On 17 December 1849 the world’s first bowler hat was sold by James Lock & Co., hatters of St. James’s Street. Created for Edward Coke, younger brother of the 2nd Earl of Leicester for his gamekeepers. It was designed by hat-makers Thomas & William Bowler. To ensure it fulfilled his brief of protecting the wearer from low hanging branches Coke is said to have twice stamped on the hat’s crown before parting with his 12/-.
On 17 December 1983 an IRA bomb exploded outside Harrod’s, killing six and injuring 90, the car containing the bomb was projected onto the 5th floor of an adjoining building
In 1952 a Nigerian visitor was fined £50 for committing an indecent act with a pigeon in Trafalgar Square and £10 for having it for tea
Caxton Hall has been the venue for celebrity weddings including Peter Sellers and Britt Ekland. Diana Dors liked it so much she used it twice!
Suicide victims were once buried at crossroads to bring absolution, last person was Abel Griffiths interred at Grosvenor Place/Lower Grosvenor Place 1823
In December 2005 the London Eye was lit pink in celebration of the first Civil Partnership performed on the wheel
The Proms came to the Royal Albert Hall in 1941 from the Queen’s Hall in Marylebone which was bombed in the Blitz
Before the statue of Nelson was placed on top of the 170-foot-tall column in Trafalgar Square in 1842, 14 stonemasons had dinner at the top
The place name Millwall originates from the windmills that previously lined the western embankment of the Isle of Dogs
There was great opposition to the building the London underground from Victorian Churchmen because they thought it would ‘disturb the devil’
Kenneth Williams was once employed as an apprentice draughtsman at Stanford’s Map Shop at 12-14 Long Acre, Covent Garden
Before he got the part of James Bond, Roger Moore moved into a new house where he inherited a telephone number ending ‘007’
Trivial 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.
I used to love wandering around in Stanford’s map shop.
I was sent in an ambulance to the Harrod’s bombing. But luckily other ambulances had already dealt with the casualties. So we were put on standby further down Brompton Road near Montpelier Street, in case of a secondary explosion.
Cheers, Pete.
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Ladbroke Grove disaster would have been bad enough, without the Harrods bombing during your time with London’s ambulances
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I went to a few bombings. Wimpy Bar Oxford St, where the bomb-disposal man was killed. St Mary Axe, Troops and horses in Hyde Park, and others. Fortunately, I was mostly on standby, and as they are ‘crime scenes’, we rarely had to remove any bodies. But we did see the devastation first-hand.
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I was near St Mary Axe, not a great experience
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Add a zero to the height of Nelson’s column.
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I don’t think the diners experienced vertigo at 17ft up! Thanks for the comment – and correction.
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