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Posts Tagged ‘St Bride’s Fleet Street’

The Perfect Walk of London.

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

There are so many London walks routes that you could follow. You could, for example, explore the area of the Inns of Court on a Legal London Walking Tour.

You could venture onto the wild expanse of Hampstead Heath and then take a stroll through the village of Hampstead on a Walk.

If you want to have a night out that is totally different then why not consider exploring the old pubs and historic inns and taverns of the City on a fun and fascinating London Pub Walk?

The truth is that, with a City like London the only thing that limits you in your exploration is your imagination.

We have been devising Walks of London for 28 years and, in that time, we have covered almost every square inch of London. Yet, strange as it might seem, things still crop up from time to time on our London Walking Tours that surprise even us!

That is because London as a City evolved rather than being built to a plan. One of the things we always stress to out walkers is that, if you really want to explore London you must not walk around with your eyes glues to the ground, you must look all around you. Up down and sideways.

Take Fleet Street for example. If you walk along it from Ludgate Circus you really should pause and look left at the graceful spire of St. Bride’s Fleet Street. This lovely spire was designed by Sir Christopeher Wren.

But it also the spire that inspired the modern tiered wedding cake, a fact that those who take part in our London walks really get to appreciate. Yet many of them say that they would never have really stopped and really looked at and thought about that lovely, graceful spire had we not pointed it out to them and explained its history.

That is why our  London walks are such a good way to explore London because they make you see beyond the obvious and really look at a City that is both beautiful and fascinating in equal measure.

The Blitz in London - walks around the bomb sites

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

We continue our story of how in December 1940 the skies over the City were lit up as fire reigned down on the streets and old buildings of London.

Walks that take in the Blitz give you the opportunity to really get the feel of what it was like to live through the terror of the bombs falling across the city.

Our London walks make an ideal opportunity to explore the places where the damage was greatest.

Yesterday’s blog told of the preparations made by the german bomb crews for the Blitz. In today’s blog we join Londoners as dusk falls over the city of London and they prepare to walk home oblivious to the fact that their city is about to be drastically altered.

Dusk fell over southern England at 5.30 on the evening of the 29th. The Black-out (the wartime ban on lights showing from buildings) began at 5.26pm.

By this time Hauptmann Aschenbrenner was already on his way.
Aschenbrenner’s squadron had received orders for the attack on ‘LOGE’ (codename for London) at 12.30pm and took off from Vannes at 4.30pm.

KG 100 circled over the Gulf of St Malo and Aschenbrenner reported at 5.20pm that he had locked into Anton Beam over Cherbourg with an estimated forty-eight minutes to target.

The bombers headed for the English coast, crossing it near Bognor Regis at 5.47pm. On the English side of the Channel, KG 100 was picked up at 5.15pm by Ventnor radar station, Isle of Wight, as the

Heinkels assembled in battle formation. RAF Fighter Com¬mand HQ at Stanmore, Middlesex, was informed and in turn alerted 11 Group, Fighter Command at sector control Uxbridge. Uxbridge in turn alerted sector airfields at Tang- mere (Kent), Kenley (Surrey) and Gravesend (Kent) to stand by.

As Aschenbrenner crossed the coast, 219 Squadron, Tangmere, scrambled its Beaufighter night fighters (equipped with Al MK IV cockpit radar). These, however, failed to make contact with the raiders.

At 5.58pm Aschenbrenner’s Heinkel passed over Mitcham, Surrey, and the first buzzer, ‘ten miles to target’, sounded in his cockpit.

London was as yet unaware of the great airfleet heading towards it.

At 5.26pm the bells of St Bride’s church, Fleet Street (most beautiful of Wren’s City churches which is covered on our historic London walks) sounded out at the end of service. It was the last time the bells would be heard for seventeen years.

At 5.58pm, when the flight line of the incoming aircraft made it clear they were heading straight for London, Air Marshal ‘Sholto’ Douglas (Fighter Command Operations Room, Stanmore) called Home Office Fire Control Room (Commander Firebrace) with the news that ‘a large formation’ was on its way to London and, seven minutes later, the sirens began to moan out along the South London approaches.

As the sirens sounded to the south, George Garwood, in charge of the permanent staff of St Paul’s Cathedral Fire Watch, received a phone call from the roof informing him of the alert.

He made ready to go upstairs, but first received a second call telling him of IBs falling across the river in Southwark.

By the time Mr Garwood had climbed to the rooftop, IBs were falling all round in heavy showers and bouncing off the dome of the cathedral.

With cloud at 4,500 feet all over southern England and London itself, Aschenbrenner could not see his target and was flying blind.

At 6.08pm the second buzzer in his cockpit sounded out and Aschenbrenner’s bombardier released his deadly cargo.

The IBs straddled Guy’s Hospital, Southwark, London Bridge Railway Station and the River Thames. They were a thousand yards short of the target — the Bank of England — though in the circumstances they had achieved remarkable accuracy.

Bombs away, Aschenbrenner ascended a few thousand feet to circle and observe the rest of his squadron’s performance. The following bombers achieved even greater accuracy, hitting areas around St Paul’s, Moorgate just north of the Bank, and the area around the Tower of London.
On the ground at Guy’s Hospital, surgeons were at work in a temporary operating theatre.

The IBs pierced the roof of the theatre and the surgeons ordered nurses to douse them with sand while continuing the operation.

Outside the hospital, in nearby Tooley Street, Mrs Florence Welsh was closing down her mobile tea canteen for the night. Suddenly the whole street was lit by the bright flare of burning incendiaries. Mrs Welsh resignedly filled up her water boiler to make tea and ’stood by to receive firemen’. She would have a long night ahead of her.

On our next London walks through the Blitz blog we will tell of the resilience with which Londoners faced their peril.

More London Freebies - Walks and Things

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

In addition to our free London walks we like to keep you updated on all the wonderful things to do in London that are absolutely free of charge.

Each week we scout the streets to come up with a handful of locations that you can reach by doing your own London walks and which won’t cost you a penny to experience and dsicover.

Why not take a London walk along Strand and Fleet Street?

Now at first glance you might think these are just busy London thoroughfares with not a great deal worth delaying your journey over.

But you would be wrong. On Strand, for example,  you will find the Royal Courts of justice a magnificent Gothic revival pile that bears a striking resemblence to a Cathedral.

It is in fact the law Courts and you can go inside its hallowed interior and sit in on the trials taking place in the various courts. Criminal Appeal cases and Civil Cases are the order of the day. Be warned that they don’t allow cameras inside the building so don’t try to smuggle one in. But of you can bear to leave the camera behind then you can spend as much or as little time inside the cases as you please.

A little further along is the entrance to the Temple and just inside its gate is the Temple Church, built by the Knights Templar in 1185. In recent years this has achieved fame beyond its historic connotations as it was featured in the books and the film of Dan Brown’s Da Vinci Code.

Walk then to the end of Fleet Street and step inside St Bride’s Church. This pretty Wren church was bombed in the Second World War and those bombs uncovered layers of buildings on the site going right back Roman times 2,000 years ago.

Going down in to the crypt you will find a fascinating display of old relics, stone walls and Roman tiles.

So for just a 10 minute walk along a London street you will find three things to do  that can keep you occupied for hours and you won’t have spent a pennny (on admissions that is - there are toilets for the other kind of spending a penny outside the Royal Courts!)

You might like to end your stroll by treating yourself to lunch at a true Fleet Street Survivor ye Olde Cheshire Cheese. This atmospheric old pub was a favourite with Charles Dickens and Dr. Johnson and it has changed little since it was rebuilt in 1667 after the previous pub was burnt down in the Great Fire of London. The food is not exactly a health kick ( steaks, Steak and Kidney pies being the order of the day) but then you can set off on another of your London walks and walk off your lunchtime excesses.

Cheers!