains little resemblance to the actual facts of his, often sordid, life.

Born in the Essex village of Hempstead in September 1705, he grew up in a relatively well-to-do household and received a modest education from the village Schoolmaster, James Smith.

At the age of sixteen he was apprenticed to a butcher in Whitechapel (which is how he comes to feature on our East End London walks), then a pleasant village on the outskirts of London, where he spent five years learning his trade before setting up in business for himself at Waltham Abbey.

Here he married an innkeeper’s daughter named Hester Palmer. When business was slow, he attempted to supplement his income by cattle stealing, was detected and, to avoid capture, fled into the wilds of rural Essex, where he earned a living from robbing the smugglers on the East Anglia Coast, sometimes posing as a Revenue Officer - an ingenuity that was appreciated by neither the smugglers nor the Customs Officers, and he was soon forced to flee again, this time to Epping Forest.

Here he joined forces with a gang of poacher’s and with them graduated from smuggling venison into London beneath wagonloads of vegetables, to burgling houses on the northeastern outskirts of London.

Known as “Gregory’s Gang”, their methods were singularly ruthless and, on one occasion, Turpin is said to have held the landlady of an inn over her fire until she revealed the whereabouts of her savings.

But, with an ever expanding list of charges against them, the gang found rewards of anything between fifty and a hundred pounds upon their heads and, when three of them were caught and hanged, the others decided to disperse.

Turpin now turned his hand to the career that was to bring him notoriety, highway robbery.  One day, in February 1736, on the London to Cambridge Road, he spotted a well-dressed individual, riding a fine horse, and duly attempted to rob him. His demand to “stand and deliver” was, however, met with raucous laughter. “What, dog eat dog?” guffawed the stranger, “Come, come brother Turpin, if you don’t know me, I know you and I shall be glad of your company”. Turpin had inadvertently challenged Tom King, known as the “Gentleman Highwayman” due to his liking for expensive clothes and fine horses.

Thereafter the two became partners in crime and from a cave in Epping Forest would ride out to rob almost every traveller, rich or poor, that had the misfortune to pass their hideout.

In our next part of our Turpin blog we will cover the story of how Turpin left London for York. In the meantime you might like to check out our Jack the Ripper London walks which take in the area where the most infamous East End crimes occurred in 1888.

East End London walks

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

Many of our London walks are led by experts in their field and we pride ourselves on the quality of guiding, and in depth expert knowledge that you will find when you join us for our tours.

Several of our guides are published authors on subjects as diverse as Dickens London, Haunted London, Jack the Ripper and Mystical London.

Indeed when it comes to Jack the Ripper London walks, no other tour company can offer you the guiding  expertise that we can.

Richard Jones, for example, wrote the books Uncovering Jack the Ripper’s London and Jack the Ripper:- The Casebook. He also wrote and presented the acclaimed drama documentary Unmasking jack the Ripper which he produced with mark Ubsdell, another of our top flight Jack the Ripper London walk guides.

Philip Hutchinson wrote the much applauded Jack the Ripper’s London Then and Now for which he uncovered several previously unpublished photographs of the murder sites.

And now John Bennet, a legend in Ripper circles, has contributed to the bookshelves of all those who are interested in East End London walks, with the superb E1: A Journey Through Whitechapel and Spitalfields.

There was a well attended book launch this Thursday just gone at the East End Bookshop on Brick Lane. The audience included local historians, people who had grown up in the area and others who simply had an interest in what is a fascinating distrcit of London.

John Bennett is an extremely popular London tour guide, and he has been studying the East End and its streets for many years. His knowledge of the area is second to none and there is hardly a kerbstone or cobblestone that he couldn’t tell you a story, or two, about.

The book itself is a fantastic read and is destined to become a true classic amongst East End History books.

So be sure to get yourself a copy. John has a few for sale on his Jack the Ripper London walks, or you can do a search on Amazon for E1: A Journey Through Whitechapel and Spitalfields.