London A to Z Part Two

This is our second visit to John Metcalf’s London A to Z, these snippets show just how much London has changed since the last Coronation.

Under AIRPORTS Northolt is given first for European and internal services, with a telephone number of Ruislip 3355 and Heathrow barely mentioned to say that London Airport as it was then known (tel: HOU 7711) was for all other destinations. London’s other aerodromes (as they were then called) Blackbushe, Bivingdon, Croydon, Gatwick and Lympne. Should you wish to take your car to the Continent Silver City Airways Ltd will fly you and your car there, give them a ring on PAd 7040 for details.

Advice for BOWLER HATS was that ‘the possession of the correct type of bowler, hairy, not too large and curly-brimmed is an essential to the young man about town as a pair of trousers’.

VOILETS were still being sold by flower girls in Piccadilly Circus to the cry: “Lovely Sweet Violets”.

Visit HAMPTON COURT PALACE by Green Line bus, or Tube and trolleybus. Admission is Monday to Friday 1/-, Saturday 6d. Sundays and Bank Holidays are free.

Perhaps the most surprising is the description of POLICEMEN. Long the target for flattering remarks by visiting film stars has earned the right to be called ‘wonderful’ by a deliberateness of gait, a slow helpfulness of manner and a near-divine sense of dignity. Impossible to shock or ruffle, you’ll find them, even in the most unlikely circumstances, your friends.

Adorned throughout with Edward Bawden’s beautiful and distinctive illustrations, John Metcalf’s charmingly idiosyncratic pocket guide brings to life with a dry humour the London and Londoners of the day, and available on Amazon.

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