London Trivia: Goodby GLC

On 31 March 1986 the Greater London Council was abolished, with thousands of people taking part in festivities to mark the historic final hours of 97 years of local rule in London. A throng of 250,000 people gathered on the South Bank in London, home to the Greater London Council, which ceased to exist at midnight, festivities ended with the largest display of fireworks ever seen in the city after a week of events costing £250,000.

On 31 March 1986 Lady Gale died in her apartment at Hampton Court Palace, the result of a fire that caused millions of pounds damage

In 1961 Elsie Batten was killed in Cecil Court by Edwin Bush the first UK man to be caught by the use of an identikit picture

The Oxo Tower’s windows were designed in ‘O-X-O’ shapes to get round rules banning neon advertising. Lit up at night they did the same job

The Imperial War Museum was once Bethlem Asylum known as Bedlam where Victorian artist Richard Dadd was incarcerated

The clock above Horseguards Parade has a black mark by the figure II marking the time when Charles I was executed nearby

Artist Rosetti kept several animals in his Chelsea home including a wombat who ate the hat of a woman he was painting

Waterstone’s Islington Green was built as Collins Music Hall where Charlie Chaplin and Gracie Fields were among the performers

Jonathan Trott has never hit a Test six. The only man ever to hit a six over the Lord’s pavilion was Albert . . . Trott. Related (distantly)

Actor Timothy Bentinck who plays David Archer in the long-running Radio 4 soap drama was the voice of “Mind the Gap” on the London Tube

In 1696 Edward Lloyd published London’s first daily newspaper containing shipping information he picked up from customers in his coffee shop

After purchasing a London cab, the immensely rich Nubar Gulbenkian said that a London taxi can turn on a sixpence – “whatever that is”

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.

Previously Posted: Regency retail park

For those new to CabbieBlog or readers who are slightly forgetful, on Saturdays I’m republishing posts, many going back over a decade. Some will still be very relevant while others have become dated over time. Just think of this post as your weekend paper supplement.

Regency Retail Park (04.03.11)

If you should jump into a London cab and direct the driver to Locks he should drive you to number 6 St. James’s Street. That is according to the website of London’s most famous hatters, James Lock of St. James’s. Just don’t ask for a bowler while you’re there, at Locks it’s called a Coke hat, after William Coke a farmer from Holkham, Norfolk, for whom Locks made the first such headgear in 1850.

But this cabbie was surprised to find after reading David Long’s Tunnels, Towers & Temples that Locks have a rear entrance giving onto Crown Passage. For years I’ve driven down Pall Mall (now being transformed with London’s most pointless road works) little realising that alongside Quebec House, with its blue and while flag, lies the entrance to Crown Passage as perfect example of a Georgian shopping centre as you’ll find in London.

Many of the little shop fronts in this side street are Georgian, Lock’s small wooden bay window on its serpentine brackets is a reminder of the period when shopkeepers were starting to be a bit more assertive in their architectural display, pushing their windows out towards the street to attract passers-by. But they were only allowed to invade the pavement-space by so much – there were strict regulations about how far they could protrude. In a narrow street like this – it’s little more than an alley, really – your windows were only meant to stick out 5 inches or less.

Next door the Red Lion pub which calls itself London’s last village pub, this little alleyway has a village feel about it with shops for all your daily requirements: hat, shoes, groceries, papers, dry cleaners and a sandwich shop, there is even a chimney sweep.

The Red Lion also plays a part in a curious custom on 30th January each year when The Royal Stuart Society laments the death of the beloved monarch, Charles I executed in Whitehall on that day in 1649.

Wearing full Cavalier attire they first lay wreaths at the base of the King’s statute at Charing Cross, itself the point where all distances are measured from in London. The statute by Hubert Le Sueur in 1633 has a curious tale. In 1649 John Rivett, a brazier, was ordered to destroy it by Cromwell, but he buried the statute in his garden and made a fortune by selling souvenirs allegedly from the metal. He then gave it back to Charles II upon the Restoration of the Monarchy.

Having done their duty for King and country like many societies The Royal Stuart Society repair to the pub after a job well done, The Red Lion in Crown Passage.

March’s monthly musings

🚓 What Cab News

As I wrote last week, a FoI request discovered the number of black cab drivers entering the the trade sat at just 185 new licensees in 2023. Shows a marked decrease in the number of new taxi drivers licensed over the past nine years in the capital.

🎧 What I’m Listening

Nick Ferrari officially took on the role of his LBC breakfast programme in 2004, running from 7 am to 10 am, with a format of news, political debate and discussion. For a phone-in show, after 20 years he still doesn’t mention the phone number to call the programme.

📖 What I’m Reading

Hedgelands by Christopher Hart appeals to the geek in me, this book is about the humble countryside hedge, and how it’s woven into our language, landscape and culture.

📺 What I’m watching

Spring must have arrived, the bluetits have been busy building their nest in our garden.

❓ What else

Check out Google Arts & Culture: TfL’s Cultural Archive, over 2,000 images and documents: historic documents, images and maps charting the history of public transport in London. Whether you want information about maps, posters, gardens, lost property, the famous moquette, and Johnson typeface.

📆 What date?

The 1st of April is just around the corner, a message will appear on CabbieBlog which isn’t a joke, far from it.

 

What do you say to cabbies?

A study conducted by the taxi-hailing app, Freenow, has delved into what must be one of the most annoying aspects of being a London cabbie.

The good news is that the UK has emerged as having the second most sociable taxi passengers in Europe, trailing only behind Ireland.

The research focused on the interaction between passengers and black cab drivers, part delved into the top five questions posed by passengers, be they: traffic, cyclists, speed limits, or the correct route:

1 Have you been busy today?
2 How’s the traffic?
3 What do you think about cyclists?
4 Why is the speed limit 20mph?
5 Is there a quicker route because I’m in a hurry?

My questions, driving at the beginning of the Millennium tended to be:

1 What do you do for a living?
2 What time are you on ’til?
3 Where do you live? or Live far?
4 How long have you been a cabbie?
5 Had anyone famous in your cab?

Johnson’s London Dictionary: Blog

BLOG (v.) Electronick diary unto which earnest fools do commit their innermost thoughts, safe in the knowledge that no man shall ever read them

Dr. Johnson’s London Dictionary for publick consumption in the twenty-first century avail yourself on Twitter @JohnsonsLondon