On 9 February 1792 German-Swiss entrepreneur Johann Jakob Schweppe arrived in London to set up his first Seltzer water factory at 141 Drury Lane. Despite an unpromising start with his Swiss partners pulling out, Johann Schweppe persevered, his Soda Water became the colloquial term for sparkling water within a decade cementing his business name in the popular lexicon and creating the worldwide brand.
On 9 February 1915 an IRA 500kg bomb in a truck explodd at South Quay, Canary Wharf at 7pm, killing two and injuring 39, causing over £100 million damage
In 1992 driving a Porsche 911 a driver clocked up 147 mph, the highest speed recorded by the police on the M25 needless to say he got banned
The oldest surviving Blue Plaque is Napoleon III staying at 1c King Street in 1848 it’s the only one installed during a candidate’s lifetime
On 9 February 1915 Only Fools and Horses actor Lennard Pearce, who played Grandad in the TV show, was born in Paddington
The Connaught Hotel was called The Coburg, but like the Royal Family changed its name during World War I to avoid anti-German sentiment
In 1851 Britain’s greatest painter J. M. W. Turner bequeathed the contents of his studio to the nation the Tate holds 39,389 pieces
In 1912 the first Royal Variety Show took place at the Palace Theatre. Queen Mary was shocked by male impersonator Vesta Tilley
Only 14 men have run each and every one of the 34 London Marathons, one is former head teacher Mike Peace his best time is 2:37.12 in 1991
Over 47 million litres water are pumped from the Underground each day, enough to fill a 25m swimming pool every quarter of an hour
The man appointed by Charles II to put out the Great Fire of London was his brother the Duke of York – after whom New York was named
The statues of Livingstone and Shackleton outside the Royal Geographical Society have given rise to cabbies calling it “Hot and Cold Corner”
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 think the date of the South Quay bombing should be 1996, David. I lived directly across the river on Redriff Road in Rotherhithe, and the blast wave blew the seals on my double glazing a split-second before we heard the explosion. They stayed intact, but after that we would get condensation between the gaps. My insurance company refused to pay out, citing ‘Act of Terrorism’ not being covered.
Best wishes, Pete.
LikeLike
Point taken. I was near the 1992 Baltic Exchange bombing. But at least the windows held!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I was sent there in an ambulance the next day, on ‘standby’. I wrote about that on my blog.
https://beetleypete.com/2019/06/18/going-the-wrong-way/
LikeLike
By the way, I bought a Kindle edition of your new book this afternoon.
LikeLike
Thanks again. Hopefully I formatted it correctly.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Love that ‘Hot and Cold Corner’ snippet 😂
LikeLike
I’ve recently found another: Brook Street and New Bond Street is Teabag Corner as in Brook Bond Tea!
LikeLiked by 1 person
😂🤣😂
LikeLike