Next stop, the City of London, with more ‘history’ crammed into a square mile than arguably anywhere else on Earth:
en.wikipedia.org












shop.cityoflondon.gov.uk
Thanks for that Wapping. Have you seen this map of Tudor London for browsing or cross reference purposes?
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Map of Tudor London (2nd Edition)
So much of London has changed over the ages. Have you ever wondered what it looked like before? Where did that road lead to in the Tudor age? What is lurking under the surface of our modern day London? This map offers answers to all these questions and more. It unfolds to reveal the...shop.cityoflondon.gov.uk










Looks to be some great hidden pubs around. Presumably not visited by tourists ?
I still have a bottle ready for a guest to drink. I wanted to enjoy it but wasn't to my taste.....´´All Bar One´´..I think these are terrible places.....
Another one which is nice but a bit further West is this one: Ye Olde Mitre. It is a Fullers pub so beer might not be to everyone taste. Doc - London Pride on draught is better than in the bottle.![]()
If Wappers is heading that way maybe we get a pic on his tour
Maybe we should start a thread:
´´Show us your favourite pubs´
and why they are so good. could also server as reference for others.












Thanks for posting.Thank you everyone for the kind comments.
I have spent just short of 40 years, wandering in idle moments around the ‘Square Mike’ of the City of London * and still trip over oddities. The biggest change? None of the huge towering office blocks were here when I started. After a while you forget what was there before. One very simple example. The French AGF insurance company (it is now part of Germany’s Allianz) had their first office next door to the post office in Leadenhall Market. That went in the early 80’s. Their second office, again in Leadenhall Market, was up some rickety stairs and still had a live fire in the brokers’ waiting area.
Leadenhall Market was itself still a functioning market then (it isn’t now) the streets within the market running with blood come closing time of the many butchers’ shops. You can still see how the road curves down to the edge, so that the blood and hosed water would run down to the drains. It’s the march of progress; a lot of it very good, if sometimes a bit sterile.
I and my immediate colleagues will be the last generation to remember ‘How it was’. I bet though, that in 2065 there will be Wapping 2, saying much the same thing, as the hover bus hovers outside his 92nd floor window and he prepares to wander to the Swan (still there, no doubt) for a pint of London Pride.
* I still need to do the 50 remaining City churches and the more besides ruins. I’d also like to do the livery companies. How ridiculous perhaps to have 50 (there used to be 100 or more) churches in a square mile. But they tell us something about the people who lived, worked, loved and died within or just outside of the City of London’s walls, for well over a thousand years.
Different times now but I do wish I had bought one of those apartments back then
I did the same in Hackney in 1986. A two-bedroom house for £42,500 (the neighbours thought I was stark, staring mad). I sold it in 1996 for £95,500 and I thought I was the smartest man in the world. Recently sold for £807,000 (and it was too small for us when we became a family of three) ....In the early 80’s, I bought my two bedroom terraced house in Bethnal Green, E2 for £9,000. No kitchen or bathroom and an outside loo. It last sold for £920,000. One of its several sisters in the same row *, has just gone through £1,300,000. Hey-ho, you can’t keep everything.
* It’s only odd numbers. The even numbers of the row opposite were bombed flat and demolished, replaced by a less than glamorous block of 50’s to 60’s flats.