London Trivia: Windy city

On 17 September 1091 a tornado which subsequently was estimated at 200 mph badly damaged London Bridge and demolished 600 houses. It laid waste to the church of St. Mary-le-Bow reports stated that four huge rafters were driven deep into the London clay so that only 4ft of their 26ft lengths remained visible. Incredibly, only two deaths are said to have been caused by the event. After the Tornado William II rebuilt the bridge, but a fire destroyed it only 40 years later.

On 17 September 1993 the British National Party won its first seat, lorry driver Derek Beackon beat Labour by 7 votes in Millwall by-election, he held seat for 8 months

After execution at Tyburn Highwayman Jack Sheppard was buried at St-Martin-in-the-Fields in front of 200,000, some protecting his corpse

Kensington Olympia’s Grand Hall famed for its barrel-roof made of iron and glass was the largest building in the country covering 4 acres

Rule, Britannia! composer, Thomas Arne, is buried in St Paul’s, Covent Garden, he also wrote a version of God Save the King, and the song A-Hunting We Will Go

Women’s Rights Campaigner Sylvia Pankhurst once lived at 120 Cheyne Walk, Chelsea it was little more than a rest stop between her numerous countrywide tours for the Women’s Social and Political Union

Wimpole Street was once home to poet Elizabeth Barrett, author Arthur Conan Doyle and Paul McCartney who wrote Yesterday there

The Palace Theatre opened in 1891 as the Royal English Opera House by Richard D’Oyly Carte wanting it to be the home of English grand opera

Old English skittles, once popular in pubs across the South East, is confined to a single alley at the Freemasons’ Arms in Downshire Hill is thought to be played in London and nowhere else

According to Transport for London Underground trains travel a total of 1,735 times around the world (or 90 trips to the moon and back) each year

In the 1800s London prostitutes were sometimes referred to as ‘Fulham virgins’ during this time there were probably about 30,000 street sellers

Kew Gardens holds the largest and most diverse botanical collection in the world, including around 7 million dried plant specimens and a living collection of over 19,000 plant species spanning two sites

CabbieBlog-cab.gifTrivial Matter: London in 140 characters is taken from the daily Twitter feed @cabbieblog.
A guide to the symbols used here and source material can be found on the Trivial Matter page.

The London Grill: Sara Pascoe

We challenge our contributor to reply to ten devilishly probing questions about their London and we don’t take “Sorry Gov” for an answer. Everyone sitting in the hot seat will face the same questions that range from their favourite way to spend a day out in the capital to their most hated building on London’s skyline to find out just what Londoners really think about their city. The questions might be the same but the answers vary wildly.

[S]ara Pascoe was once a London tour guide, but she is better known as an actress and a highly original comic. Her many TV credits include series regular roles in Campus; Free Agents and, The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret – all for C4 television, and for her guest leads in the BBC’s The Thick of It; Being Human and a regular role in the satire of this year’s London Olympics TwentyTwelve. Sara regularly performs solo stand up shows to capacity crowds and has been voted one of Time Out magazine’s ‘Rising Stars of Comedy’. Sara is one of the regular weekly stars of the Channel 4 series, Stand Up For The Week as well as appearances on Live at the Apollo; Comedy World Cup and Don’t Sit on the Front Row.

What’s your secret London tip?
Do your research before a trip or day out . . . If you are into Roman ruins, have a look at where you can see the really exciting stuff, like The Temple of Mithras near Bank, or even places that don’t have public access – the Museum of London run FREE guided tours down underneath the road to remnants of the Roman wall around the city. Also don’t be afraid to ask, once in St. Bride’s Church off Fleet Street I got talking to a vicar and he let me see the charnel room . . . a big pit full of neatly stacked bones that had been there for 100s of years and needed sorting!

What’s your secret London place?
It’s not really a secret, but I love the view from the top of the Monument. It’s only a few pounds to go up, lots of stairs so good for the heart and then on the way down you get a certificate you can colour in!! More people died committing suicide from the Monument than in the fire too, one of those macabre facts that abound in London history.

What’s your biggest gripe about London?
Most of the things I could list as London’s negatives, also count as positives – it’s the crowding and amount of people that mean anything in the world can be found or achieved here. I guess my only hope for improvement would be that we ensured that children born in poverty here still have exactly the same opportunities as wealthy children in the long run. It’s for children that the welfare state has to exist, and if young people have no opportunities, then poverty becomes a cycle. Ooh, what a light and funny answer!

What’s your favourite building?
My favourite building is the Houses of Parliament. It has fascinated me since childhood when I used to imagine giants hurting their big feet on it because it was so pointy! Now I appreciate its beauty (neo-gothic so inspired by the beauty of nature) and the lives of the men (Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin) that were dedicated to creating it after a fire destroyed the original Westminster Palace.

What’s your most hated building?
Not hatred, but I am not a big fan of the ugly brutalist buildings on Southbank . . . however, taken all together and next to the river, it does still ‘work’.

What’s the best view in London?
There is a bar at the top of Centre Point (The Paramount I think) that anyone can book a day in advance, go and have a nice glass of wine, the view I ASTONISHING! You can’t get used to it!

What’s your personal London landmark?
Boudicca Statue in Westminster Bridge is something I always point out to people and take the time to notice. A reminder of the 2000 years that preceded our time around the Thames, and the transitory nature of everything.

What’s London’s best film, book or documentary?
Do Not Pass Go by Tim Moore is funny and easy to read, it’s a history of Monopoly and why certain London areas were chosen and not others! Also Underground London by Stephen Smith and Necropolis by Catharine Arnold (this will give you an idea of some great graveyards to visit too!)

What’s your favourite bar, pub or restaurant?
My favourite pubs are near me in Tooting, the Antelope and the Tram and Social which is in an old tram shed.

How would you spend your ideal day off in London?
Vegan breakfast at Inspiral Net in Camden, walk through Regents Park to central London, watch a matinee on the fringe, then lovely wine and early dinner at Saf in Kensington, then I would watch a comedy show at Soho Theatre and then I’d catch a late film at Prince Charles cinema in Leicester Square. I would pack a lot in!!

London Trivia: Flexible friend

On 10 September 1963 the American credit culture hit the streets. American Express arrived, the first credit card was soon to be accepted at nearly 3,000 hotels, restaurants, shops in this country, the Bank of England gave permission for the scheme to go ahead – on condition users do not spend more than £75 on any one item purchased abroad, until then, Amex card holders had been able to use their cards in this country, but only if they could settle their accounts in dollars.

On 10 September 1897 cabbie George Smith crashed into a Bond Street shop and became the first person convicted of drunk-driving, fined £1

Francis Towneley executed for the Jacobite Rising his family stole the head returning to family home and kept it for years in a basket at Towneley Hall

St. Etheldreda’s Church built c.1250 is the oldest Catholic church in England the only surviving building in London dating from this period

According to a 2002 study air quality on the Underground was 73 times worse than at street level, with 20 minutes on the Northern Line having the same effect as smoking a cigarette

Portobello Road takes its name from the 1739 sea battle where the English captured the Portobello naval base in Panama from the Spanish

The “local palais” mentioned in The Kinks’ “Come Dancing” was The Athenaeum, Fortis Green Road replaced by a Sainsbury’s store in 1966

On 10 September 1973 designer Barbara Hulanicki and husband Simon Fitzsimon opened Art Deco department store-Big Biba-on Kensington High Street

Arsenal Station is London’s only station named after a football club originally opened as Gillespie Road in 1906 and renamed Arsenal in 1932

In Central London the deepest station below street level is on the Northern line. It is the DLR concourse at Bank, which is 41.4 metres below ground

Cheapside get its name from the Saxon word for market – ‘chepe’ as this was London’s main market in medieval times

In 1708 Upminster witnessed an experiment by Rev William Derham to calculate the speed of sound, his calculation was only 4.8 per second out

CabbieBlog-cab.gifTrivial Matter: London in 140 characters is taken from the daily Twitter feed @cabbieblog.
A guide to the symbols used here and source material can be found on the Trivial Matter page.