Day 85 – Jamaica Road – Spa Road – St James’s Road – Southwark Park Road

South of the river once more for today’s outing, but only just. We’re east of Tower Bridge in Bermondsey, exploring the highs and lows of the area between Southwark Park Road and the Thames; an area intersected by both the Jamaica Road and the Kent-bound rail lines out of London Bridge. In common with the other parts of South London visited recently this locale is heavy on public housing estates but unlike them it still has a wide selection of functioning pubs. The weather was warmer than I had dressed for and I had added to the usual navigational challenge by employing a map that was at least 15 years out of date. (The one below is not much better but at least handy if you need to know where the EV charging points are).

We kick things off by heading west on Jamaica Road from Bermondsey Tube Station past Major Road (which seriously belies its name) and Ben Smith Way. As we turn south onto St James’s Road we pass the first of those pubs I mentioned, the inter-war mock-Tudor style Gregorian.

Further up the road just before we reach the railway is the St James of Bermondsey which dates back to around 1870. This one-time Watneys pub was done up and renamed (from the St James Tavern) in 2014. It’s changed hands a couple of times since then including a brief ownership by one of the breweries on the so-called Bermondsey Beer Mile. That informal collection of microbreweries and taprooms alongside the railway viaduct roughly covers the distance from Tower Bridge Road to St James’s Road.

Railway Sidings Road is the first of many routes under the viaduct taken during the course of today. This viaduct is one of a series of nineteen brick railway viaducts between London Bridge station and Deptford Creek, which together make a single structure 3.45 miles in length. The structure carries the former London and Greenwich Railway (L&GR) line and consists of 851 semi-circular arches, the longest run of arches in Britain.

We don’t carry on having reached the other side however. Instead we double back and follow Dockley Road beneath the rails.

On Rouel Road we turn right down to Spa Road and make a return visit under the viaduct. As attested by the blown-up photograph mural beneath the bridge, this was once the site of Spa Road station the original terminus of the L&GR, the capital’s first railway. Opened in 1836, the station underwent several ownership changes, was rebuilt, changed its name, and relocated before closing in 1915 due to cost-saving measures during World War I. The tunnel is still supported by the original blue painted cast iron columns that line either side of the roadway.

We look in on Ness Street then continue east to Thurland Road off of which stands St James Anglican Church. After the Battle of Waterloo a Commission was set up to build churches as a means of giving thanks and commemorating the victory. A sum of £1m was initially granted for their construction, in Acts of 1818 and 1824. South London secured seven of these so-called Waterloo Churches and group of Bermondsey churchmen successfully lobbied for a grant to build one of those seven having acquired the land on which St James was built. James Savage, the architect, modelled the church on the style of Greek Temples with galleries round three sides and the organ in the west. The bells were cast by the famous foundry of Mears of Whitechapel, from cannon left behind by Napoleon at Waterloo and a four-faced striking clock, costing £160, was put in the tower. The church was consecrated in 1829.

Sadly, I have been unable to find any further information about the death by drowning of a Captain John Hullin on Christmas Eve 1846, as recorded on one of the gravestones piled up at the back of the churchyard. There is no record of a shipwreck on that date although the straits of Messina (between Sicily and the Italian mainland) are known for their jeopardy. The Nathaniel Montefiore (1`819 – 1883), commemorated by the drinking fountain was a surgeon and philanthropist who practised at Guy’s Hospital. He died of a cold caught while attending a funeral in Berlin ( I suspect that wasn’t the inspiration for the Len Deighton novel).

After leaving the grounds of the church we follow Frean Street (named for the Peak Frean biscuit factory that once existed nearby), Sun Passage, Old Jamaica Road and Marine Street back under the railway to Rouel Road. Heading south via Lucey Road and Yalding Road takes us past part of the Rouel Road Estate which is a particularly unlovely example of post-war public housing. In fact most of the housing estates in this area suffer in comparison with those encountered elsewhere in South London (so far at any rate). More England flags round here than I’ve been used to seeing as well; including this unlikely juxtaposition.

Arriving on Southwark Park Road we make our way east as far as Linsey Street which runs north into Alexis Street where we find the original school building of St James CofE Primary. This was constructed in 1877 as a London School Board facility and designed by the renowned architect E.R. Robson as part of the LSB’s massive push to educate inner-London children. Known affectionately as a “three-decker,” its classic Victorian layout stacked infants on the ground floor, junior girls on the first floor, and junior boys on the second. Nowadays, the building supplements the school’s main campus which is off Old Jamaica Road.

We round the corner into Macks Road then cut across the Rouel Road community garden to the top end of St James’s Road from here we make our way back to Southwark Park Road via Blue Anchor Lane and Bombay Street. As we make the return journey east we pass the Blue Anchor pub, the current incarnation of which has stood here since 1878. Prior to that the site was host to a “Blew Anchor” tavern as far back as at least 1695. Just beyond The Blue Anchor lies the Blue Market which has existed here for well over a hundred and fifty years; originally lining Southwark Park Road but moved to this purpose built square in 1976. Following regeneration in 2011 one of the access points, Hannah Orchard Walk, was named after a lady who worked in the market for more than eight decades starting in 1921. Despite the plaque proclaiming that the funding from the Mayor of London is “promoting a better and more prosperous London” reality doesn’t really bear that out. The market has room for 24 stallholders but there are reportedly only around 10 here on a regular basis and on this Thursday “Mr Fish Sole of Bermondsey” is holding the fort on his own. The pub on the square, The Old Bank, which is festooned with rather more flags of St George than warranted by the impending World Cup, is apparently popular with Millwall supporters (coincidence I’m sure). The statue, a representation of the Bermondsey Lion was created by Kevin Boys for Southwark Council and in 2011.

Back in the day it was was said that you could buy anything Down the Blue’ and by fair means or foul, goods bound for the local factories found their way to the Blue Market, drawing legions of eager shoppers to the area. To a rather lesser extent the first part of that could be said to still hold true today.

It’s a bit of a trek back along Southwark Park Road before, notwithstanding a detour into Henley Drive, we finally turn north again on Alscot Road which runs alongside Bermondsey Spa Gardens before hitting Spa Road opposite the former Bermondsey Town Hall. Built on the site previously occupied by Bermondsey Public Baths. The building was designed by Henry Tansley in the Greek Revival style and completed in 1930. The design involved a symmetrical main frontage with nine bays; the central section including a large three-bay, full-height, tetrastyle Ionic order portico. Internally, the main atrium on the ground floor featured a grand staircase and Doric order marble columns which supported an elliptical landing on the first floor and an elliptical domed ceiling above. The new building took over the role of headquarters of the Metropolitan Borough of Bermondsey during WWII but ceased to be the local seat of government when the enlarged London Borough of Southwark was formed in 1965. The Grade II listed building continued to be used as additional workspace by Southwark Council until 2010 before being converted into a block of apartments known as “Bath House Lofts” in 2014.

According to CAMRA, The Queens Arms, a short way to the east on Spa Road was converted into flats in 2016. If so, nothing has been done to disguise its pubbiness, which dates back to the early 19th century.

From here we make a circuit westward involving Neckinger, Grange Walk and The Grange to bring us back to Spa Road at its western end. En route we also take in several streets threaded through a development more recent than the map I was working from – Arts Lane, Limasol Street, Bakery Street and Woodmill Street. Just up from the old Town Hall is the original Bermondsey Public Library, also Grade II listed. This was built 1890-91 and was the work of John Johnson, architect and F and H Higgs, builders. It is in Flemish bond (a traditional bricklaying pattern created by alternating headers – the short end of the brick and stretchers – the long side within the same course) with terracotta and stone trim.  This was one of the first free public libraries in London and remained operational as such until the 1980s after which it was used as office space by London Borough of Southwark. In 2009 it was sold to the Kagyu Samze Dzong London Buddhist community to be used as a Tibetan Buddhist Meditation Centre for World Peace & Health.

Having covered the full extent of Spa Road we follow Enid Street southwest alongside the railway viaduct again, a stretch that is one of the main components of the Bermondsey Beer Mile. On the other side of the street lies the Neckinger Estate. The estate was built in 1938 by the Bermondsey Borough Council to provide affordable housing for local workers and occupies the site of historic tanneries and the 18th-century Neckinger Mills. It gets its name from the River Neckinger, a tidal tributary of the Thames, the remains of which are subterranean apart from the final few hundred metres that flow into St Saviours Dock (see further on).

At the end of Enid Street we emerge onto Abbey Street at the southern entrance to the tunnel underneath the Abbey Street Bridge, another of those that were built in 1836 to carry the London and Greenwich Railway.

We don’t cross under the bridge however; we turn left instead and then immediately right into Gedling Place which takes us under the railway to Druid Street where we continue into Sweeney Crescent and make our way down to Jamaica Road. After a short westward stint on Jamaica Road we turn north and follow Shad Thames down to the river. In the 19th century, this street and its neighbour, Maguire Street, were home to the largest warehouse complex in London. From the mid-1980’s onward, as with Wapping on the other side of the river, the wharves have been converted to house upmarket apartments and associated restaurants and leisure facilities. Originally built in 1873, the warehouses here stored huge quantities of tea, coffee, spices and other commodities, which were unloaded and loaded onto river boats. For this reason, the area became known as the ‘larder of London’. During the 20th century, the area went into decline as congestion and containerization forced shipping to unload goods further east, and the last warehouses closed in 1972. In 1989, the Design Museum, brainchild of Terence Conran, opened its doors in a converted banana warehouse in Shad Thames. In 2016, however, it moved to a new location in Kensington. Among the most striking features of Shad Thames are the walkways which criss-cross the street high overhead. Most of them now connect the Butlers Wharf building and the Cardamom Building and were originally used as bridges to roll barrels and the like between warehouses.

Having reached the river we are afforded panoramic views of Tower Bridge and the City to the west and Canary Wharf to the east.

A few paces further downstream we arrive at St Saviours Dock where what is left of the River Neckinger dribbles out into the Thames. The river’s name translates to “Devil’s Neckerchief” or hangman’s noose, likely referencing the gibbets where pirates were executed. In 1995 a hydraulic cable stay bridge was installed across the dock to connect up the Thames Path, and we duly take advantage of that today.

As we proceed parallel to the river along Bermondsey Wall West we pass St Saviours House, a former factory that was also, inevitably, converted into apartments. What was once manufactured in this building is seemingly unascertainable but the area was once a real hub of industry, in particular the production of biscuits.

By way of Flockton Street, Chamber Street and Jacob Street, which was once home the Spillers dog biscuit factory, we double back to Mill Street which runs along the back of St Saviours Wharf and New Concordia Wharf on the eastern bank of St Saviours Dock. Both these warehouses are Grade II listed; the former was built around 1860, the latter, constructed c.1882, also included a cornmill (hence the water tower and chimney). Conversion of both buildings occurred in the early 1980’s. The area to the east of Mill Street was once known as Jacob’s Island and was a notorious slum in the first half of 19th century. Charles Dickens used Jacob’s Island as the setting for Bill Sikes’ lair where the Oliver Twist villain is cornered and meets his demise at the end of the novel.

Leaving Mill Street via Wolseley Street we finally reach our pub of the day, the unassuming The Ship Aground. This former Courage house is situated next to Bermondsey Fire Station and featured in the 90’s TV series London’s Burning. They don’t do food so I had to make do with crisps to accompany my half a cider. The staff were very friendly (though it’s always a bit disconcerting to be referred to as my lovely by someone half your age) and the toilet was pretty smart too.

Having finished my drink I head back up to Jamaica Road on Parkers Row and Dockhead (careful with the typing there). W.R Jacobs, the (originally Irish) company responsible for the eponymous crackers, Club biscuits and Twiglets, had a factory that occupied the site between Dockhead and Wolseley Street. This site closed down in 1989 but the company, which is now part of United Biscuits, itself owned by a Turkish-based conglomerate, still produces 55,000 tons of snacks and biscuits annually from its factory in Aintree, Liverpool.

In between Dockhead and Jamaica Road lies the Roman Catholic, Most Holy Trinity Church. The original Catholic chapel here, the Dockhead Mission, was built in 1773 but only lasted seven years before being demolished in the Gordon Riots. More than 50 years later, in 1837, a replacement was built in the Early English Gothic style. That church was then destroyed by a German V-bomb in 1945. The present church, another Grade II listing, was the final work of architect Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel (1887-1959), a prolific designer of Roman Catholic churches. Construction began in 1957 but the church wasn’t consecrated until 1960 by which time Goodhart-Rendel had passed on. The church, with its yellow and red brick polychrome patterns, was completed by the successor practice of F.G. Broadbent and Partners.

About 200 metres east on Jamaica Road we turn north again on George Row. On the side of Nickleby House is a Southwark Council blue plaque marking the fact that the all-round entertainer (Sir) Tommy Steele (1936 – ) was born in Bermondsey (though nobody seems to be sure where exactly). He was born as Thomas Hicks but by the time he had his first hit record, “Rock With The Caveman” in 1956, he had adopted the stage name. A series of chart smashes followed in quick succession as Steele became Britain’s first teen idol and bona-fide rock n’ roll star (notwithstanding the tameness of his material). So rapid was his rise to fame that as early as 1957 a biographical film documenting it, “The Tommy Steele Story”, was produced. Steele shifted away from rock and roll in the 1960s, becoming an all-round entertainer. He originated the part of Kipps in Half a Sixpence in the West End and on Broadway, reprising his role in the 1967 film version. As an actor, he went on to appear in the films The Happiest Millionaire (1967) and Finian’s Rainbow (1968) and as the lead in several West End productions of Singin’ in the Rain

We work our way further east via Sugar Lane, East Lane, Scott Lidgett Crescent, Lewellyn Street, Chamber Street (once more) and Loftie Street before alighting on Bevington Street. Just round the corner on Bermondsey Wall East is one final pub, The Old Justice, another of those 1930s neo-Tudor style jobs. The architect was Sidney C Clark, regarded as one of the most accomplished inter-war pub architects. In 2017 planning permission was refused for the conversion of the pub to flats and it was Grade II-listed shortly after. Subsequently the building owner began unlawfully ripping out the historic interior but following enforcement action by Southwark Council, listed building consent was granted in 2021 for reinstatement of the interior. After a five year hiatus the pub reopened in 2023. It was famously used as a backdrop for Paul McCartney’s music video for No More Lonely Nights, a fact commemorated by the plaque which is just about visible in the photo below (next to the lamp on the right – squint !)

Opposite the pub is a former office block that is all that remains of a sewer pumping station constructed by the Surrey and Kent Commission of Sewers in 1822. At the time, this part of London was still part of Surrey, and this particular commission can be dated to 1554, as its Letters Patent were granted by Queen Mary following a series of “gret wyndes and fluddes”. Sewers at the time were more about draining water to prevent flooding in low lying areas than the removal of human waste. Land Registry documents relating to a sale of the building in 1992 indicate that the sewers remain under the building and are still used by Thames Water.

Farncombe Street leads up to another primary school dating back to the Victorian era that is still used for that purpose today. Farncombe Street Board School was built in 1874 by the London School Board in the ecclesiastical Gothic Revival style popular at the time and is yet another Grade II Listing because of this. The steeply pitched outer gable ends have stone quatrefoils with three light slits above, while the whole building is capped with a cupola containing the school bell, itself capped with a weather vane. Today the school has around 250 pupils with a more or less 50/50 gender split. Almost half the children don’t speak English as a first language notwithstanding which the proportion of them deemed to meet the expected standard for reading and writing is significantly above the national average.

For the last leg of today’s journey we move from Farncombe Street into Emba Street then on to Wilson Grove and back to Jamaica Road via Janeway Street and repeat visits to Scott Lidgett Crescent and Bevington Street. 100 metres to the east and we’re back at Bermondsey Tube Station.

Day 65 – Marylebone Road – Edgware Road – Seymour Place – Hyde Park Place

Today’s excursion is primarily concerned with the triangular area formed drawing a line along the Marylebone Road from Baker Street tube to the junction with the Edgware Road then down the latter to Marble Arch and back across to where you started. After completing that there was just time to hop over to the west side of Edgware Road a do a few streets to the north of Hyde Park. Looking at this map, it just (finally) occurred to me how much easier this same project would be in Manhattan where the streets are all numbered and laid out in a nice symmetrical grid.

Day 65 Route

We start out today on the Marylebone Road again, outside Old Marylebone Town Hall. This was designed by Sir Edwin Cooper (1874 – 1942), who also designed the impressive Port of London Authority building in Trinity Square, and opened in 1920. The building was listed in 1981 and in 2013 it was acquired from Westminster City Council by the London Business School. Following a redevelopment programme that involved the creation of a new glass and steel entrance structure linking the Town Hall building with its annexe, the Sammy Ofer Centre (named after £25m donor Idan Ofer) opened for, well, business in 2018. The main building continues to function as Westminster Registry Office in which capacity it has historically proved very popular with both members of the Beatles and wanna-be members of the Beatles. Paul McCartney has got hitched here twice; to Linda in 1969 and then for the third time, to Nancy Shevell in 2011 (I have to admit that that one passed me by). Ringo and Barbara Bach also tied the knot here as did Liam Gallagher and Patsit Kensit (of course they did) and Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffiths.

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Moving past the Town Hall we turn left into Upper Montagu Street then work our way back to the Marylebone Road via Salisbury Place, Thornton Place, York Street and Knox Street. Sandwiched between the latter and Wyndham Street is the suitably low-key London HQ of Philip Green’s Arcadia businesses. I guess these days it’s somewhat stretching a point to call it an empire.

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Down Wyndham Street to York Street again then back up Enford Street which emerges opposite the Landmark Hotel; which we covered last time out but not with an accompanying picture of the whole building so here it is in all its splendour.

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Back on the south side is the Grade II listed but derelict building that started out as the Free Hospital for Women and Children and Samaritan Institution when constructed in 1889. Fifteen years later it was renamed (slightly more snappily) as the  Samaritan Free Hospital for Women. After becoming part of the NHS in 1948 it survived for almost a further 50 years until it closed in 1997.

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Opposite, and somehow I missed this last time, is what remains of St Marylebone Grammar School. The school was founded in 1792 under the name of the Philological Society by Thomas Collingwood, under the patronage of the Prince Frederick, second son of George III, with the aim of helping “the heads of families, who by unexpected misfortune, have been reduced from a station of comfort and respectability.” It moved to Marylebone Road in 1827 and was accepted in trust by the London County Council in 1908 and renamed St Marylebone Grammar School. During the early Seventies SMGS was subject to a tug of war between the Labour controlled ILEA, who wished to merge it with a local secondary modern school, and the Conservatives who ran Westminster Council who didn’t. When Labour took over the Council in 1974 the Parents’ Association continued opposition to the scheme but in the end the ILEA simply refused to continue funding the school beyond 1981 and it was forced to close. Today the listed main original building forms part of the Abercorn independent prep school. Alumni of SMGS include pop star Stuart Goddard (aka Adam Ant), footballer John Barnes and writer Jerome K. Jerome

Continuing west the next left turning off of Marylebone Road is Seymour Place. Just  round the corner the Rwandan High Commission is the first of four HCs we’ll encounter today.

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Returning to York Street we switch eastward and then cut through Wyndham Place to Crawford Street. This is the site of St Mary’s Church which was built as one of the Commissioners’ churches in 1823–1824 and was designed by Robert Smirke (1780 – 1867) who was also responsible for the main block and façade of the British Museum.

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From Crawford Street we loop back up to Harcourt Street which runs on a diagonal north-west to Old Marylebone Road and is home to the Swedish Church (Svenska Kyrkan), otherwise known as Ulrika Eleonora Church, which dates back to 1912.

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For our final visit (for today) to the Marylebone Road we stroll westward in the shadow of the heavenly vision that is the Marylebone Flyover. As the plaque proclaims, the flyover was opened by Mr Desmond Plummer, leader of the Greater London Council, on 12th October 1967. 119m long and 17m wide it is crossed by around 80,000 vehicles each day. It was created as part of a proposed series of 1960s congestion-relieving initiatives forming the eastern end of the Westway elevated dual carriageway, one of the few schemes that actually came to fruition.

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Turning south on the Edgware Road we make an immediate left into Chapel Street where we find the second of the two tube stations named after the Edgware Road. This one serves the Circle, District and Hammersmith & City lines and was opened as part of the Metropolitan Railway between Paddington and Farringdon in 1863.

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At the end of Chapel Street we cross over the Old Marylebone Road and follow Homer Street down to Crawford Street. Running parallel to this, back up to the OMR, is Homer  Row where T.S. Eliot (1888 – 1965) once resided. American born poet and playwright Thomas Stearns Eliot moved into 18 Crawford Mansions with his wife, Vivienne, in 1916, shortly after the publication of The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. At the time, Eliot was working as a teacher at Highgate School where he taught a young John Betjeman. He also wrote book reviews and lectured in the evenings at University College London to earn extra money. By 1920 the couple had managed to find accommodation close to Regent’s Park that was both more capacious and less insalubrious in its surroundings. Today two bedroom apartments in Crawford Mansions sell for more than £1m.

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Transept Street and Cabbell Street which both cross between OMR and Chapel Street are the settings for the impressive crimson-hued Oxford and Cambridge Mansions which date from 1885.

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These buildings seem a world apart from the chaos and exoticism of the Edgware Road with its shisha cafes and mobile phone/money transfer outlets. One of the few relics of bygone days is Robertsons Pawnbrokers at 199 on the west side. Established in 1797, Robertsons specialises in fine, pre-owned, jewellery, gold, diamonds, watches, antiques and silver, and artwork and since the 1960s has been part of Suttons & Robertsons, one of the largest pawnbrokers in the UK.

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Crawford Place takes us east back to Crawford Street which is one side of the square  that surrounds the Seymour Leisure Centre, the others being Seymour Place, Bryanston Place and Shouldham Street. Grade II listed Seymour Leisure Centre was originally built in 1935-37 as a public baths and laundry by architect Kenneth Cross for St Marylebone Borough Council. The building is faced in purple brick with red brick architraves and Portland stone dressings and the gabled roof is clad in Spanish tiles. One of very few public sports facilities in central London, SLC boasts a gym, sports hall, 30m pool and an indoor climbing wall.

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Besides Shouldham Street there are three more streets that bridge across from Crawford Place to Harrowby Street; Molyneux Street, Cato Street and Brendon Street. Opposite the start of Molyneux Street is 45 Crawford Place which is shared by the High Commissions of Belize and of Antigua & Barbuda and the street itself is home to the High Commission of Tonga.

Of much greater interest though is Cato Street, not that you would know it to look at it. For here it was that the perpetrators of the eponymous Cato Street Conspiracy met in 1820 to hatch their plot to assassinate Prime Minister, Lord Liverpool and all the members of his cabinet. The conspirators, enraged by the Peterloo Massacre and the repressive legislation enacted in its wake, styled themselves as the “Spencean Philanthropists” after the radical speaker Thomas Spence (1750 – 1814). They were led by Arthur Thistlewood, who had been involved with the Spa Fields riots of 1816, with George Edwards as his second in command. The conspirators planned to assassinate the cabinet while they were at a dinner hosted by Lord Harrowby. They would then seize key buildings, overthrow the government and establish a “Committee of Public Safety” to oversee a radical revolution. Unfortunately, this supposed dinner was a set-up courtesy of Edwards who, it transpired, was a government spy.

At 7:30 pm on the evening of February 23 the Bow Street Runners stormed the Cato Street hideout. Some conspirators surrendered peacefully, while others resisted forcefully, Thistlewood killing one of the police officers with a sword. He along with three others slipped out through the back window but they were arrested a few days later. During the trial, the defence argued that the statement of Edwards was unreliable and he was therefore never called to testify. Police did however persuade two of the men, Robert Adams and John Monument, to testify against other conspirators in exchange for dropped charges. Accordingly, most of the accused were sentenced to be hanged, drawn and quartered for high treason. All sentences were later commuted to either hanging and beheading or transportation for life.  Thistlewood, Richard Tidd, James Ings, William Davidson and John Brunt were hanged at Newgate Prison on the morning of 1 May 1820.

On the stretch of the Edgware Road between the intersections with Harrowby Street and Nutford Place is a branch of Waitrose which occupies a former Woolworths store that first opened in 1914 but was done up in the modernist style seen below in 1936.

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On the actual junction with Nutford Place this forlorn and faded pub sign presents a telling juxtaposition of the past and present of this area.

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After a quick nod to Forset Street we proceed east on Nutford Place as far as Brown Street where we turn north. Off Brown Street is the pretty nondescript cul-de-sac of Castlereagh Street which, for the sake of symmetry, I am taking to be named after Robert Stewart, Lord Castlereagh (1769 -1822) who was one of the members of the aforementioned Lord Liverpool’s cabinet; Foreign Secretary in fact. Ulster-born Castlereagh was one of the prime movers behind the repressive government legislation that inspired the Cato Street conspirators and was directly named in Shelley’s vitriolic Masque of Anarchy poem written in response to Peterloo. He didn’t long survive his would-be assassins however, taking his own life in 1822 after being threatened with the exposure of his homosexual proclivities.

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Having arrived back on Harrowby Street we turn right and then head south on a further stretch of Seymour Place past the Sylvia Young Theatre School. Sylvia Young first opened her school as a full-time establishment on Drury Lane in 1981. It moved to this current location in a converted church in 2010. The impressive list of alumni features actors such as Keeley Hawes, Lily Cole, Billie Piper and Steven MacKintosh and singers Amy Winehouse, Rita Ora and Dua Lipa.

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From here, starting with George Street we continue dipping in and out of the Edgware Road all the way down to Marble Arch with Stourcliffe Street, Wythburn Place, Great Cumberland Place, Upper Berkeley Street, Hamden Gurney Street, Seymour Street and Bryanston Street providing the route. At 51-53 Edgware Road you can just about make out what remains of the Art Deco Gala Royal cinema. This opened as the Royal Cinema around 1938/9 then was taken over by Jacey Cinemas and Gala Film Distributers in the 1960s. Theirs was the partnership that introduced continental and art house film to London. As time went on the Gala Royal couldn’t compete with the big cinema companies of the West End and towards the end of its life, resorted to screening saucy sex romps before closing in 1979. The building briefly reopened showing Arabic films to cater for the growing Arabic population on Edgware Road but shut for good in 1981. It now houses what I presume to be an Egyptian restaurant, judging by the pictures of Mo Salah outside, called Shishawi.

On Upper Berkeley Street is the West London Synagogue which was consecrated in 1870. The main sanctuary, shown below, was built in the Neo-Byzantine architectural style by Davis & Emmanuel.

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So as noted at the beginning once we arrive at Marble Arch we nip across the Edgware Road and head west along the Bayswater Road. After a hundred metres or so we turn right and move away from Hyde Park up Stanhope Place where we come across the first of a string of Blue Plaques. Lily Elsie (1886 – 1962) was one of the most successful stage actresses of the Edwardian era with a particular forte for musical comedies including the first London production of The Merry Widow. Despite a multitude of male admirers, according the renowned dress designer of that age, Lucile, “She was absolutely indifferent to most men for she once told me she disliked the male character and considered that men only behaved tolerably to a woman who treated them coldly”. Sadly this didn’t prevent her from entering into an unhappy marriage that led to her exile from the stage.

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We turn down Connaught Place and at the end where it meets the Edgware Road is the house where Lord Randolph Churchill (1849 – 95), father of Winston of course, spent nine of the last twelve years of his relatively brief life. From the start of his political career Randolph was a champion of progressive Conservatism also known as “Tory Democracy”. As this philosophy gained ascendancy within the Tory party his star rose culminating in his appointment as Chancellor Of the Exchequer in Lord Salisbury’s second administration which began 1886. Unfortunately he had little talent for building alliances and gathering supporters within the Commons and lasted only a few months in the role before resigning in a row over cuts to the Armed Forces. He never made it back from the political wilderness and suffered from increasingly debilitating illness for the remainder of his life. It is considered a point of fact that he had been undergoing treatment for syphilis since his mid-twenties but it is still open to debate whether it was the mercury poisoning or an unrelated brain tumour that caused his demise at the age of 45.

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Next one is in Connaught Square, reached via Seymour Street, where the ballet dancer Marie Taglioni (1804 – 1884) lived for a couple of years at no.14. Swedish born, but Italian on her father’s side, Ms Taglioni’s main claim to fame is that she is credited with being the first ballerina to truly dance en pointe.

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Connaught Square is bordered to the north by Connaught Street which we cross over into Portsea Place where no.16 was once the home of the South African author, proto-feminist and ant-war campaigner Olive Schreiner (1855 – 1920) once lived. I have to confess to a total lack of familiarity with Ms Schreiner and the work for which she is reportedly best known, The Story of An African Farm, but her advocacy of socialism, pacifism and the rights of non-white races mark her as a woman distinctly ahead of her time.

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At the top of Portsea Place we take Kendal Street back to the Edgware Road for the very final time then make our way back south towards Hyde Park via Park West Place, Porchester Place, and Albion Street. The last of these has commemorations of two former residents, novelist William Makepeace Thackeray (1811 – 1863) at no.20 and Sir Charles Vyner Brooke (1874 – 1963) at no.13. Thackeray is of course best known for his magnum opus Vanity Fair but he also penned The Luck of Barry Lyndon which was adapted for the screen by Stanley Kubrick in 1975. Thackeray was renowned as a man of idleness and gluttony (allegedly including an addiction to spicy peppers) which undoubtedly helped to hasten him into the grave at the age of 52. Vyner Brooke was the third and last White Rajah of the Raj of Sarawak. The Raj was established as an independent state located in the northwestern part of Borneo from a series of land concessions acquired by the English adventurer, James Brooke (Charles’ great uncle), from the Sultanate of Brunei in the mid-nineteenth century. As a major producer of oil, rubber and black pepper, Sarawak prospered for a century until the territory was invaded by the Japanese in WW2. After the war it became a British Crown Colony, the last one, before becoming part of Malaysia when it gained independence.

Last port of call for today is on Hyde Park Place. This part of London, north of Hyde Park was originally the site of the village of Tyburn which was infamous as a place of public hangings from 1196 to 1793. In 1571, the so-called Tyburn Tree was erected near where Marble Arch is currently situated. The “Tree” or “Triple Tree” was a novel form of gallows, consisting of a horizontal wooden triangle supported by three legs which meant that several prisoners could be hanged at once. Among those executed throughout the ages were the 105 martyrs of the Catholic Reformation. It was in commemoration of these martyrs that Mother Marie Adèle Garnier established the Tyburn Convent here in 1903, she and her  community having fled to England from France two years earlier on account of French laws prohibiting religious Orders. In so doing she fulfilled a prophecy of the 16th century Roman Catholic priest Father Gregory Gunne who in 1585, referring the execution four years earlier of St Edmund Campion, proclaimed “You have slain the greatest man in England and one day there, where you have put him to death, a religious house will arise, thanks to an important offering.”

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