London Trivia: Peace in our time?

On 10 May 1940 after losing a vote of confidence in the House of Commons, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain resigned at the same time that Germany was invading Holland, Belgium, and Luxembourg. Winston Churchill stepped in as Prime Minister to lead a coalition Government. Within six weeks German forces had conquered all three countries with France capitulating a few weeks later.

On 10 May 1553 Sir Hugh Willoughby and his fleet set sail from Ratcliff Stairs to discover the North-East Passage

German Nazi Rudolf Hess was the last prisoner to be incarcerated in the Tower of London, captured in Renfrewshire after parachuting out of a plane

Westminster Catholic Cathedral stands on the foundations of Tothill Fields Prison demolished in 1885, which was deemed as a ‘house of correction’ for the compulsory employment of able-bodied but indolent paupers

The roof’s shape of the famous red telephone box was influenced by Sir John Soane’s tomb in St Pancras Old Church

The first bomb to drop on London in World War I is commemorated by a plaque at 16 Alkham Road in Stoke Newington, there were no injuries

Carlyle Mansions, a smart Victorian apartment block in Chelsea, was once home to authors Ian Fleming, T. S. Eliot and Henry James

Radio and music hall comedian Tommy Handley once lived at 34 Craven Road, Paddington – Known for the saying: “It’s That Man Again”

1912 was a bad year for the Boat Race on this day when both boats sank, the subsequent re-row on the following Monday was won by Oxford by six lengths

The Tube tunnel between Knightsbridge and South Kensington negotiates a massive curve to avoid a 17th century plague pit

On 10 May 1922 Ivy Williams was called to the Bar, becoming England’s first female barrister. She would never practice in a London court

In 2010, Eurostat calculated that Inner London’s Gross Domestic Product per capita stood at 328 per cent of the EU’s 27 average

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.

My next step

My local Lloyds Bank has now closed. Having been a customer since 1970 I will now have to travel over 4 miles and incur parking charges just to join the queue which will be longer than the line waiting for service was when my local branch was open. Thanks, Lloyds as you say in your current advertising campaign: ‘For Your Next Step’. My next step will be four miles long.

Blue Sky Thinking Quiz

With skies bluer than at any time in living memory, the lack of pollution turning it a deeper shade of blue, normally found on remote tropical islands, this week’s quiz turns to above our heads and London’s air.

Questions

1. Heathrow’s first passenger terminal was opened by the Queen in which year?

(a) 1955
(b) 1957
(c) 1959


2. England’s first manned balloon flight by Vincenzo Lunardi on 15th September 1784 took off from which London location?

(a) St. James’s Park beside what is now Buckingham Palace
(b) The Artillery Ground in Moorfields
(c) Outside St. Paul’s Cathedral


3. What was ‘The Skylon’ which once stood on the South Bank between Waterloo Bridge and Hungerford Bridge?

(a) A sculpture
(b) An aeroplane
(c) A skyscraper


4. From where in London did A. V. Roe launch the first powered flight in Britain by a British citizen in a British plane?

(a) Hyde Park
(b) Green Park
(c) Walthamstow Marshes


5. Why did a performance of La Traviata at Sadler’s Wells Theatre have to be abandoned in December 1952?

(a) Smog drifting into the theatre was so thick that the audience could scarcely see the performers
(b) A burst of hailstones brought down part of the ceiling
(c) Rain caused the nearby New River Head to flood the area


6. Much like today in December 1976 all planes at Heathrow were grounded. For what reason?

(a) Intelligence that the IRA were to hijack a passenger plane
(b) A flying pig
(c) A freak electrical thunderstorm


7. The weathervane of Liberty department store depicts what?

(a) The Statue of Liberty
(b) The Pilgrim Fathers’ ship the Mayflower
(c) Hermes the Greek God of Merchants


8. 7 Bruce Grove was the last home of Luke Howard, but for what is he known?

(a) He is known as the namer of clouds
(b) He deduced why the sky is blue
(c) He invented the modern weather station


9. In the film Mary Poppins, how much money does it cost to acquire ‘paper and strings’ to Go Fly a Kite?

(a) One penny
(b) Tuppence
(c) Thrupence


10. As my picture, taken above Romford, shows, plane contrails were once a familiar sight above London, as these ephemeral trails mark flight paths that criss-cross the city. The planes causing these vapour trails are held in holding stacks, but how many stacks does Heathrow have?

(a) Twelve
(b) Eight
(c) Four


As a bonus what is the cabbie speak for: A frarney?


Answers

1. Heathrow’s first passenger terminal was opened by the Queen in which year?

(a) On 16th December 1955 unveiled The Queen’s Building at London Airport, its name only revealed at the end of Her Majesty’s speech. Later renamed Heathrow, the original site was opened on 31st May 1946, with its first arrival a BOAC Lancastrian from Australia.


2. England’s first manned balloon flight by Vincenzo Lunardi on 15th September 1784 took off from which London location?

(b) Taking off in an impressive red-and-white silk balloon from Moorfields Artillery Ground, now the Honourable Artillery Company in City Road, Lunardi was lauded as the ‘idol of the whole nation’. Later balloons became a fashionable addition to London’s pleasure grounds, Charles Green’s party trick was to ascend from Vauxhall Gardens on horseback.


3. What was ‘The Skylon’ which once stood on the South Bank between Waterloo Bridge and Hungerford Bridge?

(a) A futuristic, 300ft high cigar-shaped aluminium sculpture with, as people joked at the time, ‘no visible means of support’, the Skylon was constructed as part of the Festival of Britain in 1951. Dismantled the following year, it was made into commemorative paper-knives and artefacts.


4. From where in London did A. V. Roe launch the first powered flight in Britain by a British citizen in a British plane?

(c) In 1909 Alliott Verdon Roe, who had been inspired by watching albatrosses in flight during his time in the merchant navy, constructed an early aeroplane under a viaduct and flew his Avro Triplane for 306 yards across the Marshes. A blue plaque marks the arches that he used as a workshop.


5. Why did a performance of La Traviata at Sadler’s Wells Theatre have to be abandoned in December 1952?

(a) The Great Smog of 1952 was the worst in the twentieth century, caused mainly by coal fire smoke, visibility in the city was reduced to inches. Several thousand would die from associated bronchial and cardiovascular illnesses associated with its inhalation. The reduction in air quality would bring about the Clean Air Act of 1956, and the imposition of the use of smokeless fuels.


6. Much like today in December 1976 all planes at Heathrow were grounded. For what reason?

(b) A pink pig had been strung between the chimneys of Battersea Power Station for the cover shoot of Pink Floyd’s album Animals. When the pig broke its moorings and floated away, all planes were grounded and the RAF was scrambled to chase it to ground in Kent.


7. The weathervane of Liberty department store depicts what?

(b) The weathervane has a detailed replica of The Mayflower, the ship that carried the Pilgrim Fathers to North America. The shop itself is made of ships: its mock Tudor facade was fashioned from the timbers of HMS Hindustan and HMS Impregnable (formerly known as HMS Howe and once the largest ship in the world). Liberty is also the size of a ship: The Great Marlborough Street frontage is the same length as the Hindustan.


8. 7 Bruce Grove was the last home of Luke Howard, but for what is he known?

(a) Luke Howard died on 21st March 1864 at 7 Bruce Grove, Tottenham. He proposed the nomenclature system that we still use today to identify clouds. He was also the first person to observe and measure the fact that London is warmer than the surrounding countryside. His Blue Plaque at Bruce Grove states: ‘Luke Howard 1772-1864 Namer of Clouds Lived and Died here’.


9. In the film Mary Poppins, how much money does it cost to acquire ‘paper and strings’ to Go Fly a Kite?

(b) Bert (Dick Van Dyke) sings: With tuppence for paper and strings/You can have your own set of wings/With your feet on the ground/You’re a bird in flight/ With your fist holding tight/To the string of your kite.


10. As my picture, taken above Romford, shows, plane contrails were once a familiar sight above London, as these ephemeral trails mark flight paths that criss-cross the city. The planes causing these vapour trails are held in holding stacks, but how many stacks does Heathrow have?

(c) Forming a web across its six international airports, the routes that planes take into, out of, and across London are designed to cause the least disturbance to the fewest number of people. Heathrow has four holding stacks above Bovingdon, Ockham, Biggin and Lambourne. Incoming planes circle above navigation beacons until they get the green light from air traffic control to begin their final approach.

As a bonus what is the cabbie speak for: A frarney?

A frarney is rain or a rainstorm, from rhyming slang ‘France and Spain’. Also known as Mushers Lotion, rain bringing more work to those owning their cab, or mushers.

London in Quotations: Hubert Gregg

Maybe it’s because I’m a Londoner / That I love London so / Maybe it’s because I’m a Londoner / That I think of her wherever I go / I get a funny feeling inside of me / Just walking up and down / Maybe it’s because I’m a Londoner / That I love London town.

Hubert Gregg (1914-2004), Maybe it’s because I’m a Londoner