Free London Walks

Donate

Support the podcast - help pay for the bandwidth and travel costs involved. Donate $25 or more, and receive a disk containing all walks to date. Remember to leave your mailing address with PayPal. You can use any credit card. Thank you.

 

Ads

Supporters


About Us
World Vision is a Christian charity organisation dedicated to working with children, families and communities worldwide to overcome child poverty and injustice.
Learn
Find out why so many children are living in extreme poverty around the world, learn about the causes and effects of poverty and famine.
Giving
Donate to charity online and enable World Vision to respond quickly when natural disasters strike. Your donation will help us fight poverty and justice around the world.
Africa
Sponsor a child in Africa and help to reduce child poverty. World Vision operates throughout African countries such as Kenya and Ethiopia to reduce child poverty and to promote child rights.
India
Sponsor a child in India and help to relieve child poverty with World Vision. World Vision is a NGO working throughout India to help provide clean safe water, food, healthcare and education.
Campaigning
Are your ready to stand up and take action against global poverty and inequality? Take a look at World Vision's campaigns to tackle injustice and see how you can get involved.
Close X
Would you like to have the World Vision UK Widget on your site or blog? Simply copy the code below and paste where you would like the widget to appear.




Map of Walks



Join the Facebook Group



Archives


2009
January
February
April
May
June
August
September
October

2008
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November

2007
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2006
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December


Journey Planner


Transport for London
Journey Planner


Licence Notice


Creative Commons License

Calendar


April 2008
S M T W T F S
     
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930

Audio Player

Robert's Travel Pages

Search in my walks

Vote for this podcast

PodcastAlley.com Feeds

Review in iTunes

Blubrry.com player!
blubrry.com

A circular walk from Wimbledon Underground and Mainline Station, Zone 3. The best way of reaching the start is by taking the District Line to Wimbledon from Central London, or by changing to the District Line Wimbledon Branch at Earl's Court. The walk is 3.8 miles long.

This is a charming, picturesque, historical and interesting walk on high ground through Wimbledon Village and around the Common. There is also a chance to visit the Wimbledon All-England Club, home of the most famous lawn tennis tournament in the world.

We first climb Wimbledon Hill from the railway station, and pause at St Mary's Church. This is the fourth place of worship on this site extending back more than 1,000 years. The present church was opened in 1843. It was designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott. In the chancel are wonderful mediaeval painted beams and a memorial to Sir Joseph Bazalgette, the engineer of London's sewerage system. His mausoleum is in the church yard.

We then pass through Wimbledon Village and then along the south side of the Common with its large Georgian houses. After taking some refreshment at one of the many charming pubs around the Common and walking into the Crooked Billet, we walk up the west side where the houses are even bigger and grander. The largest is Cannizaro House (pictured) which is now a hotel. The grounds are owned by the London Borough of Merton and can be visited. Here you will find over 400 species of trees and shrubs. The collection of rhododendrons and azaleas is said to be one of the finest anywhere in England.

From a little enclave of houses built on the Common and a preparatory school associated with William Wilberforce who owned a house nearby before starting his campaign to abolish slavery, there is the chance to take a diversion to look at an iron age hill fort or the Wimbledon Windmill Museum. There are also many other rides and walks throughout the Common.

Finally the walk returns to the starting point across the Common and down several tiny alley ways, crossing the line of a prehistoric path and back to the new town centre.

Files for your GPS: GPX

Direct download: wimbledon.mp3
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 8:51 AM
Comments[5]

History lovers and those who are fond of spooky alleyways and secret spaces in the mediaeval City of London will love this walk. It covers the same territory as the City walk west of St Paul's a couple of years ago, but there are only two places we visit again so this is genuinely a new delight. Mind you, it will be essential for you to have your wits about you when you do this walk - we dive in and out of tiny entrances almost invisible to tourists, and walk through part of the City you would never find without a guide.

During the walk, we see a memorial to ordinary folk who gave their lives to save others and who would be forgotten except for the good offices of the symbolist painter G F Watts. We walk underneath the Old Bailey and visit St Sepulchre where there is a stained glass window dedicated to musicians and especially the father of the Proms Sir Henry Wood. His ashes are interred in the floor. In the same church is the bell tolled the night before executions in Newgate Prison and a poem exhorting the condemned souls to repent.

After walking through run down and abandoned parts of the old Smithfield Market ripe for redevelopment, we walk into a private road of elegant houses that is technically in Cambridgeshire. Half way up the road is St Ethelreda's Roman Catholic Church and through a hidden gap the most out-of-the-way pub in the whole of London. This is the spookiest part of the entire walk and full of atmosphere.

We then pass through the old Barnard's Inn, once part of the Court of Chancery but now the home of Gresham College where free lectures are given to all comers. We revisit Gough Square where Dr Johnson's cat Hodge is set in bronze on a copy of the famous Dictionary with an opened oyster. Finally we return to St Paul's and Paternoster Square after standing right under the site of the spire which once was the centre of the Blackfriars monastery church and we see the preserved crypt of Whitefriars behind glass in the basement of the Freshfields law office building.

Files for your GPS: GPX


Direct download: secret_city.mp3
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 8:59 AM
Comments[13]