Do it Yourself Walks
The main sights on the walk are: Bankside, hosting the sites of
three Elizabethan theatre's including Shakespeare's Globe; now
rebuilt, The Tate Modern Gallery, Southwark, the site of the Clink
Prison, the Bishop of Winchester's medieval palace, St Mary Overy
Dock, Southwark Cathedral, the George Inn, Chaucer's Tabard tavern
and the old operating theatre of St Thomas's Hospital; and in the
final section of the walk through the new London Bridge, Guy's, past
HMS Belfast and onto Tower Bridge. There are superb views of the
City throughout the walk, with many photographic opportunities.
It's now about twenty to three in the afternoon.
Southwark, Southwark Cathedral, Bankside and Borough
Background
London’s Southwark and Bankside lies on the south bank of the Thames
opposite the City. Historically, they were part of the City and have
great historic appeal.
The main sights on the walk are: Bankside, hosting the sites of
three Elizabethan theatre's including Shakespeare's Globe; now
rebuilt, The Tate Modern Gallery, Southwark, the site of the Clink
Prison, the Bishop of Winchester's medieval palace, St Mary Overy
Dock, Southwark Cathedral, the George Inn, Chaucer's Tabard tavern
and the old operating theatre of St Thomas's Hospital; and in the
final section of the walk through the new London Bridge, Guy's, past
HMS Belfast and onto Tower Bridge. There are superb views of the
City throughout the walk, with many photographic opportunities.
If you like what we are doing please follow one or more of the links
Start: Blackfriars Station
Finish: Tower Hill Station Fenchurch Street British Rail Station and
Tower Gateway
Station on the Docklands Light Railway are both nearby.
Length: 21/2 miles (4 kilometres).
Time: APPROX 3 hours.
Leave Blackfriars Station following signs to Blackfriars Bridge and
then cross Blackfriars Bridge, this was the third bridge over the
River Thames to be built in central London. This bridge was erected
in 1869, though the first Blackfriars Bridge known as the William
Pitt Bridge was built a century earlier.
Next to the road bridge is a Victorian railway bridge and remnants
(of in the piers) of another.
Both bridges were built for the London, Chatham and Dover Railway
Company in pre-British Rail days, the dismantled one being the first
railway bridge across the Thames.
Over the bridge, turn left between the bollards before Ludgate House
and go down the steps onto Bankside river walk. Beyond the railway
bridges there is a fine view of the City. In the east the National
Westminster Tower is the tallest building, with the weird looking
city office of the mayor of London ( this has quite a few names
invented by the locals) while the western end of the City is still
dominated by St Paul's Cathedral, more about this later.
Until the great rebuilding of London from the massive damage
inflicted during the bombing of world war 2, up until the 1960’s St
Paul's was the tallest building in London. Even now, sensible
planning controls dictate that the buildings around the cathedral
are built no higher than around 130 feet (40 metres). St Paul's
itself is 365 feet (111 metres) high, It dominates the views from
here.
Go past the Founders Arms built on the site of the foundry where all
the iron work for St Paul's was said to have been forged and cast.
On the right is the Bankside Gallery (built in 1980), home of the
Royal Societies of Painters. Next on the riverside is the Tate
Modern gallery formerly the Bankside Power Station, with free
entrance and superb work’s of art, magical views, and an
architectural experience inside to be seen and believed, look at the
huge turbine room and cranes still intact, very impressive.
In Tudor times (16th century) there were fish ponds here which
supplied pike and other fish to the houses in the area, and the
royal palaces across the river. Beyond the Tate, Cardinal's Wharf
retains some of its old houses.
The house on the left has a plaque recording that Sir Christopher
Wren lived here while St Paul's was being built, though there is no
evidence to prove this. On the right, Provost's Lodging belongs to
the Provost of Southwark Cathedral (featured later in the walk).
In between the houses is Cardinal Cap Alley which once led to a
tavern, drinking house or brothel called the Cardinal's Hat. Until
the 1600s Bankside was a bawdy place, full of taverns, brothels then
called 'stews' from the stewhouses, which were steam baths doubling
as brothels, there was bear and bull-baiting pits and, in the time
of Shakespeare, public theatres.
These were all popular forms of entertainment but the City
authorities refused to tolerate them within their jurisdiction on
the north bank of the river. Not surprisingly, they flourished here,
even though part of this area known as “the Liberty of the Clink”
was under the control of the Bishops of Winchester, whose London
palace was nearby, ironic that their income was derived that way!.
The other part of the area was called Paris Garden, In 1556 the City
authorities gained control of the area but conditions did not really
change. It was the 17th-century Puritans who really put an end to
Bankside's debauchery and dissipation by closing down the theatres
during the Commonwealth.
Further on from Cardinal's Wharf, the new International Shakespeare
Globe Centre and visitor centre. This project was the fruit of 20
years' hard lobbying by the film director, Sam Wanamaker. It has a
reconstructed Globe Theatre in which people will be able to watch
performances of Shakespeare's plays in a partly open-air setting,
just as they were staged centuries ago.
Take the second turning on the right after the building site into
cobbled Bear Gardens, all hard on the feet here, this was the site
of Bankside's bear-baiting arena.
In 1613 the bear pit was replaced by the Hope Theatre after the
nearby Globe Theatre had burned down the Hope Theatre's owner,
Philip Henslowe, was a business rival of Cuthbert and Richard
Burbage, who ran the Globe. Although it was the most modern of the
four Bankside theatres in Shakespeare's time, the Hope only survived
for three years as a playhouse. Bear-baiting - presumably more
profitable -then resumed. In 1656 the Hope was demolished and, as
the plaque on the wall of the museum records, was replaced by the
Davies Amphitheatre, the last bear-baiting ring built on Bankside.
Bear-baiting and bull-baiting were both finally banned in 1835.
Turn left out of Bear Gardens into Park Street. The next street on
the left is Rose Alley with the site of the Rose Theatre on the
corner nearest to the bridge. This theatre, built in 1587, was the
first theatre on Bankside and (like the Hope Theatre)
Continue along Park Street, going underneath the approach to
Southwark Bridge. To the left is the new Financial Times building.
Opposite, on the wall of another building site, there is a relief
plaque marking the site of Shakespeare's Globe The plaque shows a
view of Elizabethan Bankside, with the Globe in the foreground and
on the right, London Bridge and Southwark Cathedral. Shakespeare was
both an actor and a shareholder in the Globe, which was built in
1599 by the Burbages using materials from their previous theatre in
Shoreditch. The Puritans closed the theatre in 1642 and in 1644 it
was demolished to make room for houses. In the 18th century there
was a brewery on the site, Dr Samuel Johnson, who had his own room
here a house next to the brewery. The fourth Bankside theatre was
the Swan, built in 1595 near Blackfriars Bridge.
At the end of Park Street turn left into Bank End and then right at
the Anchor Inn, with its beer garden overlooking the Great River
Thames, then into Clink Street. The Clink debtors' prison, many
years ago debtors were jailed till their debts were paid this was
ended in the 1800???? And the name of the prison gave the origin of
the slang word 'clink' meaning prison, tis stood here until it
burned down and destroyed during the Gordon Riots in 1780.
On the right, in an old warehouse, there is a museum about the
Bankside area, including the Clink and the 'Liberty' around it which
as we mentioned was controlled by the Bishop’s of Winchester.
Just along on the same side of the road are the remains of
Winchester Palace, the London house of the Bishop’s of Winchester
from 1109 to 1626. There is very little to see apart from the
foundations, and plaque although the west wall with its 14th-century
rose window is still standing.
On the left, the former Pickford's Wharf has been renovated as part
of the redevelopment of Southwark's ancient dock, St Mary Overy. The
cut nearby hosts a three-masted replica of the Golden Hind and is
open to the public. To the left there is another good view of the
City. Follow the road round to the right, turn left into Winchester
Walk and then cross over Cathedral Street to get to Southwark
Cathedral.
The building dates from 1220 and is full of historic monuments and
tombs, including that of John Gower (who died in 1408), poet and
friend of Chaucer. At that time the church was part of the Priory of
St Mary Overy, where Gower lived for the last 20 years of his life.
Other interments in the cathedral are Edmund Shakespeare, William's
younger brother, and the dramatists Fletcher and Massinger. John
Harvard, founder of Harvard University, was born in Southwark and
baptized here in 1607.
Walk past the entrance to the churchyard on the left. Underneath the
railway bridge turn right into the covered Borough Market probably
London's oldest fruit and vegetable market, this is still a live
market now catering for the latest incomers and tourists with trendy
and organic foods, great fun! And then immediately bear left. Cross
the central alley of the market and head for the Wheatsheaf pub tear
yourself from it’s welcome and continue, bear left here into Stoney
Street and then turn left again into the busy Borough High Street on
to the traffic lights outside the Bank. Borough High Street leads to
London Bridge on the left. Until 1750 London Bridge was the only one
across the Thames in London, so Borough High Street was the main
road to the south and the English Channel.
Inns for travellers entering and leaving the City lined the length
of this thoroughfare.
One actually survives, one of my favourite pub’s - The George, a
real galleried inn hidden from view dating from 1677. You can see
the entrance to its yard across the road to the right next to
another bank. Further on from the George, Talbot Yard marks the site
of the Tabard where Chaucer stayed before setting out on his
pilgrimage to Canterbury see the introduction to the Canterbury
Tales and he write’s, 'In Southwerk at the Tabard as I lay, Ready to
wenden on my pilgrimage to Canterbury...'.
Further still down the High Street were two more notorious debtors'
prisons, the King's Bench and the Marshalsea. Charles Dickens set
much of his novel Little Dorrit in the Marshalsea after his father
had been imprisoned there in 1824. Later, imprisonment for debt was
abolished and both prisons were closed.
On Borough High Street turn right from the George and then right at
the traffic lights into St Thomas's Street. On the left is St
Thomas's Church, once housed within St Thomas's Hospital and so the
hospital chapel as well.
In 1865 the hospital moved to Lambeth to make way for London Bridge
Station. The church meanwhile has become the chapter house of
Southwark Cathedral. The church loft, which was used both as a
storehouse for medicinal herbs and as an operating theatre for the
hospital, was rediscovered in 1956 and opened as a museum.
Just beyond the church, the row of Georgian houses were built for
the use of various hospital officials and Nos. 11-19 are still
occupied by the local health authority.
Opposite is the 1725 entrance court of Guy's Hospital with a statue
of its founder, Thomas Guy (an MP and a wealthy printer and
publisher) in the middle. It was here that Keats spent a year
training to be a surgeon before giving up medicine for poetry.
Turn left into Joiner Street and go through the tunnel under London
Bridge Station, opened in 1837 as London's south railway station.
Now go across Tooley Street to the London Bridge Hospital and turn
right past the London Dungeon a tourist attraction in the form of
horror museum mainly medieval.
Walk over the now filled-in dock to the riverside terrace note the
Custom House building which is over the river opposite and the old
Billingsgate Fish Market buildings next to it (Billingsgate now
lives in the Isle of Dogs see the Wapping walk). Turn right here to
HMS Belfast the largest cruiser built for the Royal Navy - weighing
in at 11,000 tons (11,220 tonnes) - and now the only one of its old
big-gun ships in existence. This massive warship was built in 1939
just before world war 2 and, on it’s disposal was opened as a museum
and venue in 1971.
When you get to the ship's gangway turn right into Morgan's and walk
down to Tooley Street. Then turn left and walk along Tooley Street
until you come to the riverside park on the left. Go into the park
and down to the riverside walkway, where there is a fine view of the
Tower of London directly opposite, potographer’s click here!!. Then
turn right, climb the steps onto Tower Bridge and cross the river
using the left-hand pavement.
Completed in 1894, when tall ships still used the Pool of London
before London Bridge, Tower Bridge was provided with a central
section which could be opened to let high-masted ships through, and
an overhead walkway so that pedestrians could use the bridge even
when it was closed to road traffic. The walkway is now included in
the bridge museum, worth the time here.
Once over the bridge, you can continue along Tower Bridge Approach
into the City,
now you can join our Wapping walk or see the Tower.
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If you like what we are doing please follow one or more of the links