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London Ghost Walks - Richard Jones

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Once again tonight, Saturday, Richard Jones will be leading his Haunted London walk through the historic streets of the old City of London.

Richard is London’s leading London Ghost Walk guide and his research into paranormal London has resulted in him writing 17 books on Haunted Britain, that include two on Haunted London, plus History and Mystery Walks of London and Edinburgh.

Richard has been conducting London walks to the places where ghosts have been seen for 0ver 28 years and he is up to date on all aspects of sinister and ghostly London.

He is also one of the top Jack the Ripper tour guides in London and is the author of two acclaimed books on Jack the Ripper’s London Uncovering Jack the Ripper’s London and Jack the Ripper the Casebook.

In 2004 he wrote and produced the drama-documentary Unmasking Jack the Ripper’s, which has been hailed as the best Jack the Ripper documentary of recent years.

So why not join Richard on one of his ghost walks of London?

He does them on Fridays and Saturdays. Each of these spooky London walks last for around 1 3/4 hours and takes you into the darker recesses of the old City of London.

You can also purchase Richard’s books and dvd’s from our online bookshop.

Richard is currently working on his new book Haunted Britain and is the process of filming several programmes on Haunted London that will be released early next year.

The book has meant that Richard has had to defer part of an important London project he was working on this year until October 2010, but that means the book will be a full resource for those who want to find out about the Ghosts of Britain.

So keep reading the blog for news of all these exciting new developements from London’s leading ghost walk guide.

Jack the Ripper - London walks and tours

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

Our Jack the Ripper London walks take you through the very streets where the infamous murders occurred in the autumn of 1888.

The alleyways we explore really are amongst some of the most atmospheric in London and our set of Victorian Photographs, which show the streets through which you stroll on our London walk, truly help give you a sense of what the area was like at the time of the murders.

In addition our Jack the Ripper Tour is led by experts who have been researching the case for many years and who are up to date with every twist and turn of what is, without doubt, the world’s most famous murder mystery.

Our London walking tour guides include Richard Jones and Mark Ubsdell who together produced what has been called one of the best Jack the Ripper documentaries of recent years Unmasking Jack the Ripper.

This 75 minute dvd was recently chosen by the Museum in Docklands as the one they wanted to sell at their shop during their 2008 Jack the Ripper exhibition.

It features expert opinions by way of talking head interviews given by such renowned Jack the Ripper historians and Tour guides as Paul Begg, Lindsay Siviter and Jenny Philips.

It also contains some truly atmospheric dramatic recreations that were filmed on location in the streets of Whitechapel, as well as in the London Dungeon’s Jack the Ripper exhibition, the Clink Prison Museum and The, now closed, House of Detention in Clerkenwell.

The dvd costs just £12.99 and can be ordered from our online shop.

In the meantime here is a little taster of what the film looks like.

Mystical Scotland - A Break From London

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

In 2004 Richard Jones took a break from his London walks and headed off on a journey across Scotland as part of his research for his book Mystical Britain and Ireland.

He has put together a short series of photographs of the places he visited on that journey. It is accompanied by a haunting “otherworldly” soundtrack which was composed by Bjorn Lynne.

The locations that are featured on the collage are of locations all across Scotland.

The film begins with photographs taken by Richard when he visited the Island of Iona. On the day he took the boat over to the Ireland it was, unbeknown to him, the 10th anniversary of the death of John Smith the former leader of the Labour Party.

John Smith is buried on Iona and on the Sunday that Richard took the boat across to it theyt were holding a memorial service for him. The consequence was that Richard found himself on board with Gordon Brown and other members of the Labour party.

Returning from Iona Richard drove to Glencoe and then continued on deep into the Highlands of Scotland.  Other locations that feature on the homage to Mystical Scotland include Loch Ness, although Richard never got to see the Loch Ness Monster, the Fairy Hill, several burial chambers and some wonderful historic locations that really did have a special and mystical feel to them.

Richard is now back in London conducting his Walks of the City, but he will soon be setting off again on another of his journeys around Britain as he begins work on his new book Haunted Britain, which is due for publication on Halloween 2010.

So why not join Richard on one of his London walks before he heads of again into the wilds of Britain?

LONDON GHOST WALKS

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Today’s blog is a little different to the normal blogs we have been posting about our London walks.

Following on from this morning’s blog we thought it might be an idea if you could actually watch a segment of the London Ghost Walk conducted by paranormal expert Richard Jones.

To that end please find below a snippet of Richard on one of his Haunted London walks telling the tale of the Cripplegate Ghost as featured on our Haunted London walk.


Richard knows how to tell a ghost story and how to hold his audience as the tale unfolds before them. Notice the surprises that he inflicts on members of his group!

But also notice the faces of all those present as they follow the story and react to each drop in voice tone each, carefully crafted phrase, each glimpse over their shoulders that suggests someone, or something, might be lurking behind them.

This is how a ghost story should be told. It should be dramatic and hold your attention throughout and Richard Jones is a masterful storyteller who has the ability to hold his audience, lull them into a false sense of security and then spring the surprise with impeccable timing.

Richard is the premier ghost walk guide in London, and has written many books on Haunted Britain and Haunted London. These include Walking Haunted London, Haunted London, and History and Mystery Walks of London. He has appeared on international television being interviewed and presenting on the ghosts of London.

So why not join Richard on his haunted London walk and enjoy almost two hours of spooky fun?

Click here to join Richard’s Haunted London walks.

London Ghost Walks With Richard Jones

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

Tonight Richard Jones will be leading one of his acclaimed Haunted London walks.

Richard is a leading expert on the ghosts of London and has been doing his Walks of the haunted City now for the last 28 years.

Tonight’s walk is entitled Alleyways and Shadows and it explores some great locations at the heart of the old City of London.

Walks on a Saturday night in the City are really atmospheric because the streets, alleyways, courtyards and passages are completely devoid of living souls.

That means that London’s “other” residents, the ghosts of former citizens can roam at will through the streets and places that they once knew so well in life.

Richard’s Haunted London walks take in some very historic places. These include old alleyways that have changed little since the days when Charles Dickens knew them. Indeed, one of the locations visited is the site where Dickens began that most ghostly of ghostly tales A Christmas Carol.

Other locations that the tour visits include one of the City of London’s most paranormally active buildings, and a spectacular view of the City’s medieval Palace, Guildhall built between 1411 and 1440.

Richard is the author of the acclaimed book Walking Haunted London and of the definitive guide to the ghosts of the capital Haunted London. In addition he was the resident historian on Living Tv’s cult show Most Haunted Live from 2003 to 2005.

So who better to guide you through the twists and turns of London’s more sinister history than the man who didn’t just read a few ghost stories in a book but, rather, wrote the book?

Richard’s Haunted London walks take place on Fridays and Saturdays. They must be booked in advance.

Click here for details of our Haunted 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.

Tonight’s Jack the Ripper London Walking Tour.

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

Tonight why not do something different in London and join one of our Jack the Ripper London walks?

We have been conducting our walking tour of Jack the Ripper’s London since 1982 and ours is considered the best of all the London Jack the Ripper walks.

That is because our jack the Ripper tour is the only one that is consistently led by experts. Our guides aren’t guides who’ve learnt their tour from a book or, even worse, a script.

They are genuine experts on the case whose knowledge comes from years of in depth research into this fascinating murder mystery.

But they are also committed storytellers who have the ability to put the subject across in an intriguing, informative and entertaining manner.

In addtion, several of our Jack the Ripper London walks guides are published authors who have written accalimed books on the subject.

Richard Jones is the author of Jack the Ripper:- The Casebook and Uncovering Jack the Ripper’s London.Philip Hutchinson is the author of Jack the Ripper’s London Then and Now. John Bennett is the author of the book  E1.The Streets of Whitechapel and Spitalfields.

No other London walks can offer you this level of expertise when it comes to this fascinating slice of London’s history.

In addtion we start at Aldgate East Underground Station right in the heart of the district that, in 1888, became Jack the Ripper’s killing ground.

We do limit the numbers so booking is essential on the tour. You can book your tickets via our website www.Jack-the-ripper-tour.com.

Hidden Interiors of Old London

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

In 1982 Richard Jones added one of his most popular London walks to his repertoire of tours. Called the Hidden Interiors of Old London this walk took participants into some of the secret buildings around Temple, Fleet Street and Lincoln’s Inn.

A Highlight of this London walk was the visit to the Sir John Soane House in Lincoln’s Inn Fields.

The house is situated at numbers 12, 13 and 14 Lincoln’s Inn Fields and it is named for Sir John Soane, the architect of the Bank of England.

His greatest distinction as an architect of London is that more of his buildings have been demolished than anyone other London architect!

Thankfully, as those who join our hidden London walks can testify to this was not the case with the wonderful old time capsule that was once his home and is now a museum.

He built No 12 in 1792, No 13 in 1812 and No 14 in 1824, residing at No 12 from 1792 to 1812.

But this was never intended to be just a house, he was also building a museum. The facade of this museum, a striking feature (which was open until glazed by Soane in 1834), shows his kleptomania: the Gothic pedestals built into the piers between the windows come from the fourteenth- century north front of Westminster Hall. The museum houses a remarkable collection of Egyptian, Roman, Greek, Medieval, Renaissance and Oriental objects, a fascinating ‘Aladdin’s Cave’. William Hogarth’s Rake’s Progress and The Election are on show in the picture room.

They say every picture tells a story and this is particularly true of the works of William Hogarth.

On the Hidden London walk Richard used to delight in explaining the story behind these two works by Hogarth.

Hogarth was an engraver, draughtsman, painter and satirist. He was an influential artist of his age. Under the patronage of Thornhill (painter of the ceiling of St Paul’s Cathedral), whose daughter he married, he changed from silver engraver to a critic of the dehumanizing money values, cultural snobbery and Palladianism of his time; creating paintings of the crowd which used real people, people who get in each other’s way, people whose breath smells.

In his own words he says, ‘I therefore turned my thoughts to a still more novel mode, viz. painting and engraving modern moral subjects…. I wished to compose pictures on canvas, similar to representations on the stage…. I have endeavoured to treat my subjects as a dramatic writer; my picture is my stage, and men and women are my players…. This I found was most likely to answer my purpose, provided I could strike the right passions, and by small sums for many, by the sale of prints I could engrave from my own pictures, thus secure the property to myself.’

In tomorrows blog we will look at how Hogarth’s Rakes Progress features on our Hidden Interiors of Old London walks.

Richard’s New Book - Haunted Britain

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Richard Jones has written many books of London walks. They include Walking Dickensian London, Memorable Walks in London (now into its 6th edition), Walking Haunted London (the 4th edition of which comes out in September), History and Mystery Walks of London, not to mention his free Harry Potter PDF which has now been requested over 2,000 times.

In addition to his books of London walks Richard is also a prolific writer on Britain’s more mystical and paranormal heritage. His books range from Mystical Britain and Ireland to the international best seller Haunted Britain and Ireland.

Richard has travelled all over Britain and Ireland collecting ghost stories for his seventeen published books on Britain’s more ethereal history. He is also widely acknowledged as the best ghost walk guide in London.

Walks that take in everything from haunted plaque pits to haunted pubs are Richard’s stock in trade and with 28 years of doing ghost tours in London he is, as the Evening Standard  memorably put it “pretty much ahead of the pack.”

In May this year Richard was appraoched by a major international publisher asking if he would write a new book on Haunted Britain for them.

Since it has been over a year since he wrote his last book History and Mystery Walks of Edinburgh, and almost six years since he wrote his last major work on Britain’s spectral landscape, Richard was happy to accept.

Thus the new book is now in the planning stages and, in September, Richard wset off for the higlands of Scotland to begin another of his jaunts around Britain.

The book will feature mostly new locations and, as with all Richard’s books on the subject, each one of them will be open to or accessible by the public.

Needless to say Richard will be cutting back on his regualr London walks whilst he is off jaunting around the haunted landscapes of Britain, but he still plans to do his Friday and Saturday night London ghost walk.

One of the new aspect of the up and coming book is that Richard will post a reguular blog here on his travels from whichever location he happens to be in on that particular day. You will be able to follow his progress around the country and, as it were, eavesdrop on his  conversations and discoveries. Indeed, it is hoped that you might feel moved to help out with the research for the book by letting Richard know of any haunted locations near you that you think should be included in the new book. As long as they are open to the public Richard will be delighted to visit and consider them.

In the meantime why not join Richard on one of his haunted London walks and see gor yourself why his is widely considered to be the most in depth and best presented ghost walk in 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.