London Trivia: Standing room only

On 23 March 1743 the first London performance of Handel’s Messiah. An account by James Beattie wrote some 37 years later related that King George II while attending the premiere was so overcome by the Hallelujah Chorus, he stood, this forced the entire audience to follow suit. It has since become an annual tradition to stand. Many historians question the authenticity of this charming story.

On 23 March 1889 the free Woolwich ferry service was launched by Sir Joseph Bazalgette, it seems to have been out of commission ever since

Having slid down a chimney teenage street urchin Edward Jones spent weeks wandering around Buckingham Palace hoping to meet Queen Victoria

In 1825 Irish MP Sir Frederick Tench drew up plans for a new Royal palace its approach would need Covent Garden and the West End demolished

The 999 service was introduced to London in 1937, the buzzer which alerted the switchboard operators was so loud that a some of them fainted

The Houses of Parliament has over 1,100 rooms; 100 staircases; 3 miles of corridors and 19 bars and restaurants

The unpopular underground Criterion Theatre opened in 1874 forced air pumps were installed to prevent patrons from suffocating it then flooded

A poll conducted by BBC Radio London found of the world’s 180 countries (some minute) London’s restaurants catered for 123 national dishes

Little Bridge Grounds near Chelsea’s ground held the first amateur boxing matches in 1867 with cups donated by the Marquess of Queensbury

Opening 1863 the Metropolitan Railway between Paddington and Farringdon was the world’s first urban underground passenger carrying railway

Phyllis Pearsall the creator of the A-Z Map is said to have personally walked London’s 23,000 streets to compile her celebrated atlas

Dan Crawford founder of The Kings Head Theatre Islington refused to accept decimal currency they charged and gave change until 2009 in £.s.d

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.

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