Test Your Knowledge: March 2024

They have recently announced that the BT Tower is to become a hotel, but how much do you know about this iconic London landmark? 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. What was the Tower’s original name?
Telecom Tower
WRONG Before the break up of communication services, the Post Office ruled supreme.
Post Office Tower
CORRECT Before the break up of communication services, the Post Office ruled supreme.
GPO Tower
WRONG Before the break up of communication services, the Post Office ruled supreme.
2. What electromagnetic wave did it transmit?
Radio waves
WRONG If wind deviated the Tower by more than a third of a degree the microwaves that it fired over miles would miss their targets.
Microwaves
CORRECT If wind deviated the Tower by more than a third of a degree the microwaves that it fired over miles would miss their targets.
Gamma waves
WRONG If wind deviated the Tower by more than a third of a degree the microwaves that it fired over miles would miss their targets.
3. What did the first member of the public to visit, do at the Tower?
He fell to his death
CORRECT Frank Goldsmith escaped from nearby UCH where he was a patient, evaded detection climbed 440ft to the aerial platform and fell to his death.
He topped out the structure
WRONG Frank Goldsmith escaped from nearby UCH where he was a patient, evaded detection climbed 440ft to the aerial platform and fell to his death.
He protested against Harold Wilson’s Government
WRONG Frank Goldsmith escaped from nearby UCH where he was a patient, evaded detection climbed 440ft to the aerial platform and fell to his death.
4. In the event of a fire, what is the drill?
Use the lift
CORRECT The Tower is the only London structure that is, in the event of a fire, evacuated via the lifts, which required Parliamentary legislation.
Use the stairs
WRONG The Tower is the only London structure that is, in the event of a fire, evacuated via the lifts, which required Parliamentary legislation.
Wait for a helicopter
WRONG The Tower is the only London structure that is, in the event of a fire, evacuated via the lifts, which required Parliamentary legislation.
5. How long does it take by lift to reach to top?
20 seconds
CORRECT The Tower’s lifts can go from ground level to the viewing platform in 20 seconds, moving at 23ft per second, they’re among the fastest in Europe.
30 seconds
WRONG The Tower’s lifts can go from ground level to the viewing platform in 20 seconds, moving at 23ft per second, they’re among the fastest in Europe.
40 seconds
WRONG The Tower’s lifts can go from ground level to the viewing platform in 20 seconds, moving at 23ft per second, they’re among the fastest in Europe.
6. How far does the Tower sway in very high winds?
15 inches
WRONG Its cylindrical shape is said to withstand wind from nuclear bombs. The BT Tower only sways 10 inches during storms with winds of 95mph.
10 inches
CORRECT Its cylindrical shape is said to withstand wind from nuclear bombs. The BT Tower only sways 10 inches during storms with winds of 95mph.
20 inches
WRONG Its cylindrical shape is said to withstand wind from nuclear bombs. The BT Tower only sways 10 inches during storms with winds of 95mph.
7. How many LEDs does the revolving display contain?
201,600
WRONG The original lighting system only consisted of 7 different colour schemes and was replaced by a 360-degree coloured lighting display in October 2009. This LED-based display is the largest of its kind in the world as it consists of 529,750 LEDs, arranged in 177 vertical strips, and covers an area of 3,000 square feet. The screen covers both the 36th and 37th floors of the building at a height of 548 feet.
469,375
WRONG The original lighting system only consisted of 7 different colour schemes and was replaced by a 360-degree coloured lighting display in October 2009. This LED-based display is the largest of its kind in the world as it consists of 529,750 LEDs, arranged in 177 vertical strips, and covers an area of 3,000 square feet. The screen covers both the 36th and 37th floors of the building at a height of 548 feet.
529,750
CORRECT The original lighting system only consisted of 7 different colour schemes and was replaced by a 360-degree coloured lighting display in October 2009. This LED-based display is the largest of its kind in the world as it consists of 529,750 LEDs, arranged in 177 vertical strips, and covers an area of 3,000 square feet. The screen covers both the 36th and 37th floors of the building at a height of 548 feet.
8. Who opened the revolving restaurant?
Harold Wilson and Fanny Cradock
WRONG The Tower was officially opened to the public by Postmaster General Benn and holiday camp owner Butlin on 19th May 1966 after HM Queen Elizabeth visited it on 17th May 1966.
Reginald Maudling and Marguerite Patten
WRONG The Tower was officially opened to the public by Postmaster General Benn and holiday camp owner Butlin on 19th May 1966 after HM Queen Elizabeth visited it on 17th May 1966.
Billy Butlin and Anthony Wedgwood Benn
CORRECT The Tower was officially opened to the public by Postmaster General Benn and holiday camp owner Butlin on 19th May 1966 after HM Queen Elizabeth visited it on 17th May 1966.
9. What was the Tower originally to be called?
The Fitzrovia Mast
WRONG Occupying the site of the Museum Telephone Exchange the Tower was first planned in 1956 to be named after the original building.
The Museum Radio Tower
CORRECT Occupying the site of the Museum Telephone Exchange the Tower was first planned in 1956 to be named after the original building.
The London Tower
WRONG Occupying the site of the Museum Telephone Exchange the Tower was first planned in 1956 to be named after the original building.
10. What event precipitated a view that the unfinished Tower should be formally opened by the Queen?
The first Premium Bonds
CORRECT In July 1964 the PR opportunity of opening a part-finished Tower to coincide with the first Premium Bonds was rejected as it ‘would have no meaning whatsoever’.
The advent of colour television
WRONG In July 1964 the PR opportunity of opening a part-finished Tower to coincide with the first Premium Bonds was rejected as it ‘would have no meaning whatsoever’.
A general election
WRONG In July 1964 the PR opportunity of opening a part-finished Tower to coincide with the first Premium Bonds was rejected as it ‘would have no meaning whatsoever’.

February’s monthly musings

🚓 What Cab News

Now we have a cab licence suspension for 3 points on one’s DVLA licence for what TfL deem a ‘serious’ offence, not for a single speeding ticket, but being convicted, for instance, of the offence of ‘driving without reasonable consideration.’ If a driver receives 6 penalty points or more, they face licence revocation.

🎧 What I’m Listening

I am still listening to any previously broadcast WizAnn podcasts, great listening if you are a cabbie.

📖 What I’m Reading

I told a good friend that I’d never watched Secrets of the London Underground on Yesterday, and for Christmas, she bought me London Transport’s publication Hidden London by the same team.

📺 What I’m watching

ITV’s Trigger Point is worth watching if only Line of Duty creator Jed Mercurio is the executive producer. Is it me? I’m finding the fictional London locations irritating. If it’s in London say it, especially when a geek like me sometimes knows the actual location.

❓ What else

My neighbour was burgled early one evening this month as we sat indoors unaware of the crime. Since then I think we’ve brought the demise of the polar bear closer, one click at a time, as we ordered the delivery of security items from Amazon, delivered by their polluting vehicles.

📆 What date?

Those of you who are more observant (or just geeks) will have noticed today’s post is falling on a Thursday and not on the last Tuesday or Friday of the month. The reason is simple: Today is a leap day (29th February), and in two more leap days CabbieBlog will be publishing its last post (29th February 2032).

 

Johnson’s London Dictionary: London Season

LONDON SEASON (n.) Summer parade where eligible girls are doth paraded for masculine inspection for matrimony.

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

Statistics 2023

This rather niche post has been running now for over half the life of the blog, and why anyone would want to read this rather self-indulgent posting I’ve yet to fathom, but some of you still keep coming back. At the time of the first post I described CabbieBlog as ‘an eclectic mix of tips, tours, trivia and tripe’ and I’m rather proud that that dubious standard has been maintained with posts this year about obsolete telephone technology, felled Ulez cameras and eating Trafalgar Square’s pigeons, all of which are hardly ‘must read’ subject material for the average person in the street. I’ve tried to provide you with a varied diet, rather than endless recycled press releases, mainly because I believe there’s still demand for original subject matter. Despite my herculean endeavours, my readership has diminished over time, the young have better things to do than read about cabbie slang, data on the times it has snowed at Christmas in London, or a taxi being converted to cook pie and mash.

I guess that much of my core readership has reached an age when experience supersedes enthusiasm, and I assume that you either keep coming back for the blog’s variety, while, at the time, you can indulge me with the personally irrelevant stuff, since you now have time on your hands.

A regular CabbieBlog whinge this year has been that this platform (WordPress) is slowly transforming into a program aimed at professional website designers and is becoming harder to use by we hobbyists. Last year I mentioned starting Unblogged London on Substack a fairly new platform upon which I write long-form essays at irregular intervals. I can see, probably sometime this year, my ability to code the daily posts becoming so much of a chore that I’ll have to abandon producing daily material posted at 1.50 pm.

So with more information than you probably wanted to know about me, here are the annual blogging statistics for 2023. As before, with the data amassed over the last year, I’ve broken it down into bite-sized chunks with comparable figures for the previous year.


Blog visitors and page views

The halcyon days of blogging are truly over and CabbieBlog’s ‘hits’ reflect this fact. In addition, as I wrote last year copyright trolls now peruse the Internet. At some time I may have inadvertently used a copyrighted image taken from a site that claims its contents are published under a Creative Commons Licence. To avoid being prosecuted for copyright infringement many posts are now password protected thus enabling me to check out the content before allowing viewing, this lack of access has inevitably reduced the hit rate. These figures don’t include those who lazily use an RSS feed to gather posts to peruse, I’m only counting visitors who come to CabbieBlog not readers that the blog goes to them. (Average hit rate per visitor: 2022 – 1.5461; 2023 – 1.5389

2022
Visitors – 27,686
Pageviews – 42,807

2023
Visitors – 22,201
Pageviews – 34,166


CabbieBlog’s readers from abroad

Once again this year has seen a drop in the number of individual countries checking out CabbieBlog. Curiously one hit was recorded from ‘Unknown Region’, I’m hoping it’s from the International Space Station, but in reality, it is probably just a glitch. The United States leads our curious cousins with 4,492 a drop of 1,131 hits since last year.

2022 – 129 individual countries

2023 – 123 individual countries


Number of comments

When socials first hit Cyberverse’s street, we realised that we could interact with strangers. Despite all the bad press some of these apps have received, here on CabbieBlog interaction with others is not only encouraged but it’s this interaction with others that keeps me going. Again a huge thank you for your encouragement or discouragement, your comments keep me submitting daily regular posts for your perusal.

2022 – 1,115

2023 – 937


Number of ‘Likes’

CabbieBlog’s hit rate might be lower these days, but curiously likes are increasing. I can’t work out whether they’re the equivalent of a firm handshake or denote just a brief nod upon passing. Whatever your like indicates, a big thank you for touching the Like button found at the foot of every post.

2022 – 1,043

2023 – 1,084


Followers of CabbieBlog

From what can understand (which is usually limited), because WordPress refuses to cross Elon Musk’s palm with silver, my followers from X aren’t recorded, in fact, they don’t now receive my pearls of wisdom. As a consequence, numbers have fallen sharply. Thanks to all of you for following CabbieBlog, however you receive notifications of postings.

2022 – 1,410

2023 – 396


Posts written

Monday’s Quotations obviously are not written by me and therefore are not included in the count, likewise Previously Posted are not included in these figures as they were, well previously posted. I’m still posting something 7 days a week, the data reflects my industrious output.

2022 – 292

2023 – 262


Most viewed and least viewed posts and pages

It has to be said that some subjects take on a life of their own, while others just sit in cyberspace minding their own business. At the bottom lie many posts with only a few views a year, unfortunately WordPress don’t now record the unread pages and posts, and so there might be many just waiting to be discovered.

2022
Highest post
Who remembers the characters of London? – 1,259
Lowest Post
Shakespeare in Love – 13
Highest page
The Knowledge – 2,482
Lowest page
The small print – 17

2023
Highest post
London’s top secret tower – 581
Lowest Post
Statistics 2021 – 9
Highest page
The Knowledge – 1,886
Lowest page
Privacy Policy – 10


Pages written

Due to the aforementioned Copyright Conundrum, I’ve written a page laying out CabbieBlog’s approach to copyright infringement.

2022 – 0

2023 – 1


Number of words written

I must be writing shorter posts these days, now I’ve finished my book I’ve no excuse, I’ll have to up my game.

2022
Words – 72,478
Characters – 425,158

2023
Words – 55,409
Characters – 325,547


Referrers

If you ignore the search engines, clocking up an impressive 18,100 hits, social media referrers are Twitter X at 722 and, surprisingly, as I haven’t an account, Facebook at 302. These are the top independent referrers.

2022
A London Inheritance – 66
Diamond Geezer – 21

2023
Tigergrowl – 72
A London Inheritance – 69


In conclusion

I didn’t mean for this blog to last for 15 years. I thought I’d start a blog (with no real thought of audience, content or duration), after work one evening on a platform named blog and naturally I assumed the name – cabbie. I then had a dabble at Google’s Blogger, finally settling on the WordPress platform on 23rd February 2009. Weblogs were at the time a burgeoning means of online communication, so it seemed a sensible use of my spare time. And here we are 5,483 days later still writing and reading about London.

London in Quotations: Sophie Kinsella

Commuting in London is basically warfare. It’s a constant campaign of claiming territory; inching forward; never relaxing for a moment. Because if you do, someone will step past you. Or step on you.

Sophie Kinsella (b.1969), My Not So Perfect Life

Taxi Talk Without Tipping