All posts by Gibson Square

A Licensed Black London Cab Driver I share my London with you . . . The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

The London Grill: Marie-Louise Samuels

We challenge our contributors to reply to ten devilishly probing questions about their London and we don’t take “Sorry Gov” for an answer. Everyone sitting in the hot seat they will face the same questions ranging from their favourite way to spend a day out in the capital to their most hated building on London’s skyline to find out what Londoners think about their city. The questions are the same but the answers vary wildly.

My name is Marie-Louise, and I am a London Black Cab driver. I have been a cabbie for just over four years and I absolutely LOVE my job, making passengers smile and giving them a great lasting impression of me! I’m not the usual type of cab driver that you would expect when you hail me down. You will be met with a welcoming smile and big positive, vivacious energy, my flamboyant personality is as much versatile as my dress sense. I enjoy travelling, learning new things, as I don’t know it all and laughing as it’s good for the soul, try it!

What’s your secret London tip?

My secret London tip is to get lost! You’ll find out so many new things or may end up in a bar or two!

What’s your secret London place?

My secret London place wouldn’t be a secret now as you’re going to know! But as I’m one to share it would be Peckham Levels something about being in familiar territory.

What’s your biggest gripe about London?

London’s cycle lanes the length of a car space but are not being used! Take Euston underpass for one, get rid of the lane and revert it to its original two lanes and get London moving again – well eastbound anyway.

What’s your favourite building?

My favourite building or one of them is the Shard! Been there a few times and the view of London/surrounding areas is amazing even better at night.

What’s your most hated building?

Most hated building in London? I don’t have one! I reckon if you give them a good clean then they would look nicer, well to look at anyway.

What’s the best view in London?

The best view in London as told by a passenger would be in Highgate (Southwood Lane), you can see the Dartford Crossing without wincing, but the view is amazing.

What’s your personal London landmark?

My personal landmark is the buildings in Canary Wharf, just something about staring at it from Greenwich or from the Emirates Air Cable gives me at ease love my city vibes.

What’s London’s best film, book or documentary?

London’s best film for me personally is Rocks (2020), it gives a true reflection of London where I grew up and have come to know.

What’s your favourite restaurant?

Balthazar in Covent Garden.

How would you spend your ideal day off in London?

I would usually spend my day off by going to the gym and getting a workout done as it helps me start my day off right and then go catch a film as I like to keep on top of the latest films. I then go to my favourite place in London which is Southbank, taking a long stroll down the Embankment, watching everyone around me go by and take in the incredible London sights, grab a coffee and not think about work or being in my cab!! There’s so much to appreciate around us and some parts you can’t get to in a cab.

London in Quotations: Frommer’s Europe by Rail

London is a dizzying delight, full of pomp and pedigree, a place where high culture and cutting-edge trends feed off one another.

Suzane Rowan Kelleher, Donald Olson and Darwin Porter, Frommer’s Europe by Rail

London Trivia: First female minister

On 5 June 1929 Margaret Bondfield, women’s campaigner and MP, became the first woman to be a minister, under Ramsay Macdonald, as Minister for Labour, and the first woman to become a Privy Councillor

On 5 June 1963 John Profumo resigned as Secretary for War after admitting he had lied over his affair with Christine Keeler

Bow Street was the only police station to have white lights outside instead of the traditional blue – they were ordered by Queen Victoria

The golden flames on top of St. Paul’s lean in the direction the wind was blowing on the night of the Great Fire

In 1637 playwright Ben Jonson was buried upright in Westminster Abbey as he couldn’t afford to pay for a larger space

London’s epic Parliament Square peace protestor (no one else can permanently stay there) Brian Haw, born 1949 stood there since 2 June 2001 until his death in 2011

Harry Potter’s magic luggage trolley sticks out of a wall between platforms 8/9 not 9/10 because J. K.Rowling was thinking of Euston

Until recently Londoners consumed a prodigious amount of champagne, by volume they equalled the entire amount exported by France to America

In the 18th century at the Cat & Mutton, Broadway Market hosted the Soapy Pig Swinging Contest, drovers lathered a pig’s tail and hurled it

The colourful benches on the Southeastern High Speed platform in St Pancras are the five chopped-up Olympic rings once hanging there in 2012

Isaac Newton lived at 87 Jermyn Street, St. James when he worked at the Royal Mint where he was tasked with prosecuting counterfeiters

On 5 June 1939 an assassin attempted to shoot the Duchess of Kent she didn’t realise what was happening and went to see Wuthering Heights

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: Time Gentlemen, Please!

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.

Time Gentlemen, Please! (12.06.09)

Pubs are quintessentially English as scones, cricket, Marmite or Stephen Fry. In Ireland or America most bars have mundane names, Murphy’s or Clancy’s, while English pubs have historic and often funny names; Cat and Fiddle, Hare and Hounds, The Red Lion, The Cricketers, The Battle of Trafalgar, The Rose and Crown, The Royal Oak (commemorating the time Charles II as a boy hid from Cromwellian troops after the Battle of Worcester), The Lamb and Flag and The King’s Head.

These names are centuries old, from the time when most of their customers were unable to read and pictorial signs could be readily recognised and even now English pubs have beautifully painted signs above their doors.

Over the centuries, the English Public House has been a place to drink with friends; magistrates would hold court in pubs; people have been hanged in them.

In the eighteenth century the Tyburn Road what has become Oxford Street was the route prisoners would be taken to be hanged. At The Mason’s Arms, a pub in Seymour Place its cellars still have the manacles on the walls, which show that prisoners enjoyed their last pint in very unusual conditions. As they left the pub and were loaded back onto the cart, prisoners would shout to customers “I’ll buy you a pint on the way back!”

The “Ye Olde Man and Scythe” in Bolton, Lancashire is the third oldest pub in England, dating back to the 1200s. In 1651, the Earl of Derby had a last drink and meal inside the pub before being beheaded in the street right outside the pub for his part in the Bolton Massacre. His head supposedly missed the basket and rolled along the street. To this day, the wooden chair which he sat on during his last meal and the axe used to behead him and on display inside the pub. On the chair is an inscription which reads: “15th October 1651 In this chair James 7th Earl of Derby sat at the Man and Scythe Inn, Churchgate, Bolton immediately prior to his execution”.

But, unfortunately, the Great British Pub is in danger of becoming a dying breed. Each week in the past six months, an average of 39 of the nation’s 57,000 pubs have closed.

Most pubs have become restaurants or television rooms, after centuries in which they were the social focus of British life. “There is no private house in which people can enjoy themselves as well as at a capital tavern,” Dr Johnson in the late 18th century. “At a tavern, there is general freedom from anxiety. You are sure you are welcome; and the more noise you make, the more things you call for, the welcomer you are.”

Urban pub numbers are declining even more steeply because the city- dwellers enjoy such a choice of restaurants and coffee shops.

A survey of 227 out of 936 North London pubs that have closed since 2002 shows that 84 have been turned into flats, while 143 have become businesses or voluntary projects.

Test Your Knowledge: June Jubilee

To commemorate the Jubilee, this month’s London quiz is shamelessly Royalist, should they wish, Republicans may reluctantly participate. As before the correct answer will turn green when it’s clicked upon and expanded to give more information. The incorrect answers will turn red giving the correct explanation.

1. Who did Princess Anne marry at Westminster Abbey in 1973?
Brigadier Andrew Parker Bowles
WRONG Anne’s romance with Bowles was covered in The Crown’s third season, with Anne played by Erin Doherty. After marrying Mark Phillips in 1973 Anne later divorced to marry Timothy Lawrence.
Captain Mark Phillips
CORRECT Anne’s romance with Bowles was covered in The Crown’s third season, with Anne played by Erin Doherty. After marrying Mark Phillips in 1973 Anne later divorced to marry Timothy Lawrence.
Sir Timothy Lawrence
WRONG Anne’s romance with Bowles was covered in The Crown’s third season, with Anne played by Erin Doherty. After marrying Mark Phillips in 1973 Anne later divorced to marry Timothy Lawrence.
2. Where was Queen Elizabeth II born in 1926?
Buckingham Palace
WRONG Not a palace, a big estate or even a hospital, but a townhouse on a busy London street. The Queen’s parents had moved into the house, belonging to her Scottish grandparents, the Earl and Countess of Strathmore, only a few weeks before her birth. Demolished in 1937, along with 20 neighbouring houses, 17 Bruton Street was replaced with Berkeley Square House which was considered Europe’s largest office block and one of London’s first major reinforced concrete buildings.
17 Bruton Street
CORRECT Not a palace, a big estate or even a hospital, but a townhouse on a busy London street. The Queen’s parents had moved into the house, belonging to her Scottish grandparents, the Earl and Countess of Strathmore, only a few weeks before her birth. Demolished in 1937, along with 20 neighbouring houses, 17 Bruton Street was replaced with Berkeley Square House which was considered Europe’s largest office block and one of London’s first major reinforced concrete buildings.
Royal Lodge, Windsor
WRONG Not a palace, a big estate or even a hospital, but a townhouse on a busy London street. The Queen’s parents had moved into the house, belonging to her Scottish grandparents, the Earl and Countess of Strathmore, only a few weeks before her birth. Demolished in 1937, along with 20 neighbouring houses, 17 Bruton Street was replaced with Berkeley Square House which was considered Europe’s largest office block and one of London’s first major reinforced concrete buildings.
3. Who was the only monarch to be born and die at Buckingham Palace?
Edward VII
CORRECT Edward VII was born at Buckingham Palace on 9th November 1841 he died at the Palace on 6th May 1910 aged 68, he lay in state at Westminster Hall, where a quarter of a million people filed past his body. On 20th May he was buried in St George’s Chapel, Windsor.
George VI
WRONG Edward VII was born at Buckingham Palace on 9th November 1841 he died at the Palace on 6th May 1910 aged 68, he lay in state at Westminster Hall, where a quarter of a million people filed past his body. On 20th May he was buried in St George’s Chapel, Windsor.
Queen Victoria
WRONG Edward VII was born at Buckingham Palace on 9th November 1841 he died at the Palace on 6th May 1910 aged 68, he lay in state at Westminster Hall, where a quarter of a million people filed past his body. On 20th May he was buried in St George’s Chapel, Windsor.
4. Before he came to the throne, George VI competed in which sporting tournament?
Wimbledon Tennis Championship
CORRECT The Duke of York, the future King George VI, remains the only member of the British royal family to ever compete at Wimbledon after playing in the men’s doubles tournament. Partnering with his mentor and advisor Louis Greig, the pair were eliminated in the first round by former champions Herbert Roper Barrett and Arthur Gore.
British Golf Open
WRONG The Duke of York, the future King George VI, remains the only member of the British royal family to ever compete at Wimbledon after playing in the men’s doubles tournament. Partnering with his mentor and advisor Louis Greig, the pair were eliminated in the first round by former champions Herbert Roper Barrett and Arthur Gore.
Cricket Test Match
WRONG The Duke of York, the future King George VI, remains the only member of the British royal family to ever compete at Wimbledon after playing in the men’s doubles tournament. Partnering with his mentor and advisor Louis Greig, the pair were eliminated in the first round by former champions Herbert Roper Barrett and Arthur Gore.
5. What shape was Queen Anne’s coffin?
Square
CORRECT After suffering 17 miscarriages and poor health, when she died in 1714, aged 49, she was placed in a coffin described by one onlooker as so wide it was “almost square”, and “bigger than that of the prince, her husband, who was known to be a fat, bulky man”. It was taken to Westminster Abbey by a chariot with particularly “large, strong wheels”, drawn by eight horses draped in purple, where it was then carried inside by no less than 14 men. Some even claim the coffin didn’t fit inside the Stuart vault, under the floor at the south aisle of Henry VII’s chapel, and that other royal coffins had to be moved to accommodate it.
Oval
WRONG After suffering 17 miscarriages and poor health, when she died in 1714, aged 49, she was placed in a coffin described by one onlooker as so wide it was “almost square”, and “bigger than that of the prince, her husband, who was known to be a fat, bulky man”. It was taken to Westminster Abbey by a chariot with particularly “large, strong wheels”, drawn by eight horses draped in purple, where it was then carried inside by no less than 14 men. Some even claim the coffin didn’t fit inside the Stuart vault, under the floor at the south aisle of Henry VII’s chapel, and that other royal coffins had to be moved to accommodate it.
Oblong
WRONG After suffering 17 miscarriages and poor health, when she died in 1714, aged 49, she was placed in a coffin described by one onlooker as so wide it was “almost square”, and “bigger than that of the prince, her husband, who was known to be a fat, bulky man”. It was taken to Westminster Abbey by a chariot with particularly “large, strong wheels”, drawn by eight horses draped in purple, where it was then carried inside by no less than 14 men. Some even claim the coffin didn’t fit inside the Stuart vault, under the floor at the south aisle of Henry VII’s chapel, and that other royal coffins had to be moved to accommodate it.
6. The Banqueting House is the last remaining part of which central London palace destroyed by fire in 1698?
Nonsuch Palace
WRONG The palace has (mostly) gone but its name lives on as a synonym for the national government quarter. Banqueting House is notable for being the first Palladian neo-classical building completed in England. It was through a window that King Charles I stepped onto a stage to be beheaded publicly in 1649.
Whitehall Palace
CORRECT The palace has (mostly) gone but its name lives on as a synonym for the national government quarter. Banqueting House is notable for being the first Palladian neo-classical building completed in England. It was through a window that King Charles I stepped onto a stage to be beheaded publicly in 1649.
Winchester Palace
WRONG The palace has (mostly) gone but its name lives on as a synonym for the national government quarter. Banqueting House is notable for being the first Palladian neo-classical building completed in England. It was through a window that King Charles I stepped onto a stage to be beheaded publicly in 1649.
7. Which London palace was used extensively to raise royal children from the fourteenth to the sixteenth centuries?
Winchester Palace
WRONG Eltham is something of a hidden gem. Its fifteenth-century hall dates from King Edward IV’s reign, who considered this his favourite palace. Buildings, gardens and hunting grounds had been extended in the fourteenth century by Edward II and his wife Isabella for their son (Edward III). Henry VIII spent much of his boyhood here in the late fifteenth century.
Kensington Palace
WRONG Eltham is something of a hidden gem. Its fifteenth-century hall dates from King Edward IV’s reign, who considered this his favourite palace. Buildings, gardens and hunting grounds had been extended in the fourteenth century by Edward II and his wife Isabella for their son (Edward III). Henry VIII spent much of his boyhood here in the late fifteenth century.
Eltham Palace
CORRECT Eltham is something of a hidden gem. Its fifteenth-century hall dates from King Edward IV’s reign, who considered this his favourite palace. Buildings, gardens and hunting grounds had been extended in the fourteenth century by Edward II and his wife Isabella for their son (Edward III). Henry VIII spent much of his boyhood here in the late fifteenth century.
8. During World War II, Buckingham Palace suffered nine direct bomb hits. Which part of the building was destroyed?
Music Room
WRONG Believed to have been a deliberate target, the most serious damage to the palace destroyed the chapel, George VI and Queen Elizabeth were filmed inspecting the site. It was during this time that the always classy Queen said, “Now I can look the East End in the face.” Since the bombing of the chapel, some royal christenings have taken place in the Music Room.
Ballroom
WRONG Believed to have been a deliberate target, the most serious damage to the palace destroyed the chapel, George VI and Queen Elizabeth were filmed inspecting the site. It was during this time that the always classy Queen said, “Now I can look the East End in the face.” Since the bombing of the chapel, some royal christenings have taken place in the Music Room.
Chapel
CORRECT Believed to have been a deliberate target, the most serious damage to the palace destroyed the chapel, George VI and Queen Elizabeth were filmed inspecting the site. It was during this time that the always classy Queen said, “Now I can look the East End in the face.” Since the bombing of the chapel, some royal christenings have taken place in the Music Room.
9. One of these IS NOT in Buckingham Palace, but which one?
A travel agents
CORRECT Buckingham Palace doesn’t have a travel agent. In 2001, the now-former head of Coutts bank, Gordon Pell, confirmed that there is indeed an ATM inside Buckingham Palace. It is tucked away in the Palace basement and reserved for the royal family. The Court Postmaster, David Baxter, is only the 29th person to hold this important position since its formation in 1565 when Robert Gascoigne became the first holder of the office providing all the services you expect from your local post office.
A post office
WRONG Buckingham Palace doesn’t have a travel agent. In 2001, the now-former head of Coutts bank, Gordon Pell, confirmed that there is indeed an ATM inside Buckingham Palace. It is tucked away in the Palace basement and reserved for the royal family. The Court Postmaster, David Baxter, is only the 29th person to hold this important position since its formation in 1565 when Robert Gascoigne became the first holder of the office providing all the services you expect from your local post office.
An ATM
WRONG Buckingham Palace doesn’t have a travel agent. In 2001, the now-former head of Coutts bank, Gordon Pell, confirmed that there is indeed an ATM inside Buckingham Palace. It is tucked away in the Palace basement and reserved for the royal family. The Court Postmaster, David Baxter, is only the 29th person to hold this important position since its formation in 1565 when Robert Gascoigne became the first holder of the office providing all the services you expect from your local post office.
10. The Trial of the Pyx is an annual Royal interrogation. What is examined?
That the House of Windsor is entitled to be our Royal family
WRONG The Trial of the Pyx examines, tests and weighs several coins to make sure that they are all consistent and meet the specifications set out in the relevant section of the Coinage Act or Royal Proclamation. The Trial usually takes place in January or February at Goldsmith’s in London every year and is thought to be the only Mint that conducts such a test.
Where several coins are tested as to their authenticity
CORRECT The Trial of the Pyx examines, tests and weighs several coins to make sure that they are all consistent and meet the specifications set out in the relevant section of the Coinage Act or Royal Proclamation. The Trial usually takes place in January or February at Goldsmith’s in London every year and is thought to be the only Mint that conducts such a test.
That the army is required to demonstrate their allegiance to the Crown
WRONG The Trial of the Pyx examines, tests and weighs several coins to make sure that they are all consistent and meet the specifications set out in the relevant section of the Coinage Act or Royal Proclamation. The Trial usually takes place in January or February at Goldsmith’s in London every year and is thought to be the only Mint that conducts such a test.