Do it Yourself Walks
The Thames,
More a ride than a walk!
Background
The River Thames is why the settlement we now know as London was
built here, it is intertwined in the in the rich story of London. In
early times closeness to a river or water source was vital, and the
many rivers which are now hidden from view buried below the city
hold he clue to the location, the rivers Fleet all the old historic
buildings are close to the river, the Tower of London, the City, the
Palace of Westminster all built on the riverbank. As is further down
Hampton Court, Henry VIII's palace southwest of London, Windsor, and
Woolwich, Greenwich, Deptford, to the east, the Thames twists and
turns in it’s path, past offices and pubs, parks and houses, and
beneath a dozen’s of bridges.
Many have been renovated over the last
decade or so, their designs highlighted with new coats of paint.
When you are tired and weary of walking, hop on to what Londoners
still call a 'pleasure boat', sit back, and enjoy the unfolding of
the London scene.
If you like what we are doing please follow one or more of the links
If you join at Westminster
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Westminster to Waterloo
Opposite Westminster Pier is County Hall, made redundant by Mrs
Thatcher's Tory government in 1986 when it abolished the GLC
(Greater London Council) in a fit of pique, and now occupied by a
hotel and the London Aquarium. To the right is the spectacular
British Airways London Eye which has changed the London skyline
here. Next door is the South Bank Centre, a cultural centre with
theatre and arts centre.
Next to the huge eye and lining the bank are the Jubilee Gardens,
created to mark Queen's Silver Jubilee in 1977. opposite lies
another smaller garden and behind what was for many years, till
1967, the metropolitan police’s HQ, New Scotland Yard, the unusual
name comes from the fact that site of the original headquarters was
once the part of Whitehall Palace that was reserved as lodgings for
Kings of Scotland. Originally there was Great Scotland Yard, Middle
Scotland Yard and Little Scotland Yard, but by the middle of the
19th century new housing meant that only Great Scotland Yard
remained.
It was Great Scotland Yard that was first chosen as the headquarters
of the Metropolitan Police in 1829. As Middle and Little Scotland
Yards no longer existed, the 'Great' was soon dropped and the police
headquarters became known as just Scotland Yard.
Then in 1884 a bomb damaged the headquarters and a new building had
to be found. A site on Victoria Embankment was chosen and a new
building was built. This was appropriately named the New Scotland
Yard. where the detectives of yesteryear were housed, immortalised
in many films and books, and next door is the only part of the
palace to survive to today the impressive Banqueting House. You
can’t see properly from the river, Built in 1622 by Inigo Jones. But
Banqueting House is more famous for the fact that it was here that
in January 1649, after the defeat of the monarchy in the Civil War,
King Charles I was executed. You can see inside the house, admire
the paintings of past monarchs, and even watch a video about the
history of the house. History says that in 1529 Henry VIII (1509-47)
chose Whitehall Palace as his main residence. It then remained the
main royal residence until the monarchy was defeated during the
Civil War. Then, during the commonwealth Oliver Cromwell lived here
as Lord Protector. And once the monarchy in Charles 2nd was restored
the palace again became the main royal residence.
It was James II (1685-88), whose illness was aggravated by the
pollution of the nearby River Thames, (it
must have been grim, even as a boy in the 1960’s working in the
docks, if you fell in, you had to have several injections to ward
off all the toxins still there) who moved out of the palace,
choosing to live in Kensington Palace instead, then in 1698
Whitehall Palace burnt down
In front lie the moored vessels, the Hispaniola and Tattershall
Castle, a restaurant and pub. After the Hungerford Bridge, the
Victoria Embankment Gardens, on the left, front the famous Savoy
Hotel; now newly refurbished (and out of
the reach of most Londoners pockets!) at the riverside stands
the ancient Egyptian obelisk, Cleopatra's Needle.
Waterloo to Blackfriars
The 1950’s concrete Royal National Theatre, on the right, contrasts
with the 18th-century elegance of Somerset House on the opposite
bank. The latter now houses the Impressionist paintings of the
Courtauld Institute Galleries. Behind the moored ships Wellington
and President which were naval traing ships for the reserve (now
offices) are the gardens of the Inns of Temple, Rising above
everything is the dome of St Paul's Cathedral.
Blackfriars to London Bridge
The massive supports of Blackfriars Bridge, shaped like pulpits,
recall the monks who once lived on the left bank. On the right, the
huge and once empty and disused Bankside Power Station has been
converted into the Tate Modern art gallery, well
worth a visit if only to see the vast turbine hall truly a feat of
engineering. this area is now linked by the Millennium Bridge
to the City of London, it pretty much takes you into St Pauls. A
narrow house next door is said to be used by Christopher Wren during
the construction of St Paul's. almost next door is Shakespeare's
Globe Theatre a reconstruction of the original Globe, which stood on
this site many hundreds of years ago, overlooking the river, and
opened in 1997.