Saturday, 28 December 2013

Dickensian London

Dickens started to write Oliver Twist in 1837, the same year the Victorian era began, when the Anti-Poor Law agitations had reached their peak. He was a fierce critic of the poverty and social layering of Victorian society. His familiarity with Clerkenwell & Islington is reflected in both his fictional and non-fictional works. This novel provides a snapshot in time before the ‘Age of Improvement’ changed the London landscape to what we can see now.



A Young Charles Dickens, 1838


Follow the footsteps of Oliver Twist and the Artful Dodger - Guided Walk

This 90 min walk follows the footsteps of Oliver Twist and the Artful Dodger on their final leg of their journey into London to reach Fagin’s lair. See more Victorian walks

The novel of Oliver Twist wallows in the gritty realism of everyday London life. Many of Dickens’ contemporary critics claimed his novels to be too realistic, and that naïve readers (i.e. female readers) wouldn’t be able to tell the difference between fiction and reality, much like today’s fear with teenagers and their relationship between the real and the virtual world. This was true the novel Oliver Twist, which covers ‘dangerous’ topics such as poverty, crime and the relationship between the two.

Victorian London was a dangerous place especially after dark, with highwaymen and other scoundrel’s waiting to pounce on anyone crossing their path.

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Victorian London - a social and literary maze

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Thursday, 26 December 2013

Social Topography of Victorian London, Charles Dickens

Oliver Twist meeting Fagin in Saffron Hill
Dickens exploits a spiritual topography; where the notion of neighbourhoods actively influences the lives and characters of the people who live in them. Victorian society avoided & ignored much of the underclass. Dickens highlighted social issues, using contrasting areas such as Pentonville and Saffron Hill & then forcing together through his characters.


For some areas e.g. Saffron Hill, the Victorian age became an era of neglect and ran unchecked until redevelopments forced the populous to move away and become the London we know today.

Follow the footsteps of Oliver Twist - Guided Walk

Victorian London was a dangerous place especially after dark, with highway men and other scoundrel’s waiting to pounce on anyone crossing their path. 

This 90 min walk follows the footsteps of Oliver Twist and the Artful Dodger on their final leg of their journey into London to reach Fagin’s lair. Find out more about Guided walks in London




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Friday, 13 December 2013

Gin in the news!


Gin Crazy

In the mid-eighteenth century the effects of gin-drinking on English society makes the use of drugs today seem hardly news worthy.

Much of the gin was drunk by women, consequently the children were neglected, daughters were sold into prostitution, and wet nurses gave gin to babies to quieten them.

The thirst for gin appeared insatiable. People sold their furnishings and even their homes to get money to buy their favourite drink.

Here's my interpretation of a modern day magazine with gin related stories of the day.



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Sunday, 8 December 2013

Music & Madness of Holloway, London

Holloway was much like other areas abandoned by polite society. Things could gestate without neighbours moaning, pubs could put on raucous music nights, former cinemas could become top rank music venues and accommodate large unruly crowds, the locals were partaking themselves!

Visiting the area was part of the frisson for concert goers, slumming it, but above all the quality of the acts brought the punters in from far and wide. The bands that cut their teeth in the area in the 1970's and 1980's went on to take the music world by storm.


Finsbury Parks own council estate prophet John Lydon AKA Johnny Rotten and the Sex Pistols, Blur, Madness, Ian Dury and the Blockheads, Oasis, Radiohead and the Arctic Monkeys to name but a few were acts which performed in Holloway.



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Wednesday, 4 December 2013

The Blackspots of C19th Holloway, London

Joe Meek Plaque, Holloway Road, London
At the end of the nineteenth century this was a fairly respectable and affluent area,with the odd blackspot which this tour explores,but as the twentieth century wore on most of the populous moved out to the ever expanding suburbs and the area fell into disrepair. 

By the 1940's and 1950's the area had become notoriously rough and crime ridden. Gangs battled each other in the streets and a lot of the grand shops and restaurants closed their doors for good.


Cheap rents attracted struggling artists like Joe Meek and Joe Orton. A lot of the so called slums were demolished in the 1950's and council estates built in their place. Islington was considered to be an area to be avoided by respectable people. 



Seven Sisters Road, N7
The holloway Road area has it all; movie glamour, movie history, rookeries, bank robbery(with a pen as well as a gun), teddy boy gang fights, murdered coppers, musical innovation,writers, cottaging, black radicals, Bob Marley and loads of Charlie, in short something for everyone.

The beauty of London is that there's always something lurking below the apparently dull surface if you scratch hard enough.



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