February 28, 2010

SHOW AND TELL – London

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 9:13 pm

Each Monday, I am going to post a SHOW AND TELL spectacular.  What I would like to do is highlight something in your possession or an item of “London” interest which ANGLOPHILE READERS will enjoy.  Stamp collectors, post card collectors, photographs, letters, old theater flyers, etc. will be fascinating for our readers.  Some of you will think your “spectacular” might be of no interest.  A lady emailed me to say that she is a button collector and wanted to share her collection with my readers– especially old English buttons which she has found all over the UK.  Now, we are set to include this kind of activity.

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I personally have a large collection of English memorabilia which I will use if you readers are slow to get started with this fun Monday posting.

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We have determined that there are 70,000 readers a month on the site.  I am thrilled that we are doing something worthwhile and helpful here.  But, I am eager for more participation from YOU.  I know some of you have had rich experiences in London and have wonderful collections of books, pamphlets, newspaper articles, etc..

Last week a gentleman called me about the National Election coming up in the UK.  We would certainly like to hear from our readers on this subject as well.    Few people outside the UK understand the English political system–pretty dynamic for sure.

Remember, I must have your information before Monday each week.  You can email your items to me at TMooreSr@me.com

This should be great.  Remember, before Monday each week.

Thanks,

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 26, 2010

CONTEMPORARY IMAGES OF ELIZABETH II – St. Dunstan-in-the-West

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 8:45 am

While I was walking down Fleet Street past St. Dunstan-in-the-West, I met up with a sculpture of Queen Elizabeth I which I have often seen.  I was on the site talking to the shopkeepers about my Sweeney Todd posting.  I kept passing the Ol’ Queen and began to wonder a bit about it.  A priest came out of the church right when I needed someone to help me with my ever-pressing questions.  He told me the most amazing story.

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The  life-size stone sculpture was carved in 1586 and was originally in front of Old Ludgate.  The date 1586 would mean it was carved contemporary with Queen Elizabeth I.  In fact, I learn, it is the only image carved in stone during her lifetime.  Further, it has been determined that it is the oldest outdoor statue in London.  What a string of credentials!  There are many paintings of the Queen, but this image is in a different category: sculpture.

In 1766, Ludgate was torn down, and the Queen’s statue was moved to St. Dunstan-in-the-West and placed over the entrance to the parochial school.

I find it so strange that such an important statue could be hidden away where you would see it only if you are searching for it or have reason to linger on the site.  It is a wonderful image, full of regal power and grace.  I am posting a picture of this sculpture as well as a contemporary canvas portrait.  Interesting to realize that the Queen commanded that any depiction of the royal person had to be approved by the Queen personally.  So, compare the sculpture with the painting and see what you think.

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Wow, what an amazingly bit of history–a bit of flesh on the ol’ bones.

I hope you find time to wander down Fleet Street on your way to the TOWER OF LONDON.  It is amazing what you will run into.  I am like you;  we both love history.  But it is more satisfying if we can have these personal encounters which bring these ancient personalities into our modern lives.

Thanks,

Tom

MONUMENT -Great Fire of London – 1666

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 6:24 am

THE GREAT FIRE OF LONDON had a very significant effect on the city.  Thousands of homes were burned, and hundreds of medieval churches disappeared.  This monumental event wiped away vast areas of the city.  However, the city responded with redrawing London’s city map.  Sir Christopher Wren went to work with the support of his friend, King Charles II.   Good thing Cromwell was long gone.

THE GREAT FIRE OF LONDON –1666 — started in Pudding lane.  The great MONUMENT commemorating this event is located nearby at Monument Street and Fish Street Hill.  As you leave  the TOWER OF LONDON, take the extra ten minutes and walk to the MONUMENT TUBE STATION and enjoy this wonderful 17th century monument.

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The MONUMENT was  designed by Sir Christopher Wren– of St. Paul’s Cathedral fame– and was built between 1671-1677.  The Doric column is 202 tall, topped with a gilded urn of fire.   The city has grown all around the MONUMENT, but the gilded urn is viewable all around.

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If you can climb the 311 steps to the top–the tallest isolated stone column in the world– the view is amazing.  I am posting a picture of the fantastic panorama of London taken from the top of MONUMENT. There are two places where such magnificent views overlook London:  the top of  St. Paul’s Cathedral and the top of MONUMENT.

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This monument is a wonderful destination for a walk.  You might wish to carry on and cross LONDON BRIDGE over the Thames and walk on to Southwark Cathedral and then to Tate Modern.

My, what a fantastic afternoon after visiting the jewels in the Tower of London.  Tops–in more ways than one.  Wonderful!

Thanks,

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 25, 2010

SWEENEY TODD at 186 Fleet Street

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 11:15 am

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The blog I wrote on 17 Fleet Street and Prince Henry’s Room has caused a lot of conversation.  So, I went down Fleet Street again to find 186 Fleet Street to hear what I could find out about SWEENEY TODD’S barbershop–just across the street from #17..  All around 186, small shopkeepers all know the story of the DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET.  So, let me tell you what I have found out.  And next you take a walk down Fleet Street, you have another destination to stop and enjoy.

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SWEENEY TODD became a staple of Victorian melodrama and an urban legend.  The original tale was titled STRING OF PEARLS where a barber murdered wealthy customers by slitting their throats, then pulling a lever while they are in his barber’s chair which, unknown to them, is fixed to a revolving trap-door, making them fall backward into the basement.  After Todd robbed his dead victims of their goods, Mrs. Lovett, his partner in crime, assisted him in disposing of the bodies by baking their flesh into meat pies and selling them to the unsuspecting customers of her pie shop.

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Todd’s barber shop is situated at 186 Fleet Street, next to St. Dunstan’s church and is connected to Mrs. Lovett’s pie shop in nearby Bell Yard by means of an underground passage.

The theme and plot of this legend are found in plays, musicals, movies, and even a ballet.  In 2005, a Broadway revival of the Sondheim musical, directed by John Doyle, was mounted at the John Barrymore Theater in 2005.  In 2001, SWEENEY TODD:  THE DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET was a filmed concert version of Sondheim’s musical.   In 2006, a BBC television drama version with a screen play was produced with Ray Winstone in the title role.  And humorously, OH MY MEAT PIE  was an episode in the 12th season of GOOD EATS, an educational cooking show on the FOOD NETWORK.

I have found that there is some fun reading:  SWEENEY TODD: THE DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET edited by Robert Mack.  Oxford University   and Robert Mack’s  THE WONDERFUL AND SURPRISING HISTORY OF SWEENEY TODD: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF AN URBAN LEGEND.  Continuum

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Wow!  What a lot of fun this has been.  I knew about Sweeney Todd and know Sondheim’s music, but all this revolving around 186 Fleet Street has amazed me.

Add this to your walking along Fleet Street.  Lots of fun.  Someone will probably be sitting outside the building enjoying a hot meat pie he has purchased at a local Cornish pie shop.  Yikes!

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 24, 2010

CITIZENS OF LONDON — World War II

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 12:58 pm

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I am in the midst of reading another incredible book.  CITIZENS OF LONDON by Lynne Olson is proving to be an amazing experience.  I thought I would mention this book so I could hook up with others who are also reading it.  I had roots into London during this war period, so these names are personalities of great interest to me.  Let’s read this together.

I look forward to it.

Thanks

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

BOOK REVIEW — A GAMBLING MAN by Jenny Uglow

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 11:49 am

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Last year, a friend suggested that I read A GAMBLING MAN, CHARLES II’S restoration game BY JENNY UGLOW.  I have been traveling a great deal this year, but I finally found a copy at BARNES AND NOBLE.  I started reading this amazing book and could not put it down.  It is an easy read, full of wonderful detail and historical highlights.  When I read the last page last night, I could not wait to get to my computer to post a blog.  Charles II was an amazing figure in British history, and Uglow captured his abilities and weaknesses.  Fascinating reading.

The PROLOGUE explains purpose of the book.  ”The first puzzle is simply how did Charles manage to stay on the throne?  His father was executed and his brother James lasted less than three years before he was ousted by William of Orange in 1688.  Yet Charles stayed in place for twenty-five years.  What balancing skills did he have that his father and brother lacked?  The bare facts suggest a man who needed to create a carapace to survive, to protect any coherent sense of self.  He was loved by his parents, brought up as the adored eldest son in a luxurious court, entertained by masques of gods and goddesses, until jolt after jolt shattered this life.  At twelve he stood by his father when the standard was raised at Nottingham, marking the beginning of the Civil War,  the unthinkable turning of subjects against their king. He saw the palaces abandoned, the capital closed.  At Edgehill a cannonball narrowly missed him.  At fifteen, he was sent west as general of the Western Army;  at sixteen he fled to the Scilly Isles,then Jersey, then to France.  He was nineteen when his father was executed.  In the years that followed he scoured foreign courts for aid, broke and hopeless.  In exile he devised a strategy based on charm, outward compliance, and private evasion…..”

Readers of this blog, I STRONGLY RECOMMEND THIS REMARKABLE BOOK.  I learned so much.  An amazing read.

TOM

http://www.londonconnection.com

TOKENS OF AFFECTION – 3 bars of soap

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 11:12 am

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Over the years, many Americans have talked to me about the role of the Royal Family in the lives of the English people.  I have had enough experience in England to understand these feelings.  During the wars, the King and Queen stayed in London and suffered the difficulties their people were enduring.  Eleanor Roosevelt went to London during the war, and she was amazed that the King ate rations and bathed in the allotted amount of water.  The Queen was asked to send the two Princesses to Canada.  She answered that the Princesses could not go without the Queen, the Queen couldn’t go without the King, and THE KING WOULD NEVER GO.  Those remarks won the love of the British people for a generation.  There have been times when the British public felt distanced from the Royal Family, and most of us saw this feeling after the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. But as Tony Blair revealed in the movie THE QUEEN, the place of the Queen is firmly entrenched in English life.  As we all saw, the Queen understood what was expected of her far more quickly than did her ministers.  During the last decade, the Queen has become the most popular sovereign in British history.  While I was watching the movie 84 CHARING CROSS ROAD, I could not help being moved by the scene where Londoners were celebrating the coronation of the Queen in 1953.  They jumped to their feet as the Queen left Westminster Abbey, and the National Anthem began to play.  I find that Americans can extend love and loyalty to movie stars and successful, rich business people, but they have a difficulty understanding extending that respect from the British public for the Queen.  Having said that, I am always amazed at the huge turn-out when the Queen or the Princess of Wales have come to the States on a state visit. To me, the depth of affection for the Queen today is a result of hundreds of years of tradition and respect.  Personally, I find it very rewarding to have a living figurehead that represents the English people.  A flag is wonderful, but a Queen who opens Parliament, rides in her gold carriage, and wears incredible jewels owned by the Crown for generations adds dynamics to public life.  It is just other-worldy–wonderful !

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A few years ago, while I was visiting a lady who had a bed-and-breakfast business in Oxford, I was the happy recipient of a box containing three bars of soap.  When I opened the box, there were three bars of soap–two with portraits of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth and one with the royal coat of arms.  As I looked at this gift, I was deeply moved.  This caring gift helped me understand how deeply the Royal Family is loved.  They were made and packed by disabled veterans from World War I.

While I was in London earlier this month, a polling company tried to determine the extent of support of the British public for the Queen.  I was amazed to learn the results:  90% in support of the monarchy.   I was somewhat surprised because of the vocal student groups and the many minorities living in England.  She still prevailed.  The Queen has done an amazing job bridging these cultural and age differences.

Enjoy the bars of soap.  I loved this gift.

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 23, 2010

VANITY FAIR ENGRAVINGS – Queen Alexandra

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 7:56 am

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Over the past several months, I have posted several stories about my growing collecting of VANITY FAIR ENGRAVINGS.  There was a lot of interest in my post about the engraving of Queen Victoria in her phaeton.  It is a beautiful item, and I am pleased so many people have enjoyed seeing it.  Thanks to Storey’s in Cecil Court who have been wonderful finding these wonderful engravings for me.

Tim at Storey’s contacted me the other day about an absolutely fabulous engraving of QUEEN ALEXANDRA.  It is exquisite, and I wanted to share it with you as I did with the engraving of Queen Victoria.

VANITY FAIR ENGRAVINGS are wonderful pieces of art, but they are also historical documents of the people who flourished during Victorian times.  I find great joy looking at these items.  I just had 60 of them framed to cover an entire wall in one of our rooms at our mountain home above Deer Valley.   But this particular one of QUEEN ALEXANDRA will stay at home.

A bit of interest:  THE LADIES LITERARY SOCIETY in our area asked me to speak on my collection of VANITY FAIR ENGRAVINGS.  I think I can work up a fun presentation, and I am sure I will get them all back when the gathering is over !  I know I would be tempted to pinch one or two, but of course I wouldn’t.

Thank you for enjoying them with me.

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 22, 2010

ST. MARGARET’S CHURCH – Westminster

Filed under: BRITISH HISTORY,Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 1:56 pm

In 2007, my dear friend the Honourable Caroline Stanley invited me to attend the Memorial Service for her father, Baron Renton of Huntington who died at the wonderful age of 98.  He was a former Conservative MP and made a Life Peer in 1979.  He also became Deputy Speaker of the House of Lords and was a close friend of Margaret Thatcher and John Major. His daughter Caroline always called him DADDY.   The Memorial Service was held in St. Margaret’s Church, Westminster.  I flew from the States for this event out of respect for Lord Renton but also out of affection for his daughter and my friend, Caroline.  John Major gave the eulogy which I will never forget.  In fact, I have to remind myself to request of copy of Major’s moving words.  It was a great tribute.  I will post the speech when I receive a copy.  Wonderful and moving.  A real tribute to Lord Renton.

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As I sat in St. Margaret’s Church waiting for the service to begin, I had time to look around me at this lovely setting.  I am sorry to say, this was the first time I had been in St. Margaret’s, and I was really amazed by what I was looking at.

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St. Margaret’s Westminster is located on the grounds of Westminster Abbey.  The Abbey was built in the 12th century by Benedictine monks.  It was rebuilt between 1486 and 1523.  In 1614, this abbey became the Parish Church of the Palace of Westminster when the Puritans preferred a more humble church than Westminster Abbey.  Many of the Tudor features have remained.

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The Great East Window dates from 1509 and was installed to celebrate the betrothal of Catherine of Aragon and Prince Arthur, elder brother of Henry VIII. (Certainly a story there ! )  William Caxton, England’s first printer, was buried here in 1491.  Sir Walter Raleigh was executed on Old Palace Yard and buried in the Church in 1618.  In 1674, John Milton was buried here.

St. Margaret’s has been the setting for many society weddings over the centuries.  Samuel Pepys and Sir Winston Churchill were both married here.

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Next time you are taking guests to Westminster Abbey, slow your pace and walk around St. Margaret’s Church.  I am posting a few incredible photos which I hope you enjoy.  Note the schedule for visits.  You will not be disappointed.

Thanks,

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

ST. OLAVES CHURCH – Samuel Pepys

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 12:36 pm

Walking around Tower Hill and All Hallows will eventually lead  to the fantastic history of St. Olave medieval church on Hart Street and Pepys Street.  The church was originally built in 1040 and was named after King Olaf of Norway who assisted Ethelred in his attempts to conquer medieval London.  I love these early buildings and their ancient history.

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Samuel Pepys lived in the Parish of St.Olave’s Church in 1660 and is buried in the family vault under the Communion Table along with this wife Elizabeth and his brother John.  Sam was instrumental in saving this historic building.

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In 1666, 13,000 houses and 88 churches were burned in the Great Fire of London.  Pepys joined the groups in the burning city to tear down wood houses near the church so that the fire would not threaten the church.  The fire came 100 meters of the church when the wind changed thereby leaving St. Olaves Church standing–one of only 14 churches which survived The Great Fire of London.    Samuel Pepys recorded the GREAT FIRE OF LONDON in is now-famous DIARIES which he wrote for his eyes only.

Samuel Pepys lived between 1633 and died near London in Clapham in 1703.  He was Surveyor General of the Royal Navy, and honorary naval officer granted by King Charles II in 1660, and member of Parliament.  He eventually became Chief Secretary of the Admiralty under Charles II and James II.  His DIARIES were written between 1660 and 1669.  The detailed events about THE GREAT PLAGUE OF LONDON, THE SECOND DUTCH WAR,  and THE GREAT FIRE OF LONDON.  He has the honor of being the first person to tell King Charles II of the fire.

Samuel Pepys stated that St. Olaves Church was “my own church.”  Samuel Pepys had a front row pew–just for modesty !    These days, St. Olaves Church holds a COMMEMORATION SERVICES at 12:00 noon each 26 May, the day Samuel Pepys died.

A point of interest, you will note SKULLS and PIKES on the entrance gates of the church.  These sculptures remind us that 360 bodies were buried in the Church during the GREAT PLAGUE OF LONDON.  Charles Dickens in the 19th century included these gates in his novels.

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A great bit of history!

T

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 21, 2010

THE GAY HUSSAR RESTAURANT – Soho

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 7:57 am

Each month, THE LONDON CONNECTION / CONNECTIONS MANAGEMENT sends out a FEEDBACK letter to clients who have returned from one of our London flats.  In the FEEDBACK, we ask clients to recommend their favorite restaurants.  We keep track of the recommendations to pass on to our future visitors.  At least once a month, someone mentions their fantastic experience at the GAY HUSSAR at 2 Greek Street, Soho.  So, on one of my fact-finding trips, I took a flat owner to an important dinner at the GAY HUSSAR.  Our company was taking on several flats owned by this lady, so dinner had to be perfect.  The flat owner knew about the Gay Hussar and was pleased we were meeting there for dinner.

img_gay_150The meeting was a success, and the food was amazing.  I knew so many clients of the London Connection could not be wrong.  I had read Frommer’s restaurant recommendations, and their comments were as positive as the reports from our visitors.  The portions were hearty.  I loved their motto:  EAT WELL, DRINK WELL, AND LIVE WELL.  And that is exactly what we did.

Some of their starters I noted were FRESH ASLPARAGUS WITH BACON salad, BEEF GOULASH SOUP.   A few of their main courses were STUFFED CABBAGE, VEAL GOULASH STEW, GRILLED SEABASS WITH LEAK AND POTATO PANCAKES, CRISPY ROAST DUCK WITH RED CABAGGE, and VEAL WIENER SCHNITZEL.   I had STUFFED CABBAGE, and I can certainly recommend my choice.

For dessert, I had POPPY SEED STRUDEL–the best I had ever eaten.  So moist and fresh!  Wonderful.

I am not a gourmet, but I do know when I have had a great meal.  So, I join the rank and file of our London clients and highly recommend THE GAY HUSSAR in Soho on Greek Street.  BE22639SURE YOU HAVE RESTAURANTS.  The restaurant has a website which details their menu and wine list.  Very helpful.

THE GAY HUSSAR, 2 Greek Street Soho      Telephone:  0207.437.0973     Tube Station:  Tettenham Ct Rd

Happy eating ! !

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

PRINCE HENRY’S ROOM – 17 Fleet Street

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 5:38 am

17_fleet_streetIt seems I am always rushing somewhere when I am walking down Fleet Street and don’t pay much attention to anything except where I am intending to go.  That is unusual for me because I like to explore and often stop to read historical markers or blue plaques.  I keep reminding myself to slow down and enjoy the sights. In this frame of mind, I ran into PRINCE HENRY’S ROOM on Fleet Street.  Let me tell you about this serendipity.

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In 1610, Fleet Street was one of the busiest thoroughfares in London.  Merchants, inn keepers, tradesmen of all kinds would have mingled and carried on the business of the day here.  The aristocracy would have been shopping in London’s best boutiques of the day along this street with fashions from the continent.  17 Fleet Street would have been part of this particularly busy district.  It is here between 1610 and 1612 Prince Henry, Prince of Wales, had his Council Chamber to deal with matters of the day and mingle with the makers-and-shakers of his day.  The room he used as his conference chamber was on the first floor and to this day still has the Prince of Wales P H initials on the ceiling.  This is a fabulous Jacobean room with fine old paneling and original windows.  Today, the room  houses the Samuel Pepys Memorabilia Museum run by the Samuel Pepys Club.

The building became  a popular tavern and is one of the few London wood buildings to have survived the Great Fire of London.  In fact, in the mid 1600′s, Pepys would have walked by this location and probably warmed himself by the tavern fire.  350 years later, Pepys would have known this walk.  He would have walked up Whitehall then known as King Street past the Banqueting House which still stands today.  He would have turned right on Charing Cross and walked past the old St. Paul’s Cathedral and on to London Bridge where London was explosive with activity.  Most of the buildings were destroyed in the Great Fire so the buildings are gone, but markers and plaques remind us of Jacobean London.  BUT 17 FLEET STREET REMAINS AS BEAUTIFUL AS EVER.  This building would certainly have been known so Pepys.

The architecture of the building is worth a visit.  I loved it.  You can visit the Pepys Memorabilia Museum in the old PRINCE HENRY’S ROOM during lunch time.  The feeling,flavor, and beauty of this room will walk you back to Pepys’s time.

Really nice.  I can’t believe I waited so many years to visit this site.  Don’t make the same mistake.  You may wish to become a member of the SAMUEL PEPYS CLUB.  I just contacted the club to see if I might qualify for membership.  When I was a young boy, my mother used to read to me from Pepys’ diary;  I think I knew about the Great Fire of London before I ever left the nursery.  My mother bought a pop-up book on the Great Fire for me at the Huntington Library when I was very young.  Funny how things all come round again.

AS YOU PASS BY THE BUILDING, LOOK UP AND YOU WILL SEE THE PRINCE OF WALES FEATHERS STILL PROMINENTLY CARVED IN WOOD– all since 1610.

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 20, 2010

WESTMINSTER ABBEY – SCULPTURES OVER THE WEST DOOR

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 10:20 am

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As I was coming to Westminster Abbey with some friends for Matins and the choir boys, the sculptures over the Great West Door intrigued me.  I have seen them for years, but I never thought to see who they were.  This time,  I was intrigued to see the figure of MARTIN LUTHER KING.  I couldn’t understand how an American martyr could find  his way to the west facade of the Abbey.

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After the service, I asked one of the ushers who explained to me that the niches over the west door had never been filled since the building was completed and Hawksmoor’s 18th century towers were complete.  In the 20th century, the decision was made to fill the niches with 20th century martyrs.   Which martyrs were to be installed there must have been an interesting process.

So, today, this medieval/Gothic building is brought into the 20th century with personalities we all know from history.  Starting from the left of the panel image, we have Maximilian Kolke, Manche Masemola, Janani Luwum, Grand Duchess Elizabeth of Russia, Martin Luther King, Archibishop Oscar Romero, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Esther Joem, Lucian Topiedi, Wang Zhiming.

I know about some of those people, but others are unknown to me.  But, I have to admit I was surprised to see the group on the west facade of Westminster Abbey.

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Very interesting and certainly revealing.

T

http://www.londonconnection.com

TRIBUTE TO A WONDERFUL OLD FRIEND AND LONDON GUIDE

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 12:20 am

Yesterday, for some unknown reason, I picked up my mobile and called one of my dearest friends in London.  Her name is HELEN CLAPP.  To my dismay and shock, she answered her mobile in a very weakened voice.  She told me she had been in the hospital for three weeks trying to get her legs moving again.  She has suffered from diabetes for years, but this was a real fight for her life.  I have to say that my heart missed a beat.

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Let me tell you about Helen.  About thirty years ago, I took my oldest daughter Kimberly and her friends to Europe for six weeks.  We started in Cairo and ended up in London.  We had had real adventures in Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, Florence, Munich, Paris, and finally in London.  Just the memories of those wonderful times warm me all over.  I see some of the participants from those trips from time to time, and we relive an episode or two and have a good chuckle.

On this first voyage with young people, I thought I could show my travelers everything there was to see.  But by the time we got to Paris, I knew I could not keep this up after Paris.  So, I called another friend of mine in London for help to see if she could recommend a special guide who could help me with some of the touring.  Lady Jessel said immediately:  ”Oh certainly.  You must contact Helen Clapp.”  That is exactly what I did.

Our coach from Dover arrived at the hotel, and we were greeted by Helen.  She marshalled us to our rooms and told us she would meet with us after dinner in the hotel and would explain the next five days in Her Majesty’s Kingdom.  Well, she set the tone with those words, and we knew who was going to be boss.  The greatest experience was about to happen.

We visited important sites from morning to afternoon;  and then we were taken to the theatre at nights.  She was full of stories and history–all told with immense seriousness salted and peppered with a bit of humor.  In the evenings, she was hysterical.  Helen has meat on her bones, and there isn’t an inch of it that isn’t under full control.  She enjoyed the American humor and rolled with laughter at our lack of knowledge about English history and culture.  She did it lovingly.  She talked about the great characters of British history:  Churchill, Queen Victoria, Henry VIII, Elizabeth I, Disraeli, Sir Walter Raleigh, Dickens, Hardy– on and on.  As the week rolled on, I could feel the young people’s attachment to this amazingly charming person.

One evening, after a play, she asked me a question which required knowledge about a very obscure event in English history.  She was trying to make the point that learning about England is a lifetime of reading and experiencing.  Because I did not know the answer to this question, she lovingly gave me the nickname TWITT.  Of course my daughter and her friends thought that was the perfect name; and in many circles today, that name has unfortunately stuck.

At the end of the week, we boarded our plane for home.  As we left Helen, there was a profund sense of sadness as we waved GOOD-BYE.  Well, Helen and I remained friends.  I am in London  4-5-6 times a year, and Helen and I meet up for a good lunch at Rules, or we just go to a pub for bangors and mash.  From time to time, when I have adult friends with me, Helen’s husband Drummond pulls together his chamber group friends, and we spend an evening eating Helen’s fabulous roast lamb with mint sauce and then enjoying a bit of the baroque:  cellos, violas, and violins.  Every time I leave Helen and Drummond, I realize that I have just experienced a moment in time that will always be with me.

I am posting a picture of Helen and my wife Stephanie.  We were at Peter Jones’s new roof top restaurant having a meal and enjoying the views over Chelsea and Knightsbridge.  On this occasion, I looked across the table and knew I had to capture the face of a person who had shared with me her love of England.  To me, she has the most beautiful face–full, radiant, powerful, and full of character.  AND HER VOICE MATCHES.

When I spoke to her yesterday and didn’t hear her thundering voice with that OH, TWITT, I HAVE BEEN THINKING ABOUT YOU.  HOW ARE THINGS– I was stunned.  When I heard that Helen was very ill, I couldn’t believe  that this fabulous personality could ever be mortal.  All I could think of is how this magnificent city London had brought together two life-long friends.

In recent years, Helen has retired form walking people about London and has moved to Ely where she is an active member of the Cathedral’s congregation and a guide there once a week.  She was included in the Queen’s New Year’s list for those to be recognized for outstanding serivice to the Nation.  She was given an OBE by the Queen, and when I heard the news I could say only DAMN RIGHT.

There is something about London that brings people together.  Is it the history, the art, the literature, the architecture, the music, or is it the PEOPLE?  Churchill knew that the people of his little island could face one of the most powerful war machines ever assembled up to that time.  He knew London would survive.

I pray Helen will be in London in late spring for my visit.  There will be one more gab session between her Twitt and my Lady Helen Clapp.  She is a lovely, spiritual lady.  A real aristocrat of the soul whom I love dearly.

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 15, 2010

ADVANCED PLACEMENT ENGLISH STUDENTS SPEND A WEEK IN LONDON

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 9:06 pm

An English teacher from Boston spends two weeks with her husband in one of our London flats each summer.  She says that all her own children are gone, so she went back to teach Advanced Placement English students in her local high school.  I chuckled when she told me that she had been teaching THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE, HEART OF DARKNESS, HAMLET, MOBY DICK, OTHELLO, OF HUMAN BONDAGE, MADAME BOVARY, MOBY DICK, and THE GRAPES OF WRATH.  Pretty heavy going, I would say!  But she loves the books passionately and has developed an amazing following of students whose older brothers and sisters have benefited significantly from Cristy’s class.

In the fall of this year, she contacted me to see if I would help her put together a ten-day London trip for her best students.  Boy, this is my kind of teacher!  I asked her how many students;  she said about 12 students and three mothers for ten days. We picked out four large flats for the group and put one parent in each accommodation.  In early November, Cristy contacted me to help her put together a worthwhile yet fun itinerary.  I told her that I have five children and I took my children and their friends to London at Valentines each year for five years.  It became a real tradition in the area where I live, and I explained to her which activities went over successfully.  I divided each day with “hard work” visits in the morning like important exhibitions at the Victoria and Albert and “fun activities” in the afternoon like THE LONDON EYE.  I told her to keep the day full, organized, and “on the march” or she would lose interest in doing another trip because of wandering-off lads.  When I saw a good student dragging, I knew I was doing my job.  Adults can pace themselves while students have these immense surges of energy only to collapse and die moments later.  So, here is one of the tours I conducted and loved.

The students could take one medium size case– duffle bag preferred.  They had to be able to carry it themselves as there would be no porters.  My wife gave the girls a packing list which dismayed these beautifully groomed American girls.  Levis and sweat shirts were perfect for the boys with one pair of slacks and a nice sweater.  Boys were always so much easier when it came to accepting luggage restrictions.  I TOLD ALL OF THEM THAT THEY WOULD HAVE WASHING MACHINES IN THEIR APARTMENTS–they never figured out the washer/dryers and instead spot cleaned their levis and just turned inside-out their sweat shirts when a floppy drip landed on their  shirt.  The key was to keep them so busy that a little stain here or there didn’t matter.

Upon arrival the first day, I got them into their flats and told them to have a shower and take a one hour nap–but no longer.  I had learned that a good start was really important, and the first night they needed to get to sleep.  Well, once students 17/18 hit the beds, they just pass out.  So, the parents got them up gradually with a big glass of juice and some warm soup.  This was the orientation afternoon ON FOOT.  We got tube passes and took the train to Tower Hill, the far east end of London.  We were just doing an orientation tour, so we got there just as it was getting dark and all the ramparts of the Tower of London were just being lighted.  We talked about why it got dark so early in the day before we talked about the Normans and their fortresses all along the Thames to safeguard their new strongholds.  We then walked to St. Paul’s Cathedral to see it lighted at night;  I tried to get them all excited about Sir Christopher Wren  and Ben Jonson for our return visit later in the week.  By then, most of the students realized that their first night’s walk was a DEATH MARCH–with good reason !  We finally got to Trafalgar Square where we went to eat a spaghetti dinner at The Spaghetti House next to Chando’s Pub.  I knew this meal was important, so I loaded them up with soup, salad, and a good dish of pasta.  We left the restaurant, and I marched them up the front stairs of the National Gallery to see the most beautiful perspective:  The Houses of Parliament in the distance and Nelson’s Column right in front of them.  I reached in my pocket and read to them the closing paragraph of OF HUMAN BONDAGE where the main character Philip stands on this same spot and describes  his life as  AND THE SUN WAS SHINING.  I wanted to bring life to the books they had been reading, and they stood absolutely still as I read the passage.  We were all moved and rewarded.  We finally wandered across Trafalgar Square and up the Mall to Buckingham Palace, but not before we stood in front of the fabulous equestrian sculpture of Charles I at the head of Whitehall–the only equestrian sculpture to elude Cromwell.  Along the Mall, I pointed out Queen Mary’s home at Marlborough House,  the Queen Mother’s home at Clarence House –this was before Charles’s moving in, and on to Buckingham Palace.  I told them that this is where the last King of America lived.  That made them think.  By then, we were all exhausted, and IT WAS VERY EASY TO GET THEM TO GO TO SLEEP.  They were dead tired.

The second day, we headed to the British Museum.  The MAGNA CARTA was there in those days.  I took them there because I wanted them to see this foundation of established law which has influenced all Western Societies for nearly a thousand years. We saw the Rosetta Stone and on to the ELGIN MARBLES.  Without exception, the Elgin Marbles stunned them as they walked into this glorious setting.  We talked about Greece and mankind’s progress toward a refined culture and  political thought.  Stunning.  There is a great sandwich shop just outside the museum,  and we filled up with PRET A MANGER sandwiches.  We headed toward Westminster Pier to take the boat  to Greenwich to see “where time begins.”  They loved the boat ride, but were cold at the end.  So, I had three of our drivers meet us at the Queen’s House Greenwich and bring us back to London in a warm cab. We all had a nice nap, and then  we  headed to the Hard Rock Cafe because they love the music no matter what I said or did.  Then, we left for the theater.  In those days, PHANTOM OF THE OPERA was their first choice.  They loved it, and it was a full day.  No nonsense when we got back to our apartments, I assure you.

The next morning we were on the Tube heading for the TOWER OF LONDON.  We arrived early to avoid crowds which were rare this time of the year.  I took them immediately to the Jewel House so we could be there almost alone to stand on the upper levels and talk about the history of these amazing jewels.  I knew the history of most of the great pieces, and the students were dazzled by their size and beauty.  One young man who happened to be my son said he couldn’t see the STAR OF AFRICA –500 + carats.  He thought of diamonds as much smaller stones.  This one was so large he couldn’t see it !  All the students had the chronology of the Kings and Queens of England in their pockets on cards.  They were with me all the way.  Then we walked outside, and I turned them over to the Beef Eaters;  I wasn’t going to try to match their performance.  As we walked away on one visit, one of the young students named Joel Christensen said:  ”Pretty bloody place.”  That led to a lot of stories.  We ate hot dogs outside the Tower–just good old hot dogs covered in onions.  THEY TASTED SO SO GOOD, and I bought as many as they could eat.  I took them round behind the entrance to ALL HALLOWS CHURCH where William Penn was blessed and James Madison was married.  The second night we tried to do a classical play.  I knew what the schedules were, so I tried to catch Shakespeare–a play they had read and knew from school.  As I remember it, HAMLET, MACBETH, AND MERCHANT OF VENICE were always being performed somewhere.

The next day was the train from Paddington to Slough to transfer to the train to Windsor.  They loved the Tube, the train, but when they arrived at WINDSOR CASTLE, their mouths fell open.  I told them all the history I could remember, and I walked them around it as far as possible.  We went inside where most of the castle is open before the mobs arrive in the summer.  The paintings, the china, the rugs, the carving, the banners, and all the military memorabilia were fascinating.  When they saw Napoleon’s Cape which the Duke of Wellington found in fleeing Napoleon’s carriage, history really began to come in focus.  This day was an incredible experience for these young people.  I saw to it that it was.  This was a history lesson, but not out of a text book.  That evening, we always went to St. Martin in-the-fields for a classical concert. When I told them we were going to hear a Baroque concert, inevitably their eyes began to roll.  But, I can report that sitting in the church where Monroe, Franklin, Madison, Jefferson all attended church while on diplomatic missions, they decided to give it a chance. I can’t say they came around totally that night, but they knew they had heard something rather special.

I will tell you about the rest of the trip in tomorrow’s post.  I think you have read enough for one posting.

Talk to you tomorrow.

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

17 FEBRUARY, 2010        Continuing

ON THE FIFTH DAY, I felt it was ART DAY.  I have spent years trying to teach young people to enjoy fine paintings.  I have taken them to galleries and given them the tours.  I have talked about the “history” of art and all about great artists.  I learned early on that young people who come from homes where they have been taught to live with family paintings and were taken to symphonies and concerts enjoy museums and galleries and don’t fight the experience.  Before I take young people to the great galleries, I walk them by art shops, have them talk to the street painters, and help them talk about color and images.  I really enjoy watching young people become curious.  They will one day put something on their walls, so why not get exposed young. The day in the galleries, I tell my children and their friends that I will take them to stand before ten masterpieces.  I tell them that I am trying to get them to talk about what they see.  Usually, it is an easy dialog as long as it doesn’t go on too long.  In the National Gallery, they all love Stubb’s GREAT HORSE.  They like VanGogh because those images are familiar to them.  Then I take them to the DaVinci CARTOON which is so moving that no one has anything but awe for such an image.  I usually take them to see a winter scene by Vermeer which no one resists.  Then, I tell them that I want them to find their favorite painting and write a paragraph for me telling me why the image appeals to them.  I tell them that I will buy the poster of the painting they choose for their walls, so it becomes a serious search for them.  When I realize that WE HAVE HAD ENOUGH, we grab a kebab on the run and head off to Covent Garden to check out the street painters or to Trafalgar Square to see who is painting there.  I tell my children and their friends that I have bought some of my favorite images that hang on my walls from London street artists.  I make it an ART DAY.  The evening is always theatre.  It is a full day, for sure

ON THE SIXTH DAY, IT WAS PORTOBELLO AND KNIGHTSBRIDGE DAY.  On Saturday morning, all the young people got up early–not an easy thing to do for exhausted teenagers who sleep like sand-beached whales with legs and arms hanging off all sides of the bed.  We are off to Portobello Road.  I introduce them to THE PEWTER LADY, Mrs. Kasdan, and to the shop where wonderful 18th brass can be found.  We talk about pick-pockets, and reproductions.  The young people are thrilled to be in a setting where every European language is heard–at full volume.  It seemed like the Italian visitors were buying all the old fur coats, all the Japanese visitors were looking for good jewelry, and the Americans were just having fun with with a chocolate crepe  in one hand.  The young people buy a simple souvenir, and it is really fun.  I take them to Harrods and Harvey Nichols in Knightsbdridge on the way home.  They are always flabbergasted when they check out the prices in Harrods.   But, what is important for young people to realize is the world economies are very different.  We go to the Globe or St. Martin in-the-fields in the evening.  I have to keep food in their systems or they run out steam early on.  It is like running a cement mixer twenty-four hours a day.  They could eat 2 dozen almond croissants in one breath–but they had a smile on their faces, and that is what counted for me.  I loved these kids.

THE SEVENTH DAY,  WAS WESTMINSTER ABBEY SERVICES AND FREE TIME.  On Sunday morning, I take the group to Westminster to hear the choir boys.  MATINS and a short sermon.  They hear the organ, feel the magnificence of the Abbey, and experience history in stone.  We go to a great meal, spend a couple of hours relaxing and lounging around Trafalgar Square.  Usually, they remember something they would to buy or go back to.  Packing, good sleep, and getting ready to return home the next day.   Often one or two of the students wanted to attend a church service of their own faith, and I happily joined them.

I love to travel with young people and first-time visitors to London. I love standing in Trafalgar Square and  walking up the Mall.  But, I love doing it with a young group who have never been in London before.  It gives me a buzz.  Many of these young people have lived in families where a packing trip or a trip to Disneyland was the extent of their family’s imaginations.  I told a student once that his parents would do better for their children if they took them on a vacation to a library or to a book store to get a book;  I don’t think that made much of an impression.  There were always those students, however, who came with a school novel and used every free minute enjoying a great read.  That thrilled me.

I REALLY HOPE CRISTY’S GROUP IS HAVING FUN, AND I HOPE MY TRIPS WITH YOUNG PEOPLE WILL GIVE YOU SOME IDEAS.  NEVER TRAVEL IN GROUPS LARGER THAN 12 PEOPLE .   NEVER  !  NEVER !   Moving people around in large groups destroys the spontaneity that you want to encourage while traveling.  Besides, a cab will take 5 people;  with 12 students and 3 adults, we all fit comfortably into three cabs.  The young people love to chat with the cab drivers who are always full of stories and relate them with their hugely funny eastender cockney accents.  Everybody has a laugh.   Young people connect so quickly, and they thrive on these kinds of expeditions.   I know only about 5 jokes, and I heard all of them from London cab drivers.

THANKS SO MUCH.

Thomas Moore

http://londonconnection.com

February 14, 2010

A ROYAL CHRISTMAS CARD – 1935

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 10:49 pm

villas inside photos and fall garden 0281935 was was a year of great events for the Royal Family.  King George V   turned 70 years old.  It was the year of his Silver Jubilee celebdrations.  Queen Mary was jubilant about all these royal occasions, but the King was dying.  He was weak, but he was determined to carry on.  The Queen’s Christmas card that year was a wonderful hand tinted photograph of her four sons:  Edward Prince of Wales, Prince Albert (later George VI), The Duke of Gloucester, and the Duke of Kent.  Their son Prince John had died several years before.

The birthday card is large–10″ X 12″, and each one was beautifully hand colored.

Several years ago, I was given one of these beautiful cards by an old friend whose grandfather had received it from Queen Mary in 1935.  I treasure the old card, and I wanted to share it with you.  It is a lovely item.

I hope you enjoy it.

Thanks,

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 13, 2010

QUEEN VICTORIA SCULPTURE IN KENSINGTON GARDENS

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 12:38 pm

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Saturday afternoon in London, and I decided to take a nice, “slightly wet” walk around Kensington Palace.  There are beautiful sunken gardens, which must be magnificent in summer, and beautifully manicured lawns.  I am certain the gardens will be full of blooms and scent where now they are just beginning to show early spring growth–still beautiful.

Today, what struck me was the large marble sculpture of Queen Victoria as she would have appeared on her Accession to the Throne in 1837–crown, flowing robes, and sceptre.  The host at Kensington Palace told me that the sculpture was done by the Queen’s daughter Princess Louise, later the Duchess of Argyle, to celebdrate her mother’s 50 years on the throne.  The Queen herself came to Kensington Palace to unveil the sculpture in 1887.  This sculpture is a beautiful monument with William and Mary’s apartments at Kensington Palace as a backdrop.

Princess Louise was the most artistically talented of the children of Queen Victoria.  Most of her children were artists, musicians, poets, sculptors, but Princess Louise was the one who was a dedicated artist and had a studio and assistants.

The Palace guide said that the sculpture was placed in an appropriate location at Kensington Palace because Queen Victoria was born in the Palace in 1819 and was blessed in the Cupola Room in the palace.  She was proclaimed Queen while living in the Palace with her mother, the Duchess of Kent.

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Starting in the spring, I strongly suggest a walk in Kensington Palace Gardens.  You will run across this lovely sculpture of Queen Victoria.  I might meet you there as I plan to return in the late spring or in summer.

Someday, I am going to write a tour called  IN SEARCH OF VICTORIA AND ALBERT.  This sculpture will certainly be included.  The tour might include London, Windsor, The Isle of Wight Osborne House, Balmoral, and perhaps even Coburg.:

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A point of interest :  ALBERTA CANADA is named after Princess Louise Alberta.  Lake Louise in Alberta is also named after her.  Very interesting little facts.

Best,

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 11, 2010

LOTS ROAD AUCTIONS – Chelsea

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 11:28 am

A432Over the years, I have spent many Sunday afternoons at   LOTS ROAD AUCTIONS.  I may be trying to buy a sofa for a flat or  a picture for a wall in a new accommodation.  For whatever reason, I have had the best of times.  LOTS ROAD AUCTIONS take place in a barn-type setting with people wandering all around and then flashing their cards to bid.  It is all very normal, but it is such a fun thing to do for Sunday afternoon entertainment.  For those traveling, small items are also auctioned.

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Ask a taxi driver to take you to LOTS ROAD AUCTION HOUSE, a he will know right where to go.  He has been there many times before!  What a fun atmosphere.

All week long, interested bidders can visit LOTS ROAD to view the objects in the next sale.  Really, it is fun.  I like it a lot more than PORTABELLO ROAD where the tourists are stacked one on top of another and many stalls sell only cheap reproductions.

The schedule for viewing the antiques to be auctioned:

Wednesday  6-8:00 PM

Thursday 9:00 AM – 6:00 PM

Friday 9:00 AM – 4:00 PM

Saturday 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM

AUCTIONS    SUNDAY   STARTING AT NOON.

For Antique dealers who ship container loads to the States, this is the place to go.  LOTS OF FUN.  Take a Sandwich and enjoy the AUCTION.

Great.

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

TOWER BRIDGE – Lifting schedule until 1 July

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 10:54 am

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REMEMBER, WE ARE TALKING ABOUT TOWER BRIDGE here—NOT LONDON BRIDGE.  For whatever reason, visitors to London call TOWER BRIDGE   London Bridge.  They are two different bridges.  We are talking about TOWER BRIDGE at the Tower of London.

Seeing TOWER BRIDGE  lift is a great experience, especially if connected to your visit to THE TOWER OF LONDON.  I was just given the spring and early summer schedule which I am posting for visitors to London this spring who might be interested in this fun experience.  Hopefully, our visitors are going to the BRIDGE to see the HIGH LEVEL WALKWAYS EXHIBITIONS (Accessible only via the North Tower of the Bridge.)

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HERE IS THE SCHEDULE WHEN THE BRIDGE WILL LIFT:

13 February      17:30                  13 March      7:30

13 February      18:30                  19 March      10:30

13 February      23:00                  19 March     13;30

20 February      00:30                 19 March      14:30

20 February      16:30                  18 June         16:30

20 February      17:15                   18 June        17:30

24 February      14:45

24 February      15:30

For those who are eager to see one of these LIFTS, go to the TOWER BRIDGE website where you will find a further schedule for BRIDGE LIFTINGS as well as current information about the exhibitions on the High Level Walkways.

TOWER BRIDGE is a fantastic location to see London’s skyline.  Look up and down the River Thames.  It is really spectacular.

Fun, eh?

Thanks

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 10, 2010

THE PERFECT LITTLE FLAT FOR 2 PERSONS

Filed under: London Connection,Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 11:50 am

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PERFECT!  From time to time, an absolutely perfect flat comes our way to offer our clients.  Well, consider this property for your next London vacation or business trip.  Let me tell you a little bit about it.  The property is located just of St. James’s Square, one of the finest and best locations in London.  Buckingham Palace, St.James’s Palace, Fortnum and Mason, St. James’s Church, the Royal Academy, and all the shopping along Piccadilly are all within moments from this flat.  Covent Garden is an easy ten- minute walk from this property.  Piccadilly Tube Station is on the Piccadilly Line which is the most convenient transportation– straight through the central portions of the city with stops in Covent Garden, Leicester Square, Piccadilly, Hyde Park, Green Park, Knightsbridge, South Kensington and right on through to Heathrow Airport.   PERFECT.

This flat has just been refurbished to a very high standard.  There is a kitchen/lounge - open plan-with small stove top, confectionary oven, fridge/freezer, and microwave.  It is beautifully arranged with great style. The double bed sleeping area has mounted lights for good reading and open to excellent storage.  The en suite bathroom is outstanding:  posted shower in the tub with good water power.  The shower has a posted shower as well as a hand held shower–very nice.  There is a nice sink and loo.

The flat has been painted in a light foam green, highlighted in gleaming white. It is just nice.  Give me a call, and I will tell you more about this fantastic little property.

http://www.LondonConnection.com/ehouse/1-119.html

Thomas Moore

htp://www.londonconnection.com

February 9, 2010

DENNIS SEVERS HOUSE ON FOLGATE STREET nr. Spitalfields Market

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 12:37 pm

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One of my readers emailed me about her “great discovery” during her recent visit to London.  SEVERS HOUSE at 18 Folgate Street is a tale of a house in Spitalfields, next to the Spitafields Market.  The house is filled with rooms of various ages–a journey through time.

I find there is a book written about the house:  INDISPENSIBLE COMPANION TO A HOUSE FILLED WITH THE MAGIC OF DENNIS SEVERS’S WORLD.  I have ordered a copy from Barnes and Noble.  I am eager to read this.

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info@dennissevershouse.co.uk    will give you all the details.  I am really excited about this reader’s information about this house.  It will be one of the first things I do once I arrive in London in early spring.

The tours of the house are 45 minutes in length.  The Candlelight Tour is on Monday (except Bank Holidays)  7:00 – 10:00 pm   12 pounds   Reservations required.

Sunday 12-00-4:00 tours   8 pounds            Monday afternoon tours 12-2:00 PM  5 pounds

Don’t book a visit until you have gone to the SEVERS HOUSE website.  Either call for reservations or onfirm your tour by email from the website.

2566885663_d225e50aeb_mAmazing.  I have been searching for these small museums for years.  How is that I could have missed this one.  WELL, thanks to my readers.  You are all wonderful.  Keep contacting me with your discovers, and I will blog about your discoveries.  Wonderful.  thanks.

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 6, 2010

A WALK AROUND ST. JAMES’S SQUARE

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 10:46 am

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The only way to see London is to take walks–lots of walks.  I was walking around St. James’s Square on my way to Knightsbridge and I ran into another one of those little memorials marking some interesting event.  I have learned to slow down my pace and to open my eyes.  I ran into a small memorial to P.C. YVONNE FLETCHER, a member of the London police force.  Here is what the marker said.

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On 17 April, 1984 PC Fletcher was watching a group of peaceful protesters at the Lybian Embassy–St. James’s Square.  The siege at the Lybian Embassy turned out to be the longest siege in London history–11 days.

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On 17 April, the terrorists started firing heavy guns out the window and killed P.C. YVONNE FLETCHER.  On the day of her funeral, the terrorists were allowed to leave England under diplomatic protection.

BUT, PC Fletcher was the first police woman to be killed in the line of duty.

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Just imagine how the world has changed since then.  Imagine, a lovely memorial to the first woman killed on duty by a band of culprits who walked free !  Sound familiar?

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Wow.

http://www.londonconnection.com

THE LONDON “BOBBY”

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 8:55 am

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My mother-in-law Louise Harper and I were at Westminster Pier getting our tickets to take the boat ride down the Thames to Greenwich.  Suddenly, Mrs. Harper realized that her purse was gone.  I should have known better because Westminster Pier is known for pick-pockets and Mrs. Harper is a lovely lady in her 80′s.  I immediately went to the ticket-takers and said that a purse has been stolen.  The elderly  gentleman said:  LET’S CALL OVER THE BOBBY.  I have known the word “Bobbly” for all the years I have been traveling to London, but at this funny moment, I wondered how the London police became known as “bobbies.”  We didn’t get the purse back, but I found out about the London police force and the BOBBY.

bobbylight

On 19 June 1829, the Home Secretary SIR ROBERT PEEL announced the creation of a new London police force because of rampant crime and disorder spreading through the city.  The policemen was called BOBBY after Sir Robert Peel who had created the new force.  Ah, there is the source of the name !

The police headquarters  were located at 4 Whitehall Place, but the back entrance was in Great Scotland Yard.  Thus the name of the London police organization:  SCOTLAND YARD.

In the 1890′s, the headquarters were moved to New Scotland Yard – a grand building on VICTORIA EMBANKMENT.  I found it interesting that the stone was quarried  by prisoners on Dartmoor.

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So, if you have ever wondered why the London police organization is called SCOTLAND YARD and a London policeman is called BOBBY, I hope I have helped you out.

Well, Mrs. Harper isn’t very impressed with the BOBBIES;  they couldn’t even help her with the lost purse.  Amusing.  Luckily, there was only a small amount of money in the purse and her passport and and family photos were at home.

Thanks,

Tom

http://www.londonconnection.com

February 4, 2010

10 DOWNING STREET

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 10:31 am

Ministers+Arrive+Downing+Street+PM+Reshuffles+Jc4c8t90lWsl

Last week, I was walking down Whitehall on my way to Westminster Abbey.  I walk this street almost daily month after month.  But this time, I asked myself what I knew about  10 DOWNING STREET.  Sadly, all I could say was that it is on a cul-du-sac which is sealed off with large, impressive gates.  So, I went on the search.

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10 Downing Street was built for Sir George Downing between 1682-1684 upon a design by Sir Christopher Wren.  I have to conclude that Sir Christopher was a very busy man–for sure !  In 1732, George II gave the residence to Sir Robert Walpole who refurbished the house and included the 3 neighboring properties into the Prime Minister’s new residence.  The house was little used for many years and almost fell into decay.  But during the the 20th century, the Prime Minister made the residence their home and headquarters.   Many of the great Victorian prime Ministers worked from their great London homes like Apsley House.

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Margaret Thatcher said that 10 DOWNING STREET is “one of the most precious jewels in the national heritage..”  There are 100 rooms over three flours in the residence.  It is the headquarters of Her Majesty’s Government.  The Prime Minister’s residence itself is on the 3rd Floor.

Next you walk past 10 Downing Street, I hope you have a flashback about the building’s history.  Like so much in London, these buildings have such great history..

Thank you,

Thomas Moore

htp://www.londonconnection.com

February 3, 2010

BE WISE – CAREFUL OF SCAMS

Filed under: Uncategorized — tmooresr @ 12:07 pm

HEADS UP!  This morning, a US family was in London in a very difficult situation.  She had booked a flat which she saw offered on the internet.  The flat was, apparently, very reasonable and the photos of the property were very inviting.

The company asked her to pay by bank transfer, so the funds were sent to London out of her US bank.  NEVER, NEVER, NEVER SEND A BANK TRANSFER.  The minute a company wishes to be paid by bank transfer, you know you may be in a problem.  Insist on a credit card.  If they refuse a credit card, do not proceed with the booking.

When she arrived in London, there was no such property and no such address.  When they tried to call this company, there was no one taking calls.

As soon as I find the name of this company that did this to a nice family visiting London, I will post their name and number so others will not be caught in this trap.

Hold tight!  I will be back to you.

This is horrific.  BUT NEVER SEND A BANK TRANSFER.

http://www.londonconnection.com

 

NEXT DAY REPORT:  The company is called RESERVATION FIND.  Their email is         reservationfind@codehot.co.uk     The company email is   http://www.reservationfind.net        Their London number is 44-7011152919     Their address is   167 Borough High Ct    London SE1 1HR

BE WARNED!   I called them today, and they hung up on me.  They know we are after them.

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