If you want the oldest building in London there is a Roman building still in use from the occupation near Whitehall called the Vetus Allec Secreti. It's open to the public every 32nd September where the holder of the keys is offered a fresh fish from the Thames, a round loaf of bread and some kale
I’m working on an idea for a wall-mounted photographic exhibition of the changing skyline of the City of London with photos and accompanying details of notable buildings, this to be based somewhere in the EC3 area.
Hey Jago, I actually used to live in the Ancient House in Walthamstow. So cool that you covered it! The inside is renovated into 2 or 3 flats if I remember, but all the original beams remain, albeit with gaps in the walls and horrendous draughts.
I'm happy that even with exploring the old(er) houses of London-ish you snuck in train footage. Very good. And yes, more about cool buildings that survived the Great Fire would be nice to watch.
The lawyer Sidney Powell's evidence for ballot box-stuffing in the 2020 Presidential election came to her psychic friend in a dream. However, no judge accepted that.
Well understated: "Legend has it that Queen Mary the first dined here while the Protestant Martyrs were burned, which would have been pretty impressive given that she'd been dead for 37 years." 🤣I think calling it "impressive" is what tickled me. Never let facts get in the way of a good legend.
There’s a well preserved Roman house (well remains of a Roman house) in a basement under a modern office block by the Monument. The best preserved parts are its baths. It is can be visited on occasional open days - or if you ask the Museum of London nicely.
St Bartholomew's church in Smithfield seen at 03:25 houses the oldest complete ring of five or more bells in the world. All five bells date from 1510, were all cast by Thomas Bullisdon and have been in the same tower all that time, doing the same job they were intended to do.
I guess you would find much older examples outside of London, saying as they didn't have a Great Fire that they needed to survive. Certainly round my way, there are some really old buildings, presumably originally farmhouses in amongst a load of much newer houses.
Richard Rich was the subject of the funniest line in A Man for All Seasons. At Thomas More's trial the only way they can get him is for Richard Rich (John Hurt) to perjure himself. More (Paul Scofield): Richard, you have a new badge of office, what is it? Thomas Cromwell (Leo McKern): Sir Richard Rich is made Solicitor-General for Wales. More: Oh, Richard. "It profiteth a man nothing to sell his soul for the world." But for Wales....?
When I moved out of London some years ago, I lived for a few years in a house built in 1698. On one occasion we were doing some work and found a mummified cat under the floor. I have no idea how long it had been there, but we just put it back so it's probably still there.
Hi Jago from Spain where it is hot 38°. Thanks for another tale not from the tube. It is all very interesting. I remember going to London on the train into Fenchurch St. and seeing houses that had been bombed leaving the adjacent houses still standing and the upper floor fireplaces still in place with the odd vase still on the mantelpiece.
Please do post more videos like this one. I really enjoy seeing old buildings. Coming from across the pond, our oldest building in my city dates back to 1633. It's a far cry from what you have. We did inherit a lot of the same names though. Where I live, there's Haverhill, Amesbury and Salisbury, all not too far away. I'm located about 2 miles from Bradford and Newbury, and 30 miles from Gloucester, Wakefield and Rowley.
Coming from colchester I get to work on some pretty old places, one of which is a medieval hall house, a lot more wonky than the one you pictured. Surprisingly not listed, mainly due to being behind a large hedge so people don't know it exists.
Why would a "large hedge" be allowed to stand if it blocks a house of this historical character, let alone be allowed to prevent it from being listed if the structure otherwise qualifies?
I think St Bartholomew's is close to the top of my "Must see unknown London'. The church is only slightly older (by English standards) than the White Tower. It one of a very few with standing Norman arches: and I still find it a bit jaw dropping nearly 50 years after I first went in. Churches of London could be a long runner. There are far more than Tube Stations. If you count everyone that's ever been there'll be close to as many as there are bus stops! Especially if you make it Places of Worship. The Welsh Church on Pentonville Rd. St Giles, were those being hung at Tyburn got their last drink. The former CofE church that is now the Russian Orthodox Cathedral on Exhibition Gardens. & many, many more.
Churches in the City of London alone would occupy dozens of videos, especially their history shortly before and after the Great Fire. Most of them were actually re-built by Robert Boyle (the physicist) - Wren was actually very busy building St Paul's at the time, but he took the the credit because he was Boyle's boss.
While I do love trains, I also love old buildings! Well, just history in general I suppose - any time you want to talk about anything historic, I'm here for it!
I grew up in Walthamstow, and used to walk past he Ancient House every sunday morning, on the way to my piano lesson. it looked quite dilapidated whilst i was growing up - the top of the house was very slanted, like it would fall down!!. The recent restoration has really brought it back to life
BTW I do suggest you go and visit my friend Lucy Quinnell at Rowhurst Forge, which lies about fifty feet outside the M25 north of Leatherhead. The origins of that house are seriously obscure, but we know it's been there since at least 1346. It's a HELL of a story.
I went and had a look across internet; and unfortunately I have seen nothing about the house and its history, but only some iron art to sell. Do you have a link about this house to share ?
In NYC's case, the oldest building in NYC is the Wyckoff House in Brooklyn's Canarsie. Built in 1652, it was one of the first structures Europeans built on Long Island, as well as one of the oldest surviving examples of a Dutch frame house in the US. It is situated on land that Wouter van Twiller (once the Dutch West India-appointed Director of New Netherland) purchased from the local Lenape people in approximately 1636. The house was one of several ordered built by Wouter before he was recalled to the Netherlands by 1640. The Wyckoff family moved there in 1652, hence the name! However the oldest buildings in the whole country are in New Mexico! The Ancestral Puebloan dwellings! Construction of them began in 750 AD! Those in the Chaco Canyon were built in 800, the Taos Pueblo was built between 1000 and 1450, and the Acoma Pueblo was built between 1000 and 1200! The Acoma and Taos Pueblos are the oldest continuously inhabited sites in the country! Their famous cliff dwellings were built as the Ancestral Puebloans shifted from hunting and gathering to a more sedentary life that relied on farming. They moved their residences from the canyon floor to the canyon walls and cliffs, which provided natural protection.
Hah! Not directly relevant, so forgive me, but when I visited my friend in Alabama in '94 and we did a 1,000 mile road-trip to Wichita Kansas, I mentioned to him that I had lived in cottages that were older than his country :)
@@jakejada1632No…the people just disappeared around 1200 AD. The thought is there was some kind of “event” that forced them out (not sure if it was war? disease? famine? ?? )
Most interesting. I noticed Rising Sun Court - how about something about the oddest street names in London? Isn't there somewhere called Bleeding Heart Yard, for example?
Not the oldest house but the oldest terraces is 52-55 Newington Green. As a newly minted architectural assistant for the GLC Historic Building Devision I was sent to survey the building one morning. It stuck in my mind because I had to survey the kitchen whilst a Greek family ate olives for breakfast with me stretching a tape over their heads.
"Sutton House" in Hackney dates back to 1535. The National Trust have it now so I suspect no-one lives there any more but it was built as a private house. Edit: Also "Bromley Hall" in Bromley-by-Bow was built in 1485 (but is now offices).
You could have stretched 'house' to public houses and The Ancient house frontage has an architectural similarity to one of the oldest buildings in Forest Gate - The Old Spotted Dog (closed pub) which IRRC dates to 15th C. It's been in a shoddy state for years and weatherboarding and stucco still hides the original timber frame exterior.
The Old Spotted Dog used to be a regular drinking haunt of mine until it closed. I used to take members of my staff there for their dread annual assessments as it was a long way from the office (Marshwall) and was big enough that at lunchtime you could always find a quiet, private corner to have a chat in.
I'd always been hoping you would do an episode about the oldest, still-operating building in London! If you expanded out from just houses to also businesses, might there be something even older that's not a castle or palace?
In some of your more recent videos you have been getting out and about to places like York and Edinburgh. How about pushing the envelope and getting out of London and finding the oldest house in Britain? When I briefly lived in Winchester, I discovered that there are houses in the Cathedral Close that are a good 150 years older than your place in Walthamstow!
More architecture! I love London for the surprises it throws at you, like the diminutive tower of All Hallows Staining, left standing amongst huge buildings near to Fenchurch St Station. Also nearby the ruins of St Dunstan in the East. St Olaves also nearby has a lot of remaining medieval features and connections with Samuel Pepys iirc
Nice video Jago. I spend a lot of time wandering around London and I am always seeking out old and interesting quirky buildings, so I really enjoyed this one. I totally agree with you that smaller and odd buildings are far more interesting than the castles and palaces that everyone already knows about. More of these please!
When I was a kid I had a jigsaw I did many times of a medieval gateway with a Tudor style building on it and shops either side. Always wondered where it was. Today, 50 years later, I found out. Thanks Jago.
I grew up in Walthamstow, and I was always fascinated by that house, and frustrated by how little I could find out about it. There's a small local history museum literally round the corner to it In another old house and they knew almost nothing about it either. Thanks for rekindling this frustrating and probably futile quest to uncover more about this house.
Darn, I'm gutted you didn't include it as it's not older than the Ancient House in Walthamstow, but...the White House in Cheam (London Borough of Sutton). It resembles a large house, mainly because it is, and today it's a little local museum, but at one point it was a boys' grammar school and Edward VI supposedly went there as a boy.
There I was, confident you'd end up on Tower Green in front of The Queen's House, home of the Constable of The Tower. Built in 1530 by Henry VIII for Anne Boleyn. It's a free-standing house within the curtain walls and very different to the rest of the buildings. You beat me by 95 years, but honestly going to Walthamstow may be cheating😂 You couldn’t get anything more London than something at The Tower! Thank you for yet another fascinating & humorous video.
@karenryder6317 It's always been called The Queen's House and was deliberately built to be free-standing & not look like anything else at The Tower. The Royal Appartments were in The White Tower, but Henry VIII wanted Anne Boleyn in her own House. Not Palace, although it was built for her in time for her becoming Queen. Suspect that was Henry telling her not to get too big for her boots. Jago cheated, as he tends to 😄, I thought it would be by going to The Tower and explaining it wasn't really cheating. Instead, he beat me by nearly a century by going outside of old London 🤣
I for one would certainly like to enjoy your research into the history of London's old, surviving buildings. We see grand and humble buildings around us and know nothing of the role they played in our forebear's lives. As we start to age ourselves, and start to mellow, our interest in these buildings, and their historical significance takes on greater importance to us. So do your research Jago, and share your findings with us!
I used to live down the road from Canonbury Tower, which i recently discovered was built about 1509. Doesn't beat Walthamstow, but sounds as if that structure has been heavily restored. I was also the housing officer for the Pepys Estate in Deptford which is built on the site of one of the old dockyards. The estate still contains the old gatehouse, officers terrace, and rum warehouses which were all converted into council housing (flats) in the 1960s. Many of those flats were sold on the Right to Buy, but i think the remaining ones could be some of the oldest social housing in London (albeit only converted as such in living memory). More old London buildings please!
I was wondering if you were going to head over to Waltthamstow to see that old house it looks a lot better since It was restored again in 2001-2, when you see it for the first time its a plesent surprise
I would LOVE to see more like this! The incredibly architectural mix from medieval-ancient to modern glass-and-steel is what makes London so incredible.
Hey, Jago, just thought you might like to know that John Taylor, the man who brought bungalows to the UK, was the architect who designed many of the buildings for the London, Chatham and Dover line.
Locally in my town (Newark-on-Trent) we have a 1350 building which is similar to your oldest house in London. It was a coaching inn and most recently was used by the Nottinghamshire Building Society. It is great to see old buildings every day and I guess most people ignore the history as they pass them. Thanks for the video JH.
In Bathley nearby, The Hollies has a structure which dates to 1296. And then of course there are Norman houses in Lincoln dating to the latter part of the twelfth century.
People ignoring history - in Oxford and Cambridge, students live, eat and work in buildings, many of which have been there since the 16th ,17th and 18th centuries, completely oblivious to and ignorant of the history of those buildings.
Thoroughly enjoyable and informative video, Jago. Thank you. I do enjoy your occasional forays into non-train-related territory. However, it would be remiss of me not to observe that on this occasion your final candidate for oldest building in London does bear a certain similarity to Trigger's broom.
@@MrGreatplum yes, it was the entrance to the south nave aisle of the church. A lot of medieval churches were a bit wonky, often for practical reasons, sometimes supposedly for Biblical ones. Truro Cathedral is the same and it's (mostly) Victorian/Edwardian. The existing street alongside forced it to be quite noticeably crooked.
Is Neal's Yard still there? I have a memory of buying cheese nearly 40 years ago, in a little courtyard area that felt incredibly ancient. Addendum: I'd be up for an "oldest shop in London" edition.
Crofton Farmhouse, near Orpington, is also a 15th Century Hall House with later additions. Time a visit when Crofton Roman Villa is open, or take the R8 to Downe Village for a trip to Down House. Darwin made a lot of money investing in the railways!
Had a three-month house sit in Walthamstow, which was brilliant. There is so much I can imagine you covering in that area, Jago. The Village, God's own Junk Yard, William Morris' house, the art school, the spooky old graveyard, and so very much in between. Love re-visiting London vicariously this way.
St Barts has 5 bells all of which pre-date the reformation, hung in an anti-clockwise circle. Unfortunately a very different set of bells appear on the soundtrack of the last wedding in "Four Weddings and a Funeral", which was set there.
A refreshing diversion from your usual "tales from the tube" Jago. A most interesting and different film. Thank you .... and yes please... some more would be great kind sir !!
In my old home town,there were/are a couple of salt box houses that date back to the 1600's,and the town ship is dated as 1653,real late comers by London standards! By the way,most of Long Island was settled by the Dutch,so the colony was named New Amsterdam,later changed to New York by the British,post war! Thank you for a most interesting video!! Thank you 😇 😊!
Jago, With the creative production values like yours, I could watch a video on paint drying, and still find it enjoyable. I especially enjoyed the "... we're off to Walthamstow." sequence.
Fantastic! It is always interesting to hear about the history of buildings that survived both the Great Fire and the World Wars. Would love to hear more.
Interesting video, I went to school in Walthamstow, Sir George Monoux Grammar School, now a 6th form college, the school was founded in 1527, the original building is in St. Mary's Churchyard, their were almshouses on the ground floor, the school room was on the 1st floor, St Mary's church is near the ancient house.
You usually sign off with "I'll see you all again very soon for another tale from the Tube." This one could be "I'll see you all again very soon for another tale from the alleyway." That could be the title for a whole series: Tales from the Alleyway. There must be a whole mine of material there.
Would love more on London's old buildings.
If you want the oldest building in London there is a Roman building still in use from the occupation near Whitehall called the Vetus Allec Secreti. It's open to the public every 32nd September where the holder of the keys is offered a fresh fish from the Thames, a round loaf of bread and some kale
Here Here!
@@billmilligan1705 32nd ? ( Oct 2th ?)
Yeah.. loved Mary close in Edinburgh...
I’m working on an idea for a wall-mounted photographic exhibition of the changing skyline of the City of London with photos and accompanying details of notable buildings, this to be based somewhere in the EC3 area.
"I don't find them as interesting as small private residences..."
- Which explains what Jago was doing in my wardrobe.
Possibly.
Hey Jago, I actually used to live in the Ancient House in Walthamstow. So cool that you covered it! The inside is renovated into 2 or 3 flats if I remember, but all the original beams remain, albeit with gaps in the walls and horrendous draughts.
It also made an appearance in Joolz Guides latest video.
I went to some parties at the then squatted Sutton House in Hackney 1535.
Late 80s.
Surreal.
It's strange this house keeps on coming up lately someone just brought me a cool ancient house mug from the Walthamstow Pumphouse Museum too.
what is between the vertical timber beams ... is that mud brick ?
Oooh interesting :-)
I'm happy that even with exploring the old(er) houses of London-ish you snuck in train footage. Very good. And yes, more about cool buildings that survived the Great Fire would be nice to watch.
In finchley there is a church that was build during the time of King alfred around 980 AD.
I saw the title and wondered if it would include The Ancient House in Walthamstow, and was pleased to see that it did.
More planning committees need to accept ‘a winged beast ordered me to build it in a dream’ as a reason to accept some slight zoning violations.
Money is more easily available and more readily accepted.
My winged beasts point out stuff that needs knocking down.
The lawyer Sidney Powell's evidence for ballot box-stuffing in the 2020 Presidential election came to her psychic friend in a dream. However, no judge accepted that.
Well understated: "Legend has it that Queen Mary the first dined here while the Protestant Martyrs were burned, which would have been pretty impressive given that she'd been dead for 37 years." 🤣I think calling it "impressive" is what tickled me. Never let facts get in the way of a good legend.
Love these London history videos of yours! * slams beer stein on table * MORE!
Sodden with beer - London
Take care of the spillage! 😂
Pint pot, surely?? 😂😂
There’s a well preserved Roman house (well remains of a Roman house) in a basement under a modern office block by the Monument. The best preserved parts are its baths. It is can be visited on occasional open days - or if you ask the Museum of London nicely.
Yes, more please on old buildings!
I love Jago's "off the rails" videos I hope he makes more.
Yes, I would like more videos about really old buildings in London please.
Really old building is one of my favourite subjects so I wouldn't be even a bit upset if this became a series.
St Bartholomew's church in Smithfield seen at 03:25 houses the oldest complete ring of five or more bells in the world. All five bells date from 1510, were all cast by Thomas Bullisdon and have been in the same tower all that time, doing the same job they were intended to do.
Not quite right: the tower was built in the 1620s. We're not entirely sure where the bells lived before that.
I like the contrast between really old and new in London
I guess you would find much older examples outside of London, saying as they didn't have a Great Fire that they needed to survive. Certainly round my way, there are some really old buildings, presumably originally farmhouses in amongst a load of much newer houses.
I think I prefer the disillusion of the monasteries over the dissolution of the monasteries.
🤣
Sellar and Yeatman (1066 And All That) beat him to that one.
Every time you put a video up I learn something new about London!
Richard Rich was the subject of the funniest line in A Man for All Seasons. At Thomas More's trial the only way they can get him is for Richard Rich (John Hurt) to perjure himself.
More (Paul Scofield): Richard, you have a new badge of office, what is it?
Thomas Cromwell (Leo McKern): Sir Richard Rich is made Solicitor-General for Wales.
More: Oh, Richard. "It profiteth a man nothing to sell his soul for the world."
But for Wales....?
I was in a production of that, many years ago.
When I moved out of London some years ago, I lived for a few years in a house built in 1698. On one occasion we were doing some work and found a mummified cat under the floor. I have no idea how long it had been there, but we just put it back so it's probably still there.
How good was the build quality?
Hi Jago from Spain where it is hot 38°. Thanks for another tale not from the tube. It is all very interesting. I remember going to London on the train into Fenchurch St. and seeing houses that had been bombed leaving the adjacent houses still standing and the upper floor fireplaces still in place with the odd vase still on the mantelpiece.
Please do post more videos like this one. I really enjoy seeing old buildings. Coming from across the pond, our oldest building in my city dates back to 1633. It's a far cry from what you have. We did inherit a lot of the same names though. Where I live, there's Haverhill, Amesbury and Salisbury, all not too far away. I'm located about 2 miles from Bradford and Newbury, and 30 miles from Gloucester, Wakefield and Rowley.
Nice to see you that you don't deal with these new-fangled piano thingies !
@@hb1338 Yup. ;-)
390 years old is still pretty incredible
Maybe oldest pubs in London? Keep up the great work
Maybe a series on interesting buildings that did survive the Great Fire that we wouldn't normally think of.
That would be a very short series
Synchonicity? Parallel universes? Joolz Guides covered the same Walthamstow house a couple of days ago - and nice to see it again.
Jago and Joolz could do a great collaboration
@@ludovica8221
Sounds like a 1960s musical duo, à la Chad and Jeremy.
Coming from colchester I get to work on some pretty old places, one of which is a medieval hall house, a lot more wonky than the one you pictured. Surprisingly not listed, mainly due to being behind a large hedge so people don't know it exists.
Why would a "large hedge" be allowed to stand if it blocks a house of this historical character, let alone be allowed to prevent it from being listed if the structure otherwise qualifies?
I think St Bartholomew's is close to the top of my "Must see unknown London'. The church is only slightly older (by English standards) than the White Tower. It one of a very few with standing Norman arches: and I still find it a bit jaw dropping nearly 50 years after I first went in.
Churches of London could be a long runner. There are far more than Tube Stations. If you count everyone that's ever been there'll be close to as many as there are bus stops! Especially if you make it Places of Worship. The Welsh Church on Pentonville Rd. St Giles, were those being hung at Tyburn got their last drink. The former CofE church that is now the Russian Orthodox Cathedral on Exhibition Gardens. & many, many more.
Churches in the City of London alone would occupy dozens of videos, especially their history shortly before and after the Great Fire. Most of them were actually re-built by Robert Boyle (the physicist) - Wren was actually very busy building St Paul's at the time, but he took the the credit because he was Boyle's boss.
While I do love trains, I also love old buildings! Well, just history in general I suppose - any time you want to talk about anything historic, I'm here for it!
i love how these centuries year old buildings are still here in between the modern ones....they will still last longer
Great shot of the old building with the skyscraper in the background!
Thanks for this interesting trip…going round the houses. As for the house which was a bicycle shop, it was being recycled 🏠
Oh dear, oh dear.
😄
I grew up in Walthamstow, and used to walk past he Ancient House every sunday morning, on the way to my piano lesson. it looked quite dilapidated whilst i was growing up - the top of the house was very slanted, like it would fall down!!. The recent restoration has really brought it back to life
BTW I do suggest you go and visit my friend Lucy Quinnell at Rowhurst Forge, which lies about fifty feet outside the M25 north of Leatherhead. The origins of that house are seriously obscure, but we know it's been there since at least 1346. It's a HELL of a story.
I went and had a look across internet; and unfortunately I have seen nothing about the house and its history, but only some iron art to sell.
Do you have a link about this house to share ?
@@roadhog6 I keep trying to reply, but the filters autodelete my comments... there is an article online detailing the full history of the place.
I'm so enjoying the London buildings sidelines outings. More please.
In NYC's case, the oldest building in NYC is the Wyckoff House in Brooklyn's Canarsie. Built in 1652, it was one of the first structures Europeans built on Long Island, as well as one of the oldest surviving examples of a Dutch frame house in the US. It is situated on land that Wouter van Twiller (once the Dutch West India-appointed Director of New Netherland) purchased from the local Lenape people in approximately 1636. The house was one of several ordered built by Wouter before he was recalled to the Netherlands by 1640. The Wyckoff family moved there in 1652, hence the name!
However the oldest buildings in the whole country are in New Mexico! The Ancestral Puebloan dwellings! Construction of them began in 750 AD! Those in the Chaco Canyon were built in 800, the Taos Pueblo was built between 1000 and 1450, and the Acoma Pueblo was built between 1000 and 1200! The Acoma and Taos Pueblos are the oldest continuously inhabited sites in the country! Their famous cliff dwellings were built as the Ancestral Puebloans shifted from hunting and gathering to a more sedentary life that relied on farming. They moved their residences from the canyon floor to the canyon walls and cliffs, which provided natural protection.
Hah! Not directly relevant, so forgive me, but when I visited my friend in Alabama in '94 and we did a 1,000 mile road-trip to Wichita Kansas, I mentioned to him that I had lived in cottages that were older than his country :)
Hey, awesome info! Do people still live in the cliff houses?
@@jakejada1632No…the people just disappeared around 1200 AD. The thought is there was some kind of “event” that forced them out (not sure if it was war? disease? famine? ?? )
4:27 "War! What is is good for?" Removing the brick facade's off of old buildings apparently 😁
Most interesting. I noticed Rising Sun Court - how about something about the oddest street names in London? Isn't there somewhere called Bleeding Heart Yard, for example?
Bleeding Heart Yard is in Farringdon - I think it is off Greville Street.
Not the oldest house but the oldest terraces is 52-55 Newington Green. As a newly minted architectural assistant for the GLC Historic Building Devision I was sent to survey the building one morning. It stuck in my mind because I had to survey the kitchen whilst a Greek family ate olives for breakfast with me stretching a tape over their heads.
that might be one of the most greek things to do
"Sutton House" in Hackney dates back to 1535. The National Trust have it now so I suspect no-one lives there any more but it was built as a private house.
Edit: Also "Bromley Hall" in Bromley-by-Bow was built in 1485 (but is now offices).
A few months ago we did a pub crawl of londons oldest pubs. Can’t remember much but I think it was fun and probably worth a try 😂
You could have stretched 'house' to public houses and The Ancient house frontage has an architectural similarity to one of the oldest buildings in Forest Gate - The Old Spotted Dog (closed pub) which IRRC dates to 15th C. It's been in a shoddy state for years and weatherboarding and stucco still hides the original timber frame exterior.
The Old Spotted Dog used to be a regular drinking haunt of mine until it closed. I used to take members of my staff there for their dread annual assessments as it was a long way from the office (Marshwall) and was big enough that at lunchtime you could always find a quiet, private corner to have a chat in.
I always enjoy a video about London's old buildings so yes please!
6:57 *I’D LIKE MORE ON REALLY OLD BUILDINGS IN LONDON THAT SURVIVED.*
I'd always been hoping you would do an episode about the oldest, still-operating building in London! If you expanded out from just houses to also businesses, might there be something even older that's not a castle or palace?
In some of your more recent videos you have been getting out and about to places like York and Edinburgh. How about pushing the envelope and getting out of London and finding the oldest house in Britain? When I briefly lived in Winchester, I discovered that there are houses in the Cathedral Close that are a good 150 years older than your place in Walthamstow!
A new, and interesting departure. More please.
More architecture! I love London for the surprises it throws at you, like the diminutive tower of All Hallows Staining, left standing amongst huge buildings near to Fenchurch St Station. Also nearby the ruins of St Dunstan in the East. St Olaves also nearby has a lot of remaining medieval features and connections with Samuel Pepys iirc
The transition from London to Walthamstow was lovely! Nicely done. And the old 'ouses :)
Nice video Jago. I spend a lot of time wandering around London and I am always seeking out old and interesting quirky buildings, so I really enjoyed this one. I totally agree with you that smaller and odd buildings are far more interesting than the castles and palaces that everyone already knows about. More of these please!
Yes please! More more more. I love your videos on whatever subject you cover.
Yes, great stuff. More old stuff would be very welcome!
I loved this! Can we have more please? Brilliant delivery as always. Only downside--it’s too short!!
When I was a kid I had a jigsaw I did many times of a medieval gateway with a Tudor style building on it and shops either side. Always wondered where it was. Today, 50 years later, I found out. Thanks Jago.
I grew up in Walthamstow, and I was always fascinated by that house, and frustrated by how little I could find out about it.
There's a small local history museum literally round the corner to it In another old house and they knew almost nothing about it either.
Thanks for rekindling this frustrating and probably futile quest to uncover more about this house.
Darn, I'm gutted you didn't include it as it's not older than the Ancient House in Walthamstow, but...the White House in Cheam (London Borough of Sutton). It resembles a large house, mainly because it is, and today it's a little local museum, but at one point it was a boys' grammar school and Edward VI supposedly went there as a boy.
There I was, confident you'd end up on Tower Green in front of The Queen's House, home of the Constable of The Tower. Built in 1530 by Henry VIII for Anne Boleyn. It's a free-standing house within the curtain walls and very different to the rest of the buildings.
You beat me by 95 years, but honestly going to Walthamstow may be cheating😂 You couldn’t get anything more London than something at The Tower!
Thank you for yet another fascinating & humorous video.
Doesn't the Tower fall into the category of a castle, which the videographer eliminated from his list?
@karenryder6317 It's always been called The Queen's House and was deliberately built to be free-standing & not look like anything else at The Tower. The Royal Appartments were in The White Tower, but Henry VIII wanted Anne Boleyn in her own House. Not Palace, although it was built for her in time for her becoming Queen. Suspect that was Henry telling her not to get too big for her boots.
Jago cheated, as he tends to 😄, I thought it would be by going to The Tower and explaining it wasn't really cheating. Instead, he beat me by nearly a century by going outside of old London 🤣
I for one would certainly like to enjoy your research into the history of London's old, surviving buildings. We see grand and humble
buildings around us and know nothing of the role they played in our forebear's lives. As we start to age ourselves, and start to
mellow, our interest in these buildings, and their historical significance takes on greater importance to us. So do your research
Jago, and share your findings with us!
I used to live down the road from Canonbury Tower, which i recently discovered was built about 1509. Doesn't beat Walthamstow, but sounds as if that structure has been heavily restored.
I was also the housing officer for the Pepys Estate in Deptford which is built on the site of one of the old dockyards. The estate still contains the old gatehouse, officers terrace, and rum warehouses which were all converted into council housing (flats) in the 1960s. Many of those flats were sold on the Right to Buy, but i think the remaining ones could be some of the oldest social housing in London (albeit only converted as such in living memory).
More old London buildings please!
Underground, overground, Wombling free, Jago is making videos on thee.
This is one area of history that I'd love to see a RobsLondon/Jago Hazzard collab...
You two really need to get together sometime.
I was wondering if you were going to head over to Waltthamstow to see that old house it looks a lot better since It was restored again in 2001-2, when you see it for the first time its a plesent surprise
YES, more on London's old buildings done in your inimitable style !
Lovely vertical panning shot in that alleyway right at the end!
I do like your occasional forays outside of transport. Please do continue to range as broadly as you want :)
Thank you for your time, effort and expense and would love to see more like this.🥰💚🌱
I watched a video of a tour of Leytonstone's oldest pubs during covid. Would love to see your take on something similar.
Would also love to see Jago do Leytonstone's tube station with its fascinating mosaic murals.
I would love for you to cover more olde buildings, or even odd ones, for that matter!
I would LOVE to see more like this! The incredibly architectural mix from medieval-ancient to modern glass-and-steel is what makes London so incredible.
Great Video.. please do more! Love the Edgar Wright transition (you could have thrown in a pint being drunk too!).. the sound worked brilliantly.
Ah yes! You spotted the source I cribbed from!
Yes please Jago !! I indeed would like to know many more of those houses and the history of the old London. Thanks a lot !
Had to correct what I’ve typed. Geeez my phone is a nuisance !! Thanks all the same for your thumbs up 👍
That Priory totally had x10 Defense Upgrades happening.
Hey, Jago, just thought you might like to know that John Taylor, the man who brought bungalows to the UK, was the architect who designed many of the buildings for the London, Chatham and Dover line.
Locally in my town (Newark-on-Trent) we have a 1350 building which is similar to your oldest house in London. It was a coaching inn and most recently was used by the Nottinghamshire Building Society. It is great to see old buildings every day and I guess most people ignore the history as they pass them. Thanks for the video JH.
In Bathley nearby, The Hollies has a structure which dates to 1296. And then of course there are Norman houses in Lincoln dating to the latter part of the twelfth century.
People ignoring history - in Oxford and Cambridge, students live, eat and work in buildings, many of which have been there since the 16th ,17th and 18th centuries, completely oblivious to and ignorant of the history of those buildings.
Thoroughly enjoyable and informative video, Jago. Thank you. I do enjoy your occasional forays into non-train-related territory. However, it would be remiss of me not to observe that on this occasion your final candidate for oldest building in London does bear a certain similarity to Trigger's broom.
My thoughts exactly. But who knows, parts of the foundations may have been original.
Please keep them coming, love your videos. Thank you!!!
Hello Jago. Very interesting historical tour. More please.
That wasn't a gatehouse, it actually was the west end of St Bart's nave, all but one bay of which was demolished after the dissolution.
Are you sure? That would have put the nave on quite a wonk… the west end of the church and the gatehouse do not join up in a straight line
@@MrGreatplum yes, it was the entrance to the south nave aisle of the church. A lot of medieval churches were a bit wonky, often for practical reasons, sometimes supposedly for Biblical ones. Truro Cathedral is the same and it's (mostly) Victorian/Edwardian. The existing street alongside forced it to be quite noticeably crooked.
More old buildings? Splendid idea.
Great content! I would like to watch more short, but informative videos about London.
As the owner of an old Hosiery Mill built in 1854/55 I approve of this Video 😜. And NO..... there's NO Hose inside 😅!
That ancient house in Walthamstow has a touch of 'triggers broom' about it.
Is Neal's Yard still there? I have a memory of buying cheese nearly 40 years ago, in a little courtyard area that felt incredibly ancient. Addendum: I'd be up for an "oldest shop in London" edition.
Neal's Yard still exists 😊
Please more of this kind of content Jago. Big fan of history of London and you. 1k likes in an hour is impressive.
Crofton Farmhouse, near Orpington, is also a 15th Century Hall House with later additions. Time a visit when Crofton Roman Villa is open, or take the R8 to Downe Village for a trip to Down House. Darwin made a lot of money investing in the railways!
A cracking video. Would love to see more London history videos.
Headstone Manor in the north end of the borough of Harrow might be a contender (and it's near to Headstone Lane station on the Overground).
As a long-time resident of Harrow I have to agree.
Had a three-month house sit in Walthamstow, which was brilliant. There is so much I can imagine you covering in that area, Jago. The Village, God's own Junk Yard, William Morris' house, the art school, the spooky old graveyard, and so very much in between. Love re-visiting London vicariously this way.
Walthamstow brilliant 😂
St Barts has 5 bells all of which pre-date the reformation, hung in an anti-clockwise circle. Unfortunately a very different set of bells appear on the soundtrack of the last wedding in "Four Weddings and a Funeral", which was set there.
A refreshing diversion from your usual "tales from the tube" Jago. A most interesting and different film. Thank you .... and yes please... some more would be great kind sir !!
seriously laugh out loud at Rahere's way of getting around the planning regulations🤣
In my old home town,there were/are a couple of salt box houses that date back to the 1600's,and the town ship is dated as 1653,real late comers by London standards! By the way,most of Long Island was settled by the Dutch,so the colony was named New Amsterdam,later changed to New York by the British,post war! Thank you for a most interesting video!! Thank you 😇 😊!
I appreciate that the titleholder is a good honest house that stuck around so long that everyone forgot how old it was
Your videos are always informative and entertaining. Keep up the good work, mate. Cheerio from New England. 😊
Jago, With the creative production values like yours, I could watch a video on paint drying, and still find it enjoyable. I especially enjoyed the "... we're off to Walthamstow." sequence.
Fantastic! It is always interesting to hear about the history of buildings that survived both the Great Fire and the World Wars. Would love to hear more.
I always love learning about really old structures in London. I’d love to see more videos from you like this!
Interesting video, I went to school in Walthamstow, Sir George Monoux Grammar School, now a 6th form college, the school was founded in 1527, the original building is in St. Mary's Churchyard, their were almshouses on the ground floor, the school room was on the 1st floor, St Mary's church is near the ancient house.
A great video once again. With no butchering or quartering of Smithfield Market and area
I was inspired to watch your program on the oldest house in London, and hope to see many more like this. You have a great sense of humor.
You usually sign off with "I'll see you all again very soon for another tale from the Tube." This one could be "I'll see you all again very soon for another tale from the alleyway." That could be the title for a whole series: Tales from the Alleyway. There must be a whole mine of material there.
I love your videos. Please do create more on the historical buildings in London. Thanks.