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9 Jan 2020

Overviews – A-Z by title/subject/area

Walks are designed to last just under 2 hrs (minimum 90 mins) unless otherwise stated.
Talks via Zoom last 60 mins –  over 
25% return for more, with over half of those attendees attending at least three talks.

SCHEDULE 
Or go to Eventbrite.com and enter "janeslondonwalks" into the search box – then toggle the on/off filter button to view talks or walks. To get alerts when new walks are added, simply follow me on Facebook

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The Angel's Ancient Taverns – Showmen, Strength and Speed
Angel tube station to St Mary's Church, Upper Street
 

Back in 1630, this area, though still mostly rural, already boasted eleven public houses and, just like today, each establishment offered its own special kind of entertainment designed to tempt the passing punter or weary traveller. The Angel Inn was one of three transport hubs within a quarter of a mile that all offered routes northward. Hear about coaching inns, beer houses and theatre pubs, speedy routes, specialist foods, spectacular feats of strength and daredevils on horseback. Plus stories about boxing champions, unfeasibly old men, death and destruction, board games, and famous customers including well-known writers and royalty. Please note, this is not a pub crawl. There'll be plenty of time for that after the walk (!!)

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Agatha Christie's London – Online presentation via Zoom
Or guided walk from Notting Hill Gate to Celsea – this is a longer walk lasting 4.5 hrs which includes a refreshment stop mid-way (not included in the price)

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ART DECO – please click here for separate list

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Art Nouveau – Soho/CoventGarden walks and an online presentation coming soon

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Battersea Power stationsee Sir Giles Gilbert Scott

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The Carreras Story 
The Black Cat Factory AKA Greater London House, Mornington Crescent

An online talk via Zoom. Find out more about this Egyptian-style temple to manufacturing in Camden. Hear about the family who started the tobacco company and how technology and clever marketing helped to create one of the country's most profitable companies. Also see Art Deco Camden

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Christmas – see Xmas

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Creative Islington – An Inspirational Tour 
St Mary's church, Upper Street to Angel tube station

As this sign around the old Angel tube station on City Road says, "Do what you love; love what you do". Would you like to try your hand at something new? Is there a budding actor, dancer or comedian in there? Have you always fancied joining an art class but just didn't know where to go? Would you like to make your own clothes, forge your own door number or carve your own memorial? Then this is the tour for you! We'll take inspiration from shops, businesses and schools in this area of Islington and I will do my best to point you in the right direction re courses and further information. Click here for more

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Crouch End – It's All In The details 
Circular from Hornsey Town Hall, Crouch End Broadway 

This tour links some of the buildings I have photographed for my cards and prints. The Town Hall and its adjacent buildings are decorated with marvellous Art Deco reliefs by Arthur Ayres whose work features on some of my Art Deco walks in central London. We'll also look at the library, a couple of pubs, some ghostsigns of various kinds and, of course, the marvellous clocktower. I'll also talk about other well-known places that are close by such as The Dairy at Stroud Green and Ally Pally. Cards will be available on the day at a cheaper than advertised price.

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Daniel Defoe (The Fortunes and Misfortunes of)
Thinker, trader, hoaxer, spy 

Online presentation / walking tour from Bank to Bunhill Fields via Barbican. This amazingly prolific man effectively created the first novel, Robinson Crusoe. Daniel's colourful life is a fascinating story in itself – a tale of politics and intrigue, disguises and debtors' prisons. I'd love to be able to go back in time and meet him! 

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The Diary Of A Nobody – Mr Pooter's Holloway
Upper Holloway to Nag's Head shopping centre  

The Diary of a Nobody is a much-loved amusing work of fiction created in 1888 by the artistic brothers George and Weedon Grossmith. It originally appeared as a column in Punch magazine and, due to its popularity, the brothers added more chapters and a book was published in 1892. It is still in print today and has often been adapted as plays and TV productions.
This guided tour brings fiction to life to take you around the late-Victorian middle-class Upper Holloway that Mr Charles Pooter and co, had they been real people, might have experienced. Many buildings and hints of that era are still with us today. We'll look at real sites and, by comparing the street directories of that area, we'll get an idea where the Grossmiths' amusing characters might have purchased some of the items mentioned in the book. We'll consider where the Pooters could have lived, how they travelled, and what they ate and drank (and they seemed to drink quite a lot!).
Ang the way, I'll read some short excerpts from the book to highlight Charles's silly arguments with his wife, his maid, the ironmonger, the butter man, the shirt dresser and the stationer. I hope you'll also laugh (or groan and roll your eyes) at some of his clunky puns – I'll be adding a few more pun-tastic observations of my own.
You don't need to have already read the book to enjoy this tour, but I am sure you'll want to afterwards. 

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The Elephants Escape – Oh What a Circus!
Gospel Oak to Archway/TufnellPark 

In 1884 the circus came to Kentish Town. Many of the animals arrived by train and, during the unloading process, Ida and Palm, two of the four performing elephants, got spooked, crashed through a gate, and fled through the nearby streets, causing mayhem along the way. Their journey ended in N19 where the pair became trapped in a basement space between two residential houses. Luckily, although there were some extraneous casualties along the way, the beasts were not harmed and, after being rescued, they made their way to the circus site and the show went on as planned, no doubt better-attended than previously expected. 

This walking tour follows the elephants' rampage to see the kind of obstacles the pair would have experienced along the way (note that we will be walking at a leisurely speed, not actually rampaging or running!). We'll trace their route from start to finish, along narrow little alleys and cobbled lanes and up and down the hilly streets of Dartmouth Park. I'll read from newspaper clippings of the period and you'll hear about one of the biggest circuses in the world run by the real "Greatest Showman" whose company was a favourite of Queen Victoria. You'll also see some lovely Georgian houses including a row of small cottages saved from demolition. And, as per my other walks, I will be pointing out other things of interest along the way including ghostsigns and film locations – it all helps to make this a really evocative tour.

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Egypt in London (two tours)
Embankment to Oxford Circus / Oxford Circus to Bloomsbury 

See Deco walks here
 

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The Only Way Is Essex Road
Islington Green to Ball's Pond 

This often overlooked thoroughfare is littered with wonderful historical gems, interesting buildings and intriguing stories. We walk the full length of the road (just over one mile) stopping to look at historical sites to see how this important road has evolved over the centuries. You'll see a variety of interesting buildings and developments including theatrical and social housing, a swimming pool, a cloned church and an Egyptian Temple. And you'll hear about an innovative market, an early care home, various alcoholic beverages, Georgian lino and amazing Tudor houses. It's a marvellous mixed bag... but then so is Islington.

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Estates and Social Housing
See Look at the Estate We're In

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Females
See Women

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Finsbury Park – A Park For the People
A walk in the park, London N4 

A Victorian park in Harringey created for the people of Finsbury and Islington when this was part of Hornsey. We'll take a stroll inside the park to see how bandstands, roller skating, chrysanthemums and model villages have, over time, gradually been replaced to suit more modern interests. Find out about the plans that never happened, putting greens, swans and another rampaging elephant. Also learn how the park was utilised during WWII and marvel at the  changes made in more recent years to rectify the neglect and vandalism of the late C20th. Starts near Finsbury Park station and ends near Manor House station.

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Finsbury Park – Victoria, Variety and Vaudeville
Circular route from the station around the general area  

This area of north London was, until the 1850s, just a rural area between The City and Hertfordshire. First, the railways came, followed swiftly by the Piccadilly tube line and then the park itself, which gave the area its name. within about ten years the area had became very popular, inundated with day-trippers as well as people wanting to move to this suburban district of clean air and open spaces with excellent transport connections. Developers quickly covered the previously empty fields with rows of respectable houses and its main roads became lined with businesses and places of entertainment. Find out more on a walk around the backstreets and through a bit of the park to look at the hints of history still visible today.

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French Soho – Cocteau, Bertaux, Huguenot
Soho Square to Leicester Square 

Find out how this famous village in central London has evolved through the past few centuries. Especially learn about its French community which was once much larger than today's Chinatown. Hear about specialist restaurants, café society, cakes, tarts, education and religion.

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Gaslamps – Three routes: 
• Victoria to Covent Garden via Buckingham Palace, The Mall and The Strand
•Pimlico to St James's Park via Westminster Abbey
• City of London to Temple via St Paul's and Fleet Street  

These walking tours are always scheduled at dusk so as to be able to experience the soft light emitted by the gas-powered lanterns that still line some London streets, Royal Parks and secluded private streets. Find out about the history behind the lamps, discover evocative backstreets and learn how the is old form of street lighting is being managed today. Three routes, all designed to be two hours but they tend to overrun, so allow an extra half hour. And all end near a goo pub for an after-walk chat.

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GHOSTSIGNS
Guided walks and online talks 
Definition: old signage that still clings onto today's streets giving telling us about bygones times and discontinued products and services; ghosted or faded signs of the past; faded hints of old advertising for products or companies that are no longer relevant there today. More here.

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Ghostsigns of Camden – Gin, Drugs and Shopping
Mornington Crescent to The Roundhouse via Camden Lock

Potions and lotions, beds and breakfast, bacon, booze and bars. Hear about Camden's varied history. Find out about bygone businesses, huge warehouses and manufactories, breweries, bakers, artists, chemists and furnishers. Plus breakfast cereals, pain relief and chewing gum. We'll mostly be in the back streets so please don't fret about shoppers and tourists in the busy main drag – there'll only be one short section when we might have to negotiate crowds and I havent' lost anyone yet.

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Ghostsigns of Covent Garden, Soho and Fitzrovia
(three separate routes)

Today, London's centre, is mostly lined with shops, bars and retail outlets selling fashion, coffee, food and gadgets. But look above pavement level to see hints of how these streets were once home to a diverse range of tradesmen and services. We look at old signage – some hand-painted directly onto walls, others embedded within masonry or printed onto metal – to discover the bygone businesses behind the advertisements. Find out about hospitality and hardware, horses and horsepower. Learn about printers, artists, woodworkers, billiard halls and, perhaps, the only kind of businesses that still thrive in this area today; cafés, restaurants and hotels.

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Ghostsigns of Holloway Road  

There is a very good cross-section of ghostsigns along and adjacent to this busy thoroughfare. The A1 connects the City of London to Scotland and for centuries has been a perfect conduit for advertisements and signage. We look at old signs advertising medicinal products, estate agents, musical instruments, foodstuffs and alcohol, cafés and hairdressing. A couple of handpainted-signs that made it through WWII but have been recently over-painted are still included beingas the stories behind the products are so good and there's every chance the lettering will reappear as the modern water-based paint peels away over time.

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Ghostsigns of Islington – Make Walking a Pleasure
Angel Islington and Upper Street area 

This area is rich in old signage. And there's a good reason for that, which I will explain on the tour. We start near Islington Town Hall by one of the sites that first got me interested in this hand-painted form of advertising. And from there we take a meandering route to end up a stone's throw from Angel tube station. Along the way I'll point out some marvellously preserved old signage and you'll hear about a diverse range of products and businesses, such as children's toys, rubber mats, bogus potions and men's hats. I will also point out other types of 'ghostsigns' along the way. The title of this walk is taken from one of the signs you'll see on the tour.

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Ghostsigns of Kentish Town – Wireworks to Waterworks
Camden Town station to Kentish Town station (or vice-versa)

We think of Kentish Town as being the area around the station but it actually started further south around St Pancras Old Church, just north of the main railway station of the same name. The village became a town and spread in a linear fashion northwards towards Highgate. This walk starts and finishes adjacent to two different railway lines. You'll see how transport connections via rail, and via canal, played a big part in altering the façades of previously well-to-do Georgian streets. front gardens became shops, back gardens became manufactories. Kentish Town Road and the streets around it has many hints of history hiding in plain view and the stories behind the old signs are intriguing 

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Ghostsigns of King's Cross – Scales, Weights and Weighing Machines
Circular from Kings Cross Station 

When the railways arrived and changed this area in the mid-1850s businesses were quick to move in and seize the opportunity, whether as a good location for manufacture and distribution or as great location to open a restaurant or a shop. By the 1880s, the brickwork on many façades was barely visible beneath a patchwork of hand-painted lettering advertising all kinds of products including breakfast foods, motor oil, newspapers and precision instruments. We'll look at some marvellous examples that still cling to the walls – innovative inventions, Italian dining rooms, alcohol, boot polish and bogus potions. You'll also hear about the signmakers themselves and we'll look at the HQ of one of the companies who managed the lucrative advertising sites. 

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Ghostsigns of Regent's Canal, Islington – Boxes, Babies, Beans and Bras
Angel tube station to The Rosemary Branch, Southgate Road 

A wander along, above and around the Regents Canal in Islington following a trail of old painted signs that hint at the area's rich history. We'll be looking mostly at hand-painted-onto-walls signs including the one shown here. See and hear about a diverse range of companies and products from ladies' underwear and fancy boxes to metals and ceramics.

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Sir Giles Gilbert Scott (The Power of)
Architect of Battersea and Bankside power stations 

An online presentation about this prolific man born into an architectural dynasty. A couple of his buildings have today achieved 'iconic' status. Hear about his busy life and works as we look at his ubiquitous utilitarian architectural style plus a few other flights of fancy.   

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Green and Pleasant Islington – Open Spaces, Hidden Places
Highbury and Islington station to Holloway station

This is a tour about flora and fauna. Islington is one of the least green London boroughs by percentage size but the open spaces it does have are as diverse as its residents, offering outdoor facilities and hidden corners for all ages and all tastes. We start near the newly-revamped Highbury Corner junction (which is always cause for debate!) and then we make our way via a circuitous route up to Holloway Road tube station keeping as much as possible off the beaten track and away from the busy streets. We visit open fields, an award-winning park, a hidden garden, a community playground, farms old and new, a churchyard, sports fields and shady meadows. Plus renovation, reclamation, rejuvenation and recycling. Oh, and dogs too. I'll also point out some other tenuously-linked green things which should raise a smile. I have heard locals who have lived in the area for decades exclaim, "ooh... I had no idea this was here... how lovely; it's so peaceful".

Also available: Green and Pleasant Newington Green to Highbury Fields via Ball's Pond 
From Mary Woolstonecroft to Crufts Dog Show via gardens of various kinds. Includes some ghost signs, light industrial history, a couple of unusual churches and a river that isn't new.

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HOLLOWAY
Also see: Irish / Green & Pleasant / The Diary of a Nobody / Inns &Taverns /
Art Deco Holloway here

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Holloway – The Oxford Street Of The North
Holloway Tube station and the Nag's Head shopping area
 

This is a time-travelling guided walk taking us back to a time when Holloway was a highly respectable neighbourhood for the upwardly-mobile middle classes – an era when the Nag’s Head shopping area of Holloway was affectionately known as “The Oxford Street Of The North” due to its excellent shopping and top-end entertainment.
We'll look back at an era of beautiful shop fronts with impressive displays behind curved glass, framed in polished brass with hand-painted signage. A time of courteous live-in staff wearing immaculate white starched aprons or uniforms. Hear about palatial variety theatres, gin palaces, trams and innovative transport, tea rooms, banqueting halls and the early labyrinthine department stores. Learn how one department store grew to be one of the best-known shops in North London, succeeding into the twentieth century. And find out about its Victorian rival just around the corner which was an even larger, more impressive and, possibly, more successful store at that time.
Today's Holloway may not be as visually impressive as it was back then but it’s still got plenty to offer – hints of the historical gems are hiding in plain view just waiting to be appreciated. 

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The Inns & Taverns of Holloway Road (two tours)
Archway to Nags Head / Nags Head to Highbury&Islington

This covers at least 30 pubs down the A1 through Holloway.  Available as two tours with a one-hour break between them. Each tour starts and ends at or near a pub and includes a brief 10-15 minute drink stop at another interesting pub along the route. Hear about the road's early history as a cattle route to Smithfield Market, find out about the delicacies available when Samuel Pepys visited, and learn why some streets were so-named. Depending on which section you attend, you'll hear about stuffed cats, cock-fighting, gin palaces, live music, local ales, billiards, politics, writers and mail coaches.

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The Irish In Islington 
Circular from Archway tube station, N19

Irish people have been settling in north London for centuries – a community that has become one of the largest this side of the Irish Sea. On this tour we look at how the Archway area has evolved thanks to these vibrant and hard-working people. We'll look at the places they have lived, worked, prayed, relaxed and partied, and along the way we'll consider poverty, politics, navvies and nurses.  

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ISLINGTON 
Please see title names: Angel / Creative / Irish / Green & Pleasant
/ See Deco walks here 

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Kings Cross & The Ladykillers
Locations and comparisons with the 1955 Ealing comedy

Join me to compare locations used in the marvellous 1955 film with what we see today. Using film stills, maps and archive images I'll show you how things have changed (or not) in this area. We'll visit Mrs Wilberforce's street and other locations used in the film by tracing the movie's heist route past B&Bs and big brands up to the railway line used near the end of the film. We might even see a steam train if we are lucky. And we probably be singing music from the film along the way. The 21st century brought big changes to the area and the district has evolved from a filthy industrial transport hub populated by the working classes into a hub for the arts, entertainment and technology. Station canopies have been added, roads have been re-aligned, the gas holders have been dismantled and partially re-sited, shopping and art have replaced coal and grain. However, some of the nearby streets and junctions still look almost the same as in the movie and you'll be surprised how much is still discernible. 

Customer feedback: "Enjoyable and informative. We were able to visit the locations used to make the film and compare with lots of illustrations... We departed wanting to again see the original Ladykillers film to relive the walk"

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Literary Holloway Poets, Playwrights and Punks
Holloway tube station to Upper Holloway station

A mixed bag showcasing the diverse range of writers and innovative creatives who have lived and worked in the Holloway area across the centuries. Hear about publishers, inventors, artists, authors, musicians, diarists and thieves. Plus drinking, dancing, sufferance and nonsense.  

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London Is Lovely – 
Central London and more

Alternative ideas for romantic spots, beautiful views, hidden spaces. This basically follows a route from The City to The West End with other ideas for places further afield such as Finchley and Denmark Hill. It's a celebration of lovely and lovely things following a trail of art, views, theatre, history, lovers lanes, sweet things, gardens and memorials. At the moment this is an online talk but I will soon be offering the City and Thames section as a physical walking tour

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Look at The Estate We're In Philanthropy and Social Housing
Essex Road to Highbury & Islington via UpperSt and Barnsbury

This architectural appreciation tour showcases different kinds of well-designed social housing in the London Borough of Islington. We'll visit an interesting cross-section of estates, from impressive Victorian, Edwardian and pre-WWII dwellings made possible by innovative benefactors and independent housing trusts to early London County Council developments and LBI's more recent schemes. Hear about the philanthropists and architects who helped to bring about a sense of pride and well-being. 

Customer feedback: "Jane's passion for the subject matter shone through with humour, perception, humanity and fascinating detail. I'd highly recommend this walk"

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Look at The Estate We're In Westminster  – coming soon

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Look at The Estate We're In CovGdn/Soho – coming soon 

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London Street Markets 
Central London – an online talk/presentation  

This talk covers over eleven miles in just under an hour, visiting markets in Islington, Camden Clerkenwell, Soho, Waterloo and Westminster. It's devised as a tour, with suggestions of interesting routes between the sites, though you couldn't possibly do this lot in one day in the real world! Find out the history of these costermonger grounds, where the largest, most vibrant Victorian markets thrived and how, over time, they have adapted to today's needs – all the more poignant as regards the changes brought about by this recent pandemic. 

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New River Path
Finsbury Park and Woodberry Down   

Starting at the northern end of Finsbury Park, we following the 400 year-old waterway's meandering course offering marvellous views along the way. Enjoy the feeling of being in the countryside, yet only a few miles from central London. This section overlooks interesting light industrial zones and skims past busy streets. Hear about the waterway, both as an amazing feat of engineering and as a recreational attraction. Learn about the nearby buildings and businesses as you enjoy the wonderful flora and fauna in the area. We end near Finsbury Park Station. 

Finsbury Park to Canonbury / Canonbury to Sadler's Wells coming soon    

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NEWINGTON GREEN – please see Green

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The Only Way Is Essex Rd – please see Essex Road 

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Parks, Pubs and Pianos
Caledonian Park to Kentish Town (or vice versa)

This lovely backstreet route keeps us as much as possible off the main roads. We'll start at the old market site where you'll hear about its history whilst taking in the marvellous view to the south. Then we'll walk through well-planned housing estates, down little alleys and into secluded gardens. We'll look at re-purposed Victorian public houses and see evidence of the large piano-making industry here. Hear about a haunted hostelry and a famous murder case. See ghosts of the past in old signage. Discover a street that will make you feel as if you have travelled back in time and, in other streets, be enlightened by the multi-coloured tones.  

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REGENTS CANAL 
Please see title names: Ghostsigns / Waterways

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Sculpture
Female forms – see Women
Art Deco embellishments – Gill, Epstein, Copnall, Bayes, etc coming soon

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Social Housing
See Look at the Estate We're In

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SOHO 
Please see title names: French / Art Nouveau / Italian
/ Art Deco walks here 


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The Strand's Sculptural Delights
Charing Cross to Aldwych

Architectural embellishments and marvellous memorials. Let me show you some of the marvellous sculptural delights overlooking and adjacent to this ancient thoroughfare. Banks and medicine, commerce and commemoration, nudity and topography. 

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Vouchers
Valid for one year from date of purchase – see here for more info

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Waterways, Wharves and Warehouses
Regent's Canal in Islington, circular from City Road Basin 

Today the canal is a linear park open to all, lined with colourful houseboats, waterside apartments and offices, complete with well-maintained paths for walkers, cyclists and joggers. It's a bit of calm and quiet away from the bustle of the shops and the beeps of the busy streets. But it wasn't always so lovely.
This 200 year old waterway from Paddington to Limehouse has a rich history. It was constructed to link the north of England to London's docklands on the River Thames therefore providing a low-impact distribution network for heavy goods. The businesses that lined the water's edge turned it into a dirty, noisy, dangerous hive of industry and manufacture. Find out about the various and unusual products that were made, stored and distributed from the wharves alongside this canal. And learn why these buildings and tow paths fell into disuse and how they were later regenerated and transformed into what we see and enjoy today.

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Wilde About Oscar
 
Wit, writer, raconteur,  

Online via Zoom or a walking tour in the Regent Street area. Hear about Oscar's life and the people who were close to him. See where his plays were staged, where life-changing events happened, and where he lived, shopped and socialised. We'll also look at how he is commemorated today. 

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Women 
Walks and talks
Two presentations available via Zoom – Memorials to Marvellous Women / Formed by Females (sculptures on the street)  – the first is about females who have been commemorated for the changes they have made to our lives such as in politics, suffrage, healthcare and the literary field. The second talk is about female artists who have created artworks that adorn the capital's streets, scuh as Hepworth, Hambling, Frink, Young, Emin and Whiteread.
Walking tours coming soon – this will mixing both topics and will be in Westminster/Southwark, Bloomsbury and the City of London.

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Christmas in Covent Garden – Magical Markets and Twinkling Trees
Strand to to Trafalgar Sq via Covent Gdn Piazza and Seven Dials 

At Christmas-time our shopping streets and squares become festooned with pretty Christmas lights and decorations – it makes everything look so gorgeous, warm and welcoming. But, have you ever wondered why we drag fir trees into our homes, eat mince pies or kiss under the mistletoe? Why is Father Christmas called 'Santa' and why does he wear red? Learn about about the origins of our Christmas traditions on a twinkly trail through little lanes, alluring avenues and sparkly squares. Hear about the streets of old as you marvel at today's fabulous displays. We'll look at hotels, shops and restaurants and there'll be lots of photo opportunities along the way. Our journey finishes in Trafalgar Square by the big Christmas tree and the Christmas market – perfect for a glass of mulled wine and a few seasonal treats.  

Customer feedback:"Fabulous walk. Jane is full of fascinating historical and current information. Wandering about the best bits of the West End all lit up for the festive holiday is fun and perfect for Christmas"

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SCHEDULE 
Or go to Eventbrite.com and enter "janeslondonwalks" into the search box – then toggle the on/off filter button to view talks or walks. To get alerts when new walks are added, simply follow me on Facebook

 

Walk descriptions – Art Deco/1930s

Art Deco – A-Z by area/title 

A series of walking tours and online talks via Zoom looking at how the statement buildings of the 1920s and 1930s altered London's streets during a significant building boom blew away the cobwebs and fussy designs of the Victorian and Edwardian eras with an aim to motivate the masses after a truly horrid WW1. Once the worst was over, businesses and architects were keen to prove that the future was bright. A motivational style evolved that we have come to recognise today using the collective term 'Art Deco'. 

The clean lines and design devices of the ArtDeco/modernist era have continued to inspire architects ever since. But what is Art Deco?

Today we marvel at these modernist survivors but, at the time they were built, not everyone would have been so impressed – they were the Shards and Cheesegraters of their day. 

Unless otherwise specified, walking tours are designed to last just under 2 hrs (minimum 90 mins). Online talks (via Zoom) are one hour  long with opportunity for questions and conversations after the presentation has ended.

For overviews of my other tours, on a variety of themes, please click here.

SCHEDULE 
Or go to Eventbrite.com and enter "janeslondonwalks" into the search box – then toggle the on/off filter button to view talks or walks. To get alerts when new walks are added, simply follow me on Facebook

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Alternative Art Deco Delights (online)
A virtual tour from Holloway to the West End via the City of London

A collection of underrated, often overlooked, architectural gems from the interwar era, all hiding in plain view. Each building is a stop on one of my walking tours. I have selected a cross-section of diverse architectural styles from Jazz Age metalwork, through geometrical patterns, tiled façades and fancy brickwork to the simplicity of Streamline Moderne.

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Angel Islington – Tea, Transport, Trade and Temples 
Walk Essex Road to City Road via Upper Street
(Coming soon)

Egyptian temples, utilitarian offices, faience tiles, Vitrolite and veneers, as well as Tudor and Georgian influences that were put to good use at that time.

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Angel South / Finsbury
Walk City Road to Exmouth Market via Mount Pleasant
(Coming soon)

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Arsenal to Finsbury Park – Terraces and Typography
Walk Arsenal tube station to Finsbury Park station 

We'll visit places of entertainment, commerce, education, travel and sport as well as residential properties. You'll see a cross-section from the era including impressive statement pieces of the 1930s and an unfinished scheme. And we'll talk about typography and design, and how the design ethos of this era has endured through subsequent decades. 

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Bank – See City

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Bankside and Battersea Power Stations
A virtual tour

An online presentation about Sir Giles Gilbert Scott – a prolific architect and interesting man. Find out about the buildings he designed and was connected with, his signature style, his ubiquitous red kiosks, and his flights of fancy.  

A guided tour from Westminster to The City via Bankside is in the making

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Bloomsbury East – Moons, Muses and Magic Squares
Walk Russell Square to Gray's Inn

An alternative Bloomsbury Art Deco walk looking at some overlooked or unnoticed not-so-hidden gems. We'll begin with a couple of the well-known 1930s constructions in the vicinity, including one building which is often referred to as one of the best examples of its style. We'll travel eastwards to admire other often overlooked or unnoticed gems hiding in plain sight in the lesser-used backstreets – residential and office developments, hospital buildings, education hubs, manufactories and bars. You'll see some wonderful examples of Streamline Moderne, Jazz Age metalwork, carved reliefs and curtain walls. Find out about the innovative industries and institutions behind the façades and hear how people lived, worked and socialised in the 1930s.
There's a chance at the end of the walk to join me for a drink and a chat inside a pub of the era which still retains most of its original features.

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Bloomsbury North – see Kings Cross/St Pancras

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Bloomsbury West – Beds, Bugs and Balconies
Walk Russell Square to Warren Street station via Gower Street

As per my Bloomsbury East tour, we start with a couple of well-known buildings near Russell Square and then go 'off-piste' to admire some unsung, overlooked and often unnoticed gems – hard to believe, considering their impressive size and the quality of workmanship. 

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Camden – Cigarettes and Alcohol
Walk Mornington Crescent to Camden Town

Along the route you'll see various examples of the era – on shops and businesses along the High Street and on factories, offices and residential properties in the back streets. We'll visit buildings that have been repurposed or revamped and you'll hear about, and see reference of, others that made it through WWII but bit the dust in subsequent waves of progressive change during the second half of the twentieth century. Please don't worry about the Camden market crowds – the route is designed so that there is only one instance when we'll have to cut through them!

The Carreras factory building shown here (AKA The Black Cat building / Greater London House) is also available as an online presentation

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Central – see Soho, Piccadilly, Holborn etc, also Egypt

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City Of London – Art and Finance, Shipping and Insurance
Walk Aldgate to Monument via Cornhill

Let me take you on a tour through The Square Mile's narrow backstreets and along its main thoroughfares to show you that squidged in amongst today's glass and high-rise edifices there are some marvellous 1920s and 1930s architectural gems hiding in plain view.
We'll look at a variety of imposing styles that show how the world of finance and insurance used the clean lines of this era to best advantage via Jazz Age metalwork, carved wood and stone reliefs, ziggurat and zig-zag embellishments, and beautifully-tiled façades.
Discover who built these impressive structures and what went on inside. Hear about shopping and shipping, money and markets, tea and coffee, fine art and fire... even horse-racing!

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Covent Garden – Flappers, Fashion, Fruit and Footlights
Walk Tottenham Court Rd station to The Savoy

See a variety of Jazz Age embellishments, marvellous Modernism and 'Art Deco' artistry on places of commerce, entertainment, employment, trade and learning, including six marvellous theatres, a couple of hotels, an art school and even a fruit and vegetable merchant. We'll visit some unsung Deco-era constructions that are [shamefully] rarely included in those "Best Of" listings and we'll peek inside some impressive interiors.
Hear about the buildings and the people who commissioned them. Find out about the architects and artists, products and productions, reviews and revues. 

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Clerkenwell / St Luke's – Bauhaus, Workhouse, Our House
Walk Old Street to Clerkenwell Green
Coming soon... Modernist manufactories, wonderful workshops and fabulous flats

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Demolished / Lamented
Online – a provocative presentation 

Forty years of architectural change. 
Find out about some of the interwar buildings that have recently been lost to us. Hear about heritage, conservation, façadism, renovation and rejuvenation. Learn about the new structures that replace the old.   

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Earl's Court – see Demolished
Also available a walk around Olympia (see architecture section here)

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East End to West End – Impressive Art Deco (Virtual tour)
An online tour across London looking at some impressive interwar buildings between Whitechapel and Mayfair

A selection of large buildings, simply hiding in plain view, selected for their diverse architectural styles and superb embellishments. Many of these buildings feature as stops on my walking tours. There are sure to be a couple here that you were not aware about before despite their huge size(!).

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Egyptian London – Walk Like An Egyptian
Two walking tours in Central London that include some Art Deco buildings

Originally inspired by 'Tutankhamen, Treasures of the Golden Pharaoh' exhibition at The Saatchi Gallery in 2019-20.
 

Are you aware of the many Egyptian-related buildings and motifs that overlook the streets of central London?
The pharaohs and their followers believed that the body dies twice; once when the mortal body ceases to function, and then again after the last person speaks your name for the final time. But, I wonder if they foresaw how their designs would also transcend time? Architects and artists have for centuries been plundering Egypt, cherry-picking from the wonderful mix of beauty, geometry, iconography and craftsmanship. Evidence of this can be seen on the streets above and around us, and in various art forms.

These are usually scheduled on the same day with an hour between them:

Temples, Tombs and Travel
Embankment to Oxford Circus via Mayfair
Sphinxes, obelisks, pharaohs, curses, gods and more... hear about art and artists, travel and tourism, curses, mummification and long-lost museums. 

Mummies, Movies and Music
Oxford Circus to Bloomsbury via Soho
More of the above but with a bias towards artistes, artisans, antiques and the afterlife. You'll see temples, obelisks and pharaohs – and we might even dance like Egyptians(!).

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Finsbury Park – walking tour – see Arsenal

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Fitzrovia – Flats, Films and Fashion
Walk Gt Portland Street tube to Tottenham Court Road

This haunt of writers, creatives and garment manufacturers offers a patchwork of architectural styles. Squished between the Georgian houses and the C21st glass there are some really interesting buildings erected in the 1920s and '30s, showing us a cross-section of the architectural styles implemented in that era. Of particular interest on this tour is the use of pattern within render and brickwork – I have some theories as to who might have been involved.  

For a residential-specific online tour – see Living

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Great Portland Street – Retail, Radio and RIBA
Walk Oxford Street to Portland Place

The district north-east of Oxford Circus around Great Titchfield Street was, until the 21st century, the home of the clothing and soft furnishings industry, and this makes sense, considering its proximity to the main shopping streets. We'll look at manufactories, distribution hubs and head offices for many of the brands being sold in the big department stores nearby. You've probably walked these streets many times and never seen the delights above street level all hiding in plain view. We'll also look at buildings constructed for education and entertainment, including BBC Broadcasting House. This walk ends at RIBA, itself an impressive showcase of 1930s architecture. 

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Hatton Garden – See Smithfield

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Holborn – Cables, Collars and Commonwealth
Walk Holborn tube station to Aldwych

Temple-esque architecture of all kinds – art, advertising, technology, transport, theatre, fashion, finance and furniture. Marvel at statement façades including a recent renovation that I am sure will be cause for conversation.

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Holloway – Drapery, Divers and Display
Walk aroing the Nags Head area neding near Holloway Rd tube station

The Holloway area of Islington, a short distance from the City and the West End, has for over 150 years been the go-to shopping area for North London. In the 1930s many well-established businesses were keen to keep up with the design zeitgeist and rebuilt their shop fronts, if not the whole building, in the then new forward-thinking modern style of the time. There are some excellent examples of pre-WW2 modernism here, all hiding in plain view – we'll look at places of entertainment, commerce and health, as well as some residential properties. One building, in particular, designed by one of the best architects of the time, is sure to impress – I can never understand why it's not on those 'Art Deco Best of London' lists.

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Kings Cross / St Pancras – All Change Here!
Walk St Pancras Hotel to Euston Station via North Bloomsbury

See how the area just south of Euston Road has evolved to include some Art Deco and Modernist delights that are hidden in the gaps between the very old and the very new.
We'll meander through back streets and green squares to see evidence of inter-war technology and connections of various kinds. Plus impressive residential developments, sports halls, places of learning and social hubs. At the end of the walk we'll look inside a 1930s pub that has some lovely original features including some evocative marquetry – perfect for an after-walk cocktail or a half of shandy.

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Living the Art Deco Dream / Art Deco Living 
An online tour from Hampstead to Pimlico

Independent living. Innovative 1930s design. Streamlined and serviced. Economical, luxurious and convenient. All mod cons.

A virtual tour/ online presentation

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Mayfair a walking tour around the Bond Street area – a work in progress

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Piccadilly – Slacks, Flicks and Slots
Walk Piccadilly tube station to Leicester Square

The title refers to slacks as in trousers, flicks as in cinema and slots as in machines you put coins in. This short route through the three yellow squares on the London version of the Monopoly board, also from the same era, packs in so much.We start within Piccadilly tube station, one of London Underground's best designed booking halls, and then we go up to pavement level to look at some impressive 1930s buildings – shops, telecommunications, offices and, of course, various places of entertainment. Hear the stories behind the façades, learn about the people and businesses associated with them. We will also look inside some original interiors.

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Shoreditch and Hoxton – Health, Ham and Housing
Walk Finsbury Square to Old Street via Moorfields

This route showcases a cross-section of styles of the era – solid statement architecture, simple geometry, curtain walls, Egyptian inspiration and 'Streamline Moderne' which echoes the fabulous ocean-going liners. We'll look at places of literature, commerce, manufacture, health, and housing. You'll hear about the people and/or companies related to the façades and see how the style has endured and continues to inspire today's architects.

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Residential – See Living (online talk)

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Smithfield – Markets, Meat and Mysteries
Walk Chancery Lane to Barbican station via Hatton Garden 

From leather and diamonds, pottery and pearls via heists and firearms to mire, meat, murder. Join me for a walk through various market areas in the Holborn and Charterhouse districts to at look at a selection of mid-20th century modernist architecture.
This constantly-evolving district shows us a marvellous cross-section of architecture through the centuries. Obviously, we'll be concentrating on 1920s façades, 1930s offices, 1950s factories, functional constructions, fancy concoctions and film location. Learn about Miami Deco, streamline moderne, luxury lino, gold stores, cold stores and... find out whodunnit!

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Spitalfields – Fabulous Façades
Walk Bishopsgate to Aldgate via Brick Lane

There are some really impressive examples of Art Deco architecture along this route. I guarantee you'll find at least one building with the 'wow' factor and wonder how you managed to walk past it for so long without really noticing it.
Both long-established and newly-created businesses were keen to show they were part of the zeitgeist. You'll see the clean lines of the 1930s applied in various ways to places of commerce, art, health, housing and entertainment, including one of the largest purpose-built office buildings of that era. Find out who built these impressive structures and what when on behind the façades. 

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Soho – Movies, Music and Motor Cars
Walk Oxford Street, through Soho, to Piccadilly Circus 

Soho's charm is due to it being a village contained within four major roads. It might seem busy today but in the interwar years of the '20s and '30s it was even more congested. By day it was a hive of activity with shops, cafés, markets, schools, artisans and craftsmen, then, as the sun went down, the streets buzzed with nightlife as people, dressed in their finest clothes, made for the best or cocktail bars, restaurants, casinos and theatres.
During this "Jazz Age" era a lot of impressive buildings were constructed in the new motivational style implementing clean geometric lines, pared-down motifs and shiny tiles, often in contrast to their crazy patterned interiors – Soho has some fine examples. See evidence of this area's vibrant movie-making history, film stars and flappers, fabulous fabrics, colourful cabaret venues and even a classy carpark. We will also visit a restored and revamped 1930s interior. I am sure you will find a new "Art Deco" favourite along the way.

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Theatrelandguided walk 3.5 hrs with refreshment break / online talk
West End / Soho / Covent Garden / Strand

Jazz Age Jazz Hands!
Thirteen Art Deco theatres built or renovated in the central London area between 1924 and 1937 with eight new theatres completed within a 13-month period 1929-30 and opening nights often being within weeks of each other. See how the architecture of that time evolved from Art Nouveau into Jazz Age geometrics and then Streamline Moderne.

The virtual tour is a chronolgy. The walking tour takes a clockwise route from Tottenham Court Rd station to Piccadilly, – it is designed to last 2hrs, however, it often overruns due to questions and conversations etc – please allow an extra half hour.

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Tottenham Court Rd area – see Bloomsbury / Covent Garden / Fitzrovia

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West End – See Soho, Piccadilly, Mayfair, Theatreland etc – also see East End (really!)

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Whitechapel – walking tour coming soon – meanwhile, see East End

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A depiction; an idea of walking tours in the central area – please note, not all the routes are shown on here so please check the listings above  

 

SCHEDULE 
Or go to Eventbrite.com and enter "janeslondonwalks" into the search box – then toggle the on/off filter button to view talks or walks. To get alerts when new walks are added, simply follow me on Facebook