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Walks In Harry Potter’s London

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Platform nine-and-three-quarters has moved!

Yes, you read it right. They have moved platform nine-and-three quarters at King’s Cross Station whilst building work goes on.

King’s Cross is currently undergoing a major renovation and this has affected several of the locations featured on our London walks.

You used to arrive at Platform nine-and-three-quarters by strolling along Platform eight and then turning left towards platforms 9,10 and 11.

Not any more though. As those who have requested our free Harry Potter London walks PDF will know, if you arrive at the old location you will find an information board telling you that the platform has moved. They do provide a map to help you discover this major Harry Potter London attraction, but of course it is much better to just go straight to the new location.

You can do that very easily by just walking straight down Platform eight, passing the Ticket Office and the Left Luggage Office. Having gone past the bike stands next the next turning left and there on the left you will find a luggage trolley embedded in the walk and above it the sign for Platform 9 3/4.

For those who want to follow our free self guided London walks around the Harry Potter film location sites. You can still request out Harry Potter Tour PDF.

This 30 page very detailed booklet is a print off and follow fully researched London walk around the Harry Potter sites all over London.

To receive your copy of the PDF please just email us at

harry-potter-pdf@discovery-walks.com

and we’ll send you the free 30 page pdf by return.

London Characters On Our Walks

Sunday, July 5th, 2009

On our City of London walks we wander along Cheapside and turn into Ironmonger Lane. On the wall of the building on the corner is an image of one of the most famous Londoners ever St Thomas Becket.

It marks the site of the birthplace of the murdered Archbishop of Canterbury and is an important part of the history that we cover on our London walks since it gives the opportunity to tell our walkers about the office of England’s chief prelate.

In the spring of  AD597 St Augustine landed in England with instructions from Pope Gregory to convert its inhabitants to Christianity.

As a deacon in Rome, Gregory had been much taken with a group of fair haired slaves he had seen for sale in the market place. When he asked their nationality he was told that they were Angles, to which he made the famous, punning riposte that they were “not Angles but Angles.”

The story is probably apocryphal and its veracity is difficult to ascertain today, but certainly something persuaded Gregory that the Angles were worth converting to Christianity, and so he persuaded St Augustine and a band of fellow monks to set sail as missionaries and so it was that in the Spring of AD597, Augustine arrived in Kent and set about his duty of bringing the Good News of Christ to its pagan inhabitants.

The missionaries were received with courtesy by Ethelbert of Kent, a pagan King who was married to a Christian wife. The King agreed to grant Augustine an audience and so the two men met at Thanet, with Ethelbert seated in the open and Augustine and his fellow monks standing before him with their standards, a silver cross and a portrait of Christ, placed where the King could see them.

Having listened to Augustine’s message, Ethelbert told the missionary that he and his people could not be expected to abandon the religion that they had always followed, but he granted permission for the monks to go to Canterbury and preach their message to anyone who would listen.

Eventually, however, Ethelbert did find himself moved by Augustine’s message and on the following Whit Sunday, the King was baptised at Canterbury and within a few years most of his subjects had followed suit.

Thus began the conversion of  England to the Christian religion, as gradually its message spread throughout the other Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms. Augustine was made Archbishop of the English and, having established his See at Canterbury, he founded a monastery there. From this foundation eventually grew Christ Church Cathedral, which today is an awe-inspiring mix of Romanesque and Perpendicular Gothic architecture.

Of course on our London walks we tell the story of the murder of Becket in Canterbury Cathedral.

At a little after 4pm on December 29th 1170, four Norman knights - who were responding to an outburst against the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas a Becket, by King Henry 2nd, “What Miserable drones and traitors have I nourished…who allow their lord to be treated with such shameful contempt by a low-born cleric,” arrived at Canterbury Cathedral and murdered Becket.

In so doing they sparked off one of the greatest saint-hero cults of the Middle Ages and turned the unappealingly arrogant, haughty and self-centred Becket into a posthumous international icon.

Within three years the dead arch-bishop had been canonised and the shrine of St Thomas at Canterbury soon became one of the Christian world’s greatest places of pilgrimage, and countless miracles were said to have taken place there.

London Pub Walks

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Of all the London walks that we offer some of the most popular our our range of historic pub walks of London.

What is a London Pub Walk?

One thing a pub walk isn’t is a pub crawl! It’s not about binge drinking but rather about a gentle stroll through an historic neighbourhood stopping off to enjoy the hospitality at some of the lovely old pubs in the area explored.

It is a fantastic and intriguing mix. A nice stroll through old streets that our cobwebbed by time. You learn about the characters who have lived in the area and hear about the history of the area. You get to see some great neighbourhoods. Then, just, when your legs are getting slightly weary hey presto your guide opens the door of a pub and you have a fifteen to twenty minute break to have a sit down, enjoy a drink and explore its interior. How good is that?

Your thirst slaked its off into the streets to find and experience more historic buildings and more history.

In addition our London Pub Walks are a great way of socialising. You are going round with a group of people who, at first might be strangers, but who, by the end of the evening have become drinking buddies.

Since each of these London walks that explore the pubs of old London is a true gem, chosen for its ambiance, there is much to talk about, much to discuss and much to comment on.

So if you are looking for a night out with a difference then choose a gentle strol through historic London and enjoy socialising the way people used to before technology took over our lives! Cheers!

Walks of London - Charles 1st

Friday, June 26th, 2009

In an earlier post we told how on our Dickens London walks we mention the site of the Golden Cross Hotel which used to stand on the site now occupied by Trafalgar Square.

Today a statue of Charles 1st stands on the site of part of the old hotel and on our Westminster London walks we tell how Charles was beheaded not far from here outside the Banqueting House of Whitehall Palace.

On the night of April 13th, 1810, a man named Moxon, a porter employed at the Golden Cross Hotel, was walking across the road at Charing Cross when he stumbled over a heavy metal object.

He stooped to pick it up, and found that he was holding in his hand the sword, buckler and straps which had fallen from the equestrian statue of Charles I.

The newspapers of the day record that Moxon handed the articles over to a certain Mr. Eyre, a trunkmaker, who kept them for some time before he received instructions what to do with them from the Board of Green Cloth at St. James’s Palace.

After considerable delay the sword was replaced on the statue, from which it would appear that officialdom was in no hurry to complete the accoutrements of the ill-fated “Martyr” King, Jacobitism still being a vivid memory.

About 30 years later the sword disappeared entirely. A writer in a periodical of 185o comments : “When did the real sword, which but a few years back hung at the side of the
equestrian Statue of King, Charles at Charing Cross, disappear?

“That the sword was a real one of that period, I state Upon the authority of my learned friend, Sir Samuel Meyrick,who had ascertained the fact, and who pointed out to me its loss.”

A correspondent replied to this query as follows : “The sword disappeared about the time of the Coronation of her present Majesty [Queen Victoria], when some scaffolding was erected around the statue, which afforded great facilities for removing the rapier—for such it was; and I also understood that it found its way into the so-called museum of the notorious Captain D–, where in company with the wand of the Great Wizard of the North, and other well-known articles, it was carefully labelled and numbered, and a little account appended relating the circumstances of its acquisition and removal.”

To which the editor added a footnote, intending to be facetious : “The age of chivalry is certainly ‘past, otherwise the idea of disarming a statue would never have entered the head of any man of arms even in his most frolicsome mood.”

A new sword was placed in position, but so little did officialdom still care about Charles I that they actually affixed a modern one.

But this sword, too, disappeared — when, is not certain.

Light on this second theft, however, was given in 1924 by Miss Elizabeth Montizambert in her book, “Unnoticed London.”

She recorded that while she was in British Columbia she received a letter from a stranger who had read her book, giving information as to the disappearence of the sword.

The writer of the letter declared that he had “accidentally appropriated” the article.
In 1867, he said, he was a reporter on a newspaper, and in December of that year Her Majesty’s Theatre was destroyed by fire. He was in the crowd when it occurred, and realized that the pedestal of the Charles I statue was a good vantage ground from which to view the blaze.

He climbed the pedestal, using the sword for the purpose. The weapon broke off in his hands, and he was about to throw it away when someone begged it from him to keep as a souvenir.

Further inquiries failed to elicit the name of the man to whom the sword was given.

Thus it is possible that swords from the Charles 1 statue are still in existence somewhere.

The statue itself has had a curious history. It was modelled by Hubert Le Soeur, a Frenehman, who came to England about the year 1630, and was cast to the order of the Earl of Arundel, in 1639, “on a spot of ground hard by Covent Garden Church.”

It was put in place just before the outbreak of the Civil War. When hostilities began, the Roundheads had little use for the statue of the King, admirable though it was, and forthwith ordered it to be removed.

The Parliament sold it to a brazier, named Rivet, strictly on condition that it should be melted down or at least broken up. Rivet, who lived near Holborn Conduit, may have been a Royalist and disliked breaking up the effigy of his King. Or, believing that the Commonwealth regime could be only temporary, he may have thought there was a possibility of selling the statue in the future.

At all events he kept the statue intact. He buried it under ground, and proceeded to make knives and forks with bronze handles which he declared were relics of the statue.

He is said to have made a small fortune out of these knives and forks which were bought in large quantities both by Royalists, as a mark of affection for their King, and by the Roundheads as a memorial of their triumph over Charles.

After the Restoration, the statue reappeared and was bought by the Government and set up in 1671 on the Charing Cross site where it stands today and by which we pause on our Westminster London walks and ponder the history of this relic of old London.

Pepys London - The Great Fire Walks

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

London has seen more than its fair share of destruction. The Blitz of World War Two razed vast areas of the city and some were never rebuilt. As we make away around the historic City on all our London walks that cover the one square mile we encounter blue plaques that remember long ago buildings that were destroyed in 1666 by the Great Fire of London.

We can stand on a spot and try and recreate the terror and dismay that swept through London as the fire raged through its narrow streets of mid-17th Century London.

Walks are a great way to follow the fires trail of destruction as they provide a way to really get into, so to speak, the flames. But you can’t beat eye witness accounts for bringing home the immediacy of how the people of London tried desperately to halt the fire.

Fortunately for us, Samuel Pepys, the great 17th century diarist, lived close to where the fire began and our Pepys’s London walk takes you through the streets that he knew.

But the most moving part of the walk is when Pepys describes actually witnessing the fire and, since we could never hope to better his “lived through” it account he is going to be our guest blogger today and is going to transport you make to the early hours of a September morning in 1666 when a dull glow on the London skyline gave Londoners the first glimpse of one of London’s greatest catastrophes. Over to you Samuel:

From the diary of Samuel Pepys as recited on our Great Fire of London walk.

Lords day. Some of our maids sitting up late last night to get things ready against our feast today, Jane called us up, about 3 in the morning, to tell us of a great fire they saw in the City.

So I rose, and slipped on my nightgown and went to her window, and thought it to be on the back side of Markelane at the furthest; but being unused to such fires as (allowed, I thought it far enough of and so went to bed again and to sleep.

About 7 rose again to dress myself, and there looked out at the window and saw the fire not so much as it was, and further off. So to my closet to set things to rights after yesterday’s cleaning. By and by. Jane comes and tells me that she hears that above 300 houses have been burned down tonight by the fire we saw, and that it was now burning down all Fishstreet by London Bridge. So I made myself ready presently, and walked to the Tower and there got up upon one of the high places, Sir J. Robinsons little son going up with me; and there I did see the houses at that end of the bridge all on fire, and an infinite great fire on this and the other side the end of the bridge — which, among other people, did trouble me for poor little Michell and our Sarah on the Bridge. So down, with my heart full of trouble, to the Lieutenant of the Tower, who tells me that it begun this morning in the King’s bakers house in Pudding lane, and that it hath burned down St. Magna Church and most part of Fishstreete already.

So I down to the waterside and there got a boat and through the bridge, and there saw a lamentable fire. Poor Michelle house, as far as the Old Swan, little time it got as far as the Stillyard while I was there. Everybody endeavouring to remove their goods, and flinging into the River or bringing them into lighters that lay off Poor people staying in their houses as long as till the very fire touched them, and then running into boats or clambering from one pair of stair by the waterside to another.

And among other things, the poor pigeons I perceive were loath to leave their houses, but hovered about it the windows and balconies  ’till they were some of them burned, their wings, and fell down.

Having stayed, and in an hour’s time seen the fire rage every way, and nobody to my sight endeavouring to quench it, but to remove their goods and leave all to the fire; and having seen it get as far as the Steeleyard, and the wind mighty high and driving it into the city, and everything, after so long a drougth, proving combustible, even the very stones of churches, and among other things, the poor steeple by which pretty Mrs. [Horsley] lives, and whereof my old schoolfellow Elborough is parson, taken fire in the very top and there burned till it fall down.

I to Whitehall with a gentleman with me who desired to go off from the Tower to see the fire in my boat— to Whitehall, and there up to the King’s closet in the chapel, where people came about me and I did give them an account dismayed them all and word was carried in to the King, so I was called for and did tell the King and-Duke of York what I saw, and that unless his Majesty did command houses to be pulled down, nothing could stop the fire.

They seemed much troubled, and the King com¬manded me to go to my Lord Mayor from him and command him to spare no houses but to pull down before the fire every way. The Duke of York bid me tell him that if he would have any more soldiers, he shall; and so did my Lord Arlington afterward, as a great secret. Here meeting with Capt. Cocke, I in his coach, which he lent me, and Creed with me, to Pauls; and there walked along Wading street as well as I could, every creature coming away loaden with- goods to save — and here and there sick people carried away in beds.

Extraordinary good goods carried in carts and on backs. At last met my Lord Mayor in Canning Streete, hie a man spent, with a handkercher about his neck. To the King’s message, he cried like a fainting woman, “Lord, what can I do? I am spend People will not obey me. I have been punting] down houses. But the fire overtakes us faster then we can do it.” That he needed no more soldiers; and that for himself, he must go and refresh himself, having been up all night. So he left me, and I him, and walked home.

How’s that for first hand reporting? This account from a man who was there. A man who saw and spoke with the major players in the drama. But its the little personal observations that really move people when we recite excerpts from the diary on our London walks. That quote “the poor pigeons I perceive were loath to leave their houses, but hovered about it the windows and balconies ’till they were some of them burned, their wings, and fell down” is one such observation that can only have come from someone who was there.

London’s Best Ghost Walk

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

London Ghost Walks are incredibly popular and their are several walking tour companies who offer to show you London’s haunted heritage.

Of all those London walks Richard Jone’s Haunted London Tour is widely acknowledged as far and away the best.

Richard is well placed to show you the streets and places of haunted London since he is the author of 20 books on Britain’s supernatural landscape. he wrote the books Wallking Haunted London and Haunted London.

From 2003 to 2005 Richard was the historian on Living TV’s hugely sucessful cult programme Most Haunted Live, and he has appeared on programmes all over the world discussing Britain’s ghostly places.

His London ghost walk has been enjoyed by people from all over the world and has been acclaimed as the best of all similar London walks.

Typical of the many rave reviews his haunted tour of London has received was one written by Dan Neidermyer, who had been doing London walks for years and who felt moved to comment after joining Richard’s tour that

“… I have been coming to England for many years and have done almost all the … London Walks. In all honesty you are truly the “BEST” …”

In February 2009 Annabel, a student at London’s Imperial College, joined Richard’s tour and later posted on the college student blog that:-

Our tour guide, Richard Jones, who possesses a superbly oratory and expressive voice, guided us from place to place in the local area, providing plenty of elegantly stuffy central London architecture- - and odd nooks and crannies.

In summing up on the Blog Annabel wrote that:-

All in all, I felt we stopped at a good number of locations and it was fun to walk about a piece of the city at night, hearing odd bits of history and ghostly lore. It was more of a history walk, really- but the guide put in neat bits of acting, stuttering or pausing to flinch as his delivery was distracted by unseen flickers in the background, throwing cautious glances, askance, and making all of us jump with perfectly timed volume changes in his storytelling.

“BANG!!” he screamed at one point, and “AAAAAARRGGH!!!!” at another, into the face of a poor girl who instinctively replied “AAAAARRRRGGGHH!!!!!!!” right back.

Odd. Historical. Exercising. Spooky. Fun!

It is these complimentary reviews from people who have actually taken the tour and who are in a position both to comment on it and make comparisons with other companies that we find most rewarding.

After all, we have striven for years to put together a tour that is thrilling, chilling and informative, but when participants send in unsolicited complimentary comments (or even blog us) it’s great to realise that our London walks and Haunted Tours are providing people with a pleasant and rewarding night out in London.

More on our free London walking tours

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

One of the comments we often hear from people on our various London walks is just how expensive London is.

Whereas this is true if you choose to follow the well trodden (and, it must be said, extremely crowded) tourist routes, there is a lot more to London than  attractions that can cost an arm and a leg.

Walking is a great way to see London and since 2005 we have been writing and publishing an entire series of free London walks that have been specially devised to get you away from the busy main roads and in to the lesser known backstreets where so much of London’s fascinating history was forged.

Each carefully researched and paced out London walk will introduce you to aspects of this wonderful city that you might never dream still existed.

For example the walk that takes in Fleet Street and The Temple includes a visit to the crypt of St. Bride’s Church. This beautiful wren church, the spire of which is rightly acknowledged as Sir Christopher Wren’s prettiest spire, was where Virginia Dare, the first English child born on North American soil, was christened.

The church was devastated by bombing in the Second World War. But those bombs uncovered layers of buildings that have stood on the site going right back to a Roman pavement dating back 2,000 years.

To explore the crypt of this lovely church is to forage in the past, and a series of fascinating display boards tell you all about the history of the site and the surrounding area.

It costs nothing to visit this London attraction. Admittedly it doesn’t have the bells and whistles of computarised reconstructions and interactive displays that many of the modern (and let’s be honest extremely expensive) London attraction have. You have to use your imagination here, create pictures in your mind’s-eye, absorb the atmosphere and feel the place as opposed to having it all done for you by some computer generated wizardry.

But is that a bad thing? The aspect of our London walks that people seem to like a great deal is that we make use of the almost forgotten art of storytelling to set the scene and create the atmosphere.

In addition we are the only one of the London walks companies to actually offer you a choice of both paid for and free walking tours.

You can join our expert guides and enjoy a 2 hour stroll through historic London, or you can print off one of our free walks and do the same tour in your own time and at your own pace.

Our free Harry Potter PDF is the first of a long list of exciting and fascinating London walks that we will be rolling out over the next few months. If you would like a copy please fill in the quick request form at the top of the page and you will receive it by email within 24 hours (it might take a little longer at weekends).

But soon we will be offering this free service all over London and to locations outside London such as Oxford, Cambridge, Stonehenge and Shakespeare’s Stratford.

As you will see from our free Harry Potter walk, you don’t get a flimsy 2 page turn left here turn right there type of tour. Our Free Harry Potter London walk is a 28 page pdf that you can print off and follow the step by step instructions interspersed with fascinating facts and snippets of history about the places included.

So please do request our Harry Potter London Tour and please do keep returning to our site for updates as our free London walks begin going live.

Spencer Compton - Westminster Walks

Monday, June 8th, 2009

On our Westminster London walks we take in the Banqueting House, all that survives of Whitehall Palace. It was outside this building that Charles 1st was beheaded on a bitterly cold January morning in 1649.

However, in the middle of the road that runs alongside the Banqueting House there stands a statue to Spencer Compton,  8th Duke of Devonshire, whose story we love telling people who join us on our London walks in this fascinating area.

An able politician, Spencer Compton was Known as Lord Hartington in Politics, although he was also nicknamed Harty Tarty.

During his maiden speech to the House of Lords he yawned. He went on to become known as the man who yawned at his own speeches. With commendable self awareness, however, he did point out in his own defence “some of them were damned dull.”

He is said to be the only peer who dreamt he was addressing the House and woke up to find he was doing just that!

Once when a speaker in House of Lords was expounding on his own political achievements Hartington turned to his neighbour and said loudly “The proudest moment of my life was when my pig won first prize and Skipton Fair.”

However he was an able statesman and politician.

He became an M.P in 1857, was made Under- Secretary for War in 1863,Postmaster general 1868-70, and Chief Secretary of State for Ireland 1870

He was Leader of Liberal Party 1875 -80 and was offered the Premiership by Queen Victoria but declined it.

He was Secretary of State for India and resolved the Afghan crisis 1880-2.

After that he was twice more offered the Premiership but declined it on both occasions.

When we stop alongside his statue on our Westminster London walks people often notice the serpent on its plinth and ask what it is. It is in fact the crest of the Cavendish family, Dukes of Devonshire and is known as “The Cavendish Serpent.”

Historic London Pub Walks

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Our London walks that explore the historic pubs of old London are very popular for birthday parties on office socials.

We have numerous routes around London that tell you something of the history of the area whilst, at the same time, allowing you to sample the hospitality at some of the Capital’s most timeless hostelries.

One of these hostelries which we encounter on several of our Secret London walks, is Ye Olde Mitre, which enjoys the reputation of being London’s most hidden pub.

This venerable London institution dates back to 1547, and we’ve been introducing participants on our London walks pub tours to it since 1982.

Everyone who discovers it is, to say the least, drawn by its magic. For a start, it is so well hidden that it is very much a locals pub. You reach it via a narrow passageway that either comes in from Hatton Garden (London’s Jewellery district) or from Ely Place, a slice of bygone London that has a very colorful history in its own right.

Once inside the Mitre you are pitched back to a bygone age. No fruit machines afron your eyes, no loud, blaring music accosts your ears. Instead the gentle murmur of conversations holds sway and the cheapest beer in London is on sale.

Add to this connections with Elizabeth 1st and Sir Christopher Hatton and you’ll see why the locals to whom this pub is almost a second home, want to keep it a truly hidden gem which is, without doubt, London’s best kept secret.

Pottering around London

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Harry Potter has captured the hearts of young and old across the globe. J. K. Rowling’s outstanding success has spurred a huge trade in all sorts of directions. It seems that everyone is getting in on the Harry Potter phenomenon, so why can’t you enjoy it too?

Yes, you too can get on the Harry Potter train, you can try a fantastic tour. The Harry Potter London walking tour is a great way to do more than just flit past monuments. Oh, it is much more than that and it will cost you absolutely nothing.

The Harry Potter London walking tour is a self-guided tour so you can take as long as you like and explore as much as you like. Kids and adults can travel across London to all the locations used for filming Harry Potter. See, smell, taste and hear Harry Potter’s London come alive.

Experience the real time world of Harry Potter at your leisure and with all your senses. Many London sightseeing tours only offer something to excite the eyes. A Harry Potter London walking tour offers something for everyone and for every one of your senses.

Visit places like Diagon Alley, the Leaky Cauldron and Platform 9¾, see where it all began and enjoy London as it is today. There is nothing more exciting or more enchanting that putting real faces to the places caught on film.