One of my work locations was in St John's Smith Square and I used to walk to it from Tothill Street regularly. I loved doing this on winter afternoons as the streets around the area are still gas lit and the gentle light provides a wonderful almost Dickensian atmosphere.
This was a bit strange one for me as you walked around where I used to live when I first moved to London at the end of the 90’s. I lived on The Cut back then and worked for NHSE in E&C. I haven’t had cause to go back that way in about 15 years as I live in Peckham and work in Chelsea these days. Doesn’t look like it’s changed that much! Thanks for the nostalgia, John.
When working in a little Co op Bank sub office in Smith Square Labour Party HQ in 1979 I heard the explosion that killed Airey Neave at Westminster. Loved the video, as always, very interesting.
I did the same "rambling" around London as a young teenager on a bus season ticket. I just took a bus to wherever it was going, just to see what the areas were like.
@Michael Myke yes it was - no you’ve mentioned it I came back to me - only watched that once however watched Layer Cake quite a few times so stuck in the mind.
My great grandfather once served the King (around 1907-1914) as he passed by the pharmacy he worked at in Sloane Square. Not sure exactly where it was located, but there used to be one on one of the corners - it got converted into a clothes shop about 15 years ago.
Love this area, I was lucky enough to work here for the last 10 years of my career. So many interesting and beautiful places. Next time you should try the Antelope pub on Eaton Terrace, a wonderful old Fullers pub. Hope you carry on up Kings Road soon!
I lived in part of Kennington Rd near Lambeth North tube from 1966 to 1979. Used to play in Bedlam Park (Geraldine Mary Harmsworth Park - never knew it as that). The police station in Kennington Rd used to have an air raid siren test every six months or a year until a few years before I moved from the area in the late 70's. The lovely building in Lambeth Walk which is now an NHS building used to be a baths house where people without proper washing facilities could go to have a proper bath. 109 Lambeth Rd used to have the police forensics lab in it, not sure if it still does. My old infant school (Holy Trinity) on the edge of Archbishops Park next door to Lambeth Palace, it's now a plant museum.
I used to live in a room at the top of a building in Queens Gate near to Kensington Road back in the 70s. The Albert Hall was just around the corner and Hyde Park is opposite. I used to go to the Albert Hall to see artists like Diana Ross, Labi Siffre and The Carpenters. Happy days.
John - another lovely video and a great reminder of when I worked near St John's Smith Square some 25 years ago. At the end of the street where I worked (Little College St) was an underground car park, the entrance of which Patrick McGoohan would emerge from at the start of each episode of The Prisoner. Happy days....
I learnt to navigate my way around London almost by necessity ! I came back from working nr Aylesbury and was strapped for cash . I got to ? Paddington ( it was 40 years ago) and didn't have money to get to Victoria Station so I just walked . After that I would go to other main line stations and then walk back to Victoria or walk between main line stations . Bit by bit I got a sense of how the land lies . Of course the Knowledge is endless and changing and you always know that just around the corner may be a wonderful surprise 🚶♂️✌️.
John, your were in my old manor of Lambeth Walk. You missed so many things, the " Passport to Pimlico" film, which was filmed down by the 1960's flats at the start of the Lambeth Walk. As this area was well bombed, and you can see the railway bridge, in the back ground of the film. You missed the Jolly Cockney pub, now called the Jolly Gardener, where Charlie Chaplin's dad played the piano. Further down Black Prince Rd, the Royal Dalton pottery building. You did a river walk along the Tachbrook, with out saying so. Lupus St, Lupus is Latin for wolf. Named after the Earl of Chester, as the wolf is on his heraldic shield.
Passport to Pimlico was filmed on the site of the China Walk Estate that you passed on the way to Lambeth Palace. At one point in the film you can see the railway bridge over Lambeth Palace Road at the junction with Hercules Road. My mum lived in Lollard Street just off the Walk and she remembers it being filmed.
Another great walk . Always makes me smile when you use them street maps of which I installed many all around the the city and surrounding boroughs. I think to my self that I have helped you on your route sometimes Thanks John
Since subscribing to your channel, my walks have increased a lot, like the other day I walked it from Edmonton green, to green lanes, haringey, then after walked to ally pally, back to Edmonton green.
gosh, many, many years ago, my parents took my siblings and myself to the Uk, and we stayed at a place in Ebury Street in London - I have good memories of that trip! Passport to Pimlico - terrific movie!
I love London and this walk especially, takes me back to my apprenticeship days where I worked for a contractor to Grosvenor Estates. Worked on some amazing properties around Chelsea, Knightsbridge and Sloane Square areas. That was in 1963 London was buzzing with great characters without inhibitions.
Alfred The greater. Yes I believe so it was a wonderful time, the music was the best and everyone had a job and you could walk from one job to another if you were not happy. People respected each other and their opinions, most of us had great work ethics and employers appropriated hard workers and rewarded them. It was a land of opportunity for those that worked for it, so sad for the youth of today who struggle with high rents and for most out of reach sky high mortgage deposits.
David Bryant Very jealous fella, to live through the 60s in London, it was probably at that time the music and fashion capital of the world and like you say Britain was also booming.
The "police station " mentioned near Lambeth Walk was the Forensic Science Service for the Metropolitan Police where all exhibits were sent for examination. There were other departments based here also. I vaguely remember that it was sold for development some years ago
When I was a wee spud, I used to know a lady who was in the 1928 flood and said it was pretty horrific. Looking it up now, after many years, it reads pretty shocking - lots of this walk was part of it. Great stuff as ever :-)
In 1973 I worked in Marsham Towers in Marsham street. They were pulled down in 1992. That was with the Department of the Environment.Further down the river in Mansion house there was Hudson's Bay Fur Company in Little trinity Lane.THat is now owned by the Royal Bank of Canada. Finnish Fur Sales built another warehouse in Queen's Quay off Lower Thames Street spent millions of pounds extending it out to the river then pulled it down in 1992.(Approximately.)
I loved this less planned walk, and a fab array of different types of architecture today, the chequer-board housing was delightful! Thanks again John, and that looked like a very refreshing and well-deserved pint at the end :-)
Liberty of Norton Folgate is a great album, I listened to it because of last week's walk. 'On the Town' especially... and 'Forever Young'... and 'That Close'...
Adore that serendipitous drifting through the city of London, never stop being surprised. You’ve inspired me so much to amble. Mi6 seems to be shrinking under the weight and cluster of new builds. St Johns square has lovely concerts at Christmas. Aren’t those new street maps a great help. A great idea and for regaining your position and direction. Those white stucco homes in Pimlico are adorable. Great walk.
Nice, unexpected route but I really enjoyed it. Brings back fond memories for me as Pimlico was the first place I ever lived in London years ago in a studio flat the size of a shoebox. I worked at a shop on the Kings Road and would walk to work and back. I loved it. Nice little pub around the corner from Sloane Square for next time called The Antelope. Cheers!
Another Rogers gem ...... cheers mate. Watching the diverse architecture and general "London weirdness and intrigue" i vacillate between feeling a sense of historical beauty and creativity, and obversely, being in a bad acid trip. SUPERB channel.
Note the wider windows and arches at street level, these seem less rare in london, having some northish of chelsea royal hospital, and close to the design on 1930s post offices, but not often seen outside london, a handful in manchester maybe, are they a civil service board of works kind of design, have the look of tax inspectors and dole offices of the past.
Thanks John, another interesting stroll. I used to work in Pimlico so I was familiar with some of the roads. The Prison the gentleman you met mentioned must have been Millbank Penitentiary 1819 - 1890.
Thoroughly enjoyed this Flaneur with you John , especially that remote corner of Westminster. With all restrictions off in England, you all take care and stay safe.
The first place I landed in London was on the Royal Court steps. Went off to a video shoot and ate prawns in their shells for the first time. Lovely walk this.
Interesting walk today John,as it brought back old memories when I used to work at Peter Jones in Sloane Square,hope you enjoyed a well deserved pint!!!
Big shout out to I'Klectik, the art space in the misleadingly entitled 'Paradise Yard' (slap bang in the middle of William Blake territory) in south Lambeth. Have seen and heard some lovely free improvised music there, a really hidden gem. Shame that the proposed Phillip Jeck gig there tomorrow night has been postponed. Thanks again John.
I was just thinking that Passport to Pimlico might've been based on the docker's cutting off of the Isle of Dogs & you run across a statue of Mr. Cubitt! Spooky 😎
I see the millbank properties have finally been cleaned and washed, with the london soot until the 2000s they were always forboding, and a contrast to Smith Square behind and Westminster , etc.
Love this. I used to work in Lambeth Bridge House and Marsham Street. Have an old London map with Bedlam on it. Thames House used to be Dept of Energy til coal mine closeure. I went into Thames house as they used to do themed lunches i.e American, Mexican. Chinese etc each day.
Another fabulous video John. Well spoken and so informative! I really appreciate all of your knowledge and information. Looking forward to the next one! x
You must have been posh to have lived in South Kensington. In my first year as a student at Imperial College I lived in Evelyn Gardens. The rent was £9 per week. The Paris Pullman cinema was just around the corner. In 1983/84 I lived in Princes Gardens. The room was free as I was Hon Sec of Imperial College Students Union. I used to walk across Princes Gardens each morning to my office that looked onto the Royal Albert Hall. Many mornings I would stop to say hello to an old lady, with her cat, named Eva. She was lovely and it was only years later I found out she was a movie star. She lived in a small mews house behind the halls of residence.
I always wondered about those chequered flats on my daily lunchtime walks when I worked in the area. I invariably found Pimlico interesting, especially St John's Square. Thank you for the information and trip down memory lane. 😊
I recently moved back to London after a few years away and used to live in the Old Chelsea area, some fascinating history around there if you ever venture that far up from Kings Road, and some Peabody flats tucked away down the back streets very close to Cheyne Walk.
Wonderful mate, you deserve that beer, London never ceases to amaze me....I can vaguely remember some of the areas you walked, but my memory, like time itself has become a mist in/of the past.
Watching you and your videos, the forgetten pasts of places and people that came before us, reminds me of how transient life is and helps me appreciate my own life that little bit more. Cheers John!
Loved this thanks John. Captures the spirit and tone of this part of London. I love that time between rush hour home and the later evening delights. A sense of calm and anticipation. Keep them coming!
109 Lambeth Road has several functions within the Metropolitan Police. It's their 24 hour emergency communication centre as well as being home to one of their larger Forensic Labs. In the late 1980's I was based at Chelsea Barracks for a short period of time which is just around the corner from Sloane Square. Needless to say that a soldiers pay didn't lend itself too well to being able to socialise locally.
A nice roasted dinner, now a nice stroll with John Rogers.
I concur, the unplanned amble around London is definitely my favourite type of walk. People (and place) watching at its finest.
One of my work locations was in St John's Smith Square and I used to walk to it from Tothill Street regularly. I loved doing this on winter afternoons as the streets around the area are still gas lit and the gentle light provides a wonderful almost Dickensian atmosphere.
Thanks John. Entertaining as ever. I’ll add The Chelsea Potter to my ‘to do’ list.
After a long day shopping had a pint near the end of the walk at a pub called " The Chelsea Potter" years ago
Those checker board flats were the kind of discovery that really makes the walks so interesting …. Adventures in the overlooked city 👍
This was a bit strange one for me as you walked around where I used to live when I first moved to London at the end of the 90’s. I lived on The Cut back then and worked for NHSE in E&C. I haven’t had cause to go back that way in about 15 years as I live in Peckham and work in Chelsea these days. Doesn’t look like it’s changed that much! Thanks for the nostalgia, John.
My pleasure Jason
Another sublime Sunday evening's viewing....Nice to read the additional info in the comments
When working in a little Co op Bank sub office in Smith Square Labour Party HQ in 1979 I heard the explosion that killed Airey Neave at Westminster. Loved the video, as always, very interesting.
Yet another little stroll through my childhood memories, thank you John and I’m still looking forward to bump into you were ever that may be.
I did the same "rambling" around London as a young teenager on a bus season ticket. I just took a bus to wherever it was going, just to see what the areas were like.
The Regency Cafe has been used in a few movies including Layer Cake.
Don't think Freddy much enjoyed the hot pot of tea poured over his mush!
@Michael Myke yes it was - no you’ve mentioned it I came back to me - only watched that once however watched Layer Cake quite a few times so stuck in the mind.
An early urban evening stroll
rejuvenates my ailing soul
can leave my heart remaining whole
what once the city had almost stole
My great grandfather once served the King (around 1907-1914) as he passed by the pharmacy he worked at in Sloane Square. Not sure exactly where it was located, but there used to be one on one of the corners - it got converted into a clothes shop about 15 years ago.
Love this area, I was lucky enough to work here for the last 10 years of my career. So many interesting and beautiful places. Next time you should try the Antelope pub on Eaton Terrace, a wonderful old Fullers pub. Hope you carry on up Kings Road soon!
Thanks for the tip Simon - I’ll certainly give it a try next time I’m over that way
I love the end scene in The Chelsea Potter with the pint in frame. I can't think of a finer reward after a thirst-inducing stroll. Cheers.
Cheers W M
These videos always bring a relaxing, enjoyable and educational end to Sunday evening.
I lived in part of Kennington Rd near Lambeth North tube from 1966 to 1979. Used to play in Bedlam Park (Geraldine Mary Harmsworth Park - never knew it as that). The police station in Kennington Rd used to have an air raid siren test every six months or a year until a few years before I moved from the area in the late 70's. The lovely building in Lambeth Walk which is now an NHS building used to be a baths house where people without proper washing facilities could go to have a proper bath. 109 Lambeth Rd used to have the police forensics lab in it, not sure if it still does. My old infant school (Holy Trinity) on the edge of Archbishops Park next door to Lambeth Palace, it's now a plant museum.
I used to live in a room at the top of a building in Queens Gate near to Kensington Road back in the 70s. The Albert Hall was just around the corner and Hyde Park is opposite. I used to go to the Albert Hall to see artists like Diana Ross, Labi Siffre and The Carpenters. Happy days.
This church is near to where you ended the walk. Saved from demolition by Sir John Betjeman. Thanks for another great walk.
John Brackenbury Loved listening to your talk on your walks.Brilliant Thanks.
Watching now, made my week complete, thank you John.
My pleasure- hope you enjoyed it
I learned so much from your wonderful walk….thank you John! 😊👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏😉👍👍
John - another lovely video and a great reminder of when I worked near St John's Smith Square some 25 years ago. At the end of the street where I worked (Little College St) was an underground car park, the entrance of which Patrick McGoohan would emerge from at the start of each episode of The Prisoner. Happy days....
Great memories Martin, thanks for sharing
I learnt to navigate my way around London almost by necessity ! I came back from working nr Aylesbury and was strapped for cash . I got to ? Paddington ( it was 40 years ago) and didn't have money to get to Victoria Station so I just walked . After that I would go to other main line stations and then walk back to Victoria or walk between main line stations . Bit by bit I got a sense of how the land lies . Of course the Knowledge is endless and changing and you always know that just around the corner may be a wonderful surprise 🚶♂️✌️.
John, your were in my old manor of Lambeth Walk. You missed so many things, the " Passport to Pimlico" film, which was filmed down by the 1960's flats at the start of the Lambeth Walk. As this area was well bombed, and you can see the railway bridge, in the back ground of the film.
You missed the Jolly Cockney pub, now called the Jolly Gardener, where Charlie Chaplin's dad played the piano. Further down Black Prince Rd, the Royal Dalton pottery building.
You did a river walk along the Tachbrook, with out saying so. Lupus St, Lupus is Latin for wolf. Named after the Earl of Chester, as the wolf is on his heraldic shield.
Great film.
I have often cycled past the home of The Duke Of Westminster. It is called Eaton Hall and it's just outside Chester on the old Wrexham road.
Passport to Pimlico was filmed on the site of the China Walk Estate that you passed on the way to Lambeth Palace. At one point in the film you can see the railway bridge over Lambeth Palace Road at the junction with Hercules Road. My mum lived in Lollard Street just off the Walk and she remembers it being filmed.
Another great walk . Always makes me smile when you use them street maps of which I installed many all around the the city and surrounding boroughs. I think to my self that I have helped you on your route sometimes
Thanks John
Thanks Ian - I remembered you mentioned this in a previous video and was thinking of that when I included those shots
Since subscribing to your channel, my walks have increased a lot, like the other day I walked it from Edmonton green, to green lanes, haringey, then after walked to ally pally, back to Edmonton green.
That’s brilliant to hear John and that sounds like a cracking walk
@@JohnRogersWalks it sure was, I'll definitely do that walk again
gosh, many, many years ago, my parents took my siblings and myself to the Uk, and we stayed at a place in Ebury Street in London - I have good memories of that trip! Passport to Pimlico - terrific movie!
I love London and this walk especially, takes me back to my apprenticeship days where I worked for a contractor to Grosvenor Estates. Worked on some amazing properties around Chelsea, Knightsbridge and Sloane Square areas. That was in 1963 London was buzzing with great characters without inhibitions.
What a great time to experience that area David
Wow you are very lucky to live in that time period in that area...
Alfred The greater. Yes I believe so it was a wonderful time, the music was the best and everyone had a job and you could walk from one job to another if you were not happy. People respected each other and their opinions, most of us had great work ethics and employers appropriated hard workers and rewarded them. It was a land of opportunity for those that worked for it, so sad for the youth of today who struggle with high rents and for most out of reach sky high mortgage deposits.
David Bryant Very jealous fella, to live through the 60s in London, it was probably at that time the music and fashion capital of the world and like you say Britain was also booming.
Another gem of a walking video!
Ooh I used to run a Pub Quiz in the Chelsea Potter! Good pub, that! 🍺
Got myself a few weeks behind, so catching up with back-to-back videos and it’s cheered me up no end. Thanks John.
Wonderful to hear Ben - thanks for being a regular viewer
The "police station " mentioned near Lambeth Walk was the Forensic Science Service for the Metropolitan Police where all exhibits were sent for examination. There were other departments based here also. I vaguely remember that it was sold for development some years ago
Thank you for these walks 💖🎸🏏
my pleasure icatz
Thanks John in Chicago
Cheers John - hope the temperature is coming down a bit there now
When I was a wee spud, I used to know a lady who was in the 1928 flood and said it was pretty horrific. Looking it up now, after many years, it reads pretty shocking - lots of this walk was part of it. Great stuff as ever :-)
In 1973 I worked in Marsham Towers in Marsham street. They were pulled down in 1992. That was with the Department of the Environment.Further down the river in Mansion house there was Hudson's Bay Fur Company in Little trinity Lane.THat is now owned by the Royal Bank of Canada.
Finnish Fur Sales built another warehouse in Queen's Quay off Lower Thames Street spent millions of pounds extending it out to the river then pulled it down in 1992.(Approximately.)
You just keep getting better and better
I loved this less planned walk, and a fab array of different types of architecture today, the chequer-board housing was delightful! Thanks again John, and that looked like a very refreshing and well-deserved pint at the end :-)
Thanks Lois - yes that pint of Gamma Ray went down very well indeed
Liberty of Norton Folgate is a great album, I listened to it because of last week's walk. 'On the Town' especially... and 'Forever Young'... and 'That Close'...
Wonderful and interesting walk. Thankyou John.
my pleasure - thanks for watching Gareth
😂 I see my car parked there. Great video John.
Great walk. You passed my street and flat. Lived on Lambeth Rd since 1990, it’s a great area.
Love the people watching, unplanned walks are the best. Thanks, John!!!!
Adore that serendipitous drifting through the city of London, never stop being surprised. You’ve inspired me so much to amble. Mi6 seems to be shrinking under the weight and cluster of new builds. St Johns square has lovely concerts at Christmas. Aren’t those new street maps a great help. A great idea and for regaining your position and direction. Those white stucco homes in Pimlico are adorable. Great walk.
Real enjoyed this walk with you..and listening to your explanation on who you gained your knowledge of London..
Had a great breakfast in the Regency Cafe, only downside are the chairs are so close together 😁
Great walk, thank you!
great work and lovely video, John. Enjoy your freedom
thanks George
Nice, unexpected route but I really enjoyed it. Brings back fond memories for me as Pimlico was the first place I ever lived in London years ago in a studio flat the size of a shoebox. I worked at a shop on the Kings Road and would walk to work and back. I loved it. Nice little pub around the corner from Sloane Square for next time called The Antelope. Cheers!
Excellent.
Another Rogers gem ...... cheers mate. Watching the diverse architecture and general "London weirdness and intrigue" i vacillate between feeling a sense of historical beauty and creativity, and obversely, being in a bad acid trip. SUPERB channel.
Ha, thanks Paul - I love that span of emotions
Note the wider windows and arches at street level, these seem less rare in london, having some northish of chelsea royal hospital, and close to the design on 1930s post offices, but not often seen outside london, a handful in manchester maybe, are they a civil service board of works kind of design, have the look of tax inspectors and dole offices of the past.
the Antelope around the corner, on the left just before Eaton Sq is a rather nice place for a pint.
Thanks Cali I’ll remember that for next time
London ❤️ another great vid ! Your knowledge is mint John 👌ps pub tokker lol
Excellent. Golf and a stroll !
Most excellent...un flaneur avec distinction.
Thanks Maax
Interesting walk thanks must try it sometime
Where you ended the walk the great Holy Trinty Church. Saved from demolition by Sir John Betjeman. Great walk love the area around LSBU too
evening meal, walking and listening to you. Brilliant. thank you
Wonderful- many thanks
Thanks John, another interesting stroll. I used to work in Pimlico so I was familiar with some of the roads.
The Prison the gentleman you met mentioned must have been Millbank Penitentiary 1819 - 1890.
Great commentary john great part of london
Thanks Christopher
Another great video John, thanks buddy
my pleasure Peter
great stuff, thanks John
On either side of St Johns Gdns stand the old Westminster Hospital & the nurses' accomadation
I love those old Ealing Studio films. Often even still see the bombed out sites in the films with kids playing on them. A real time capsule
Once again. A great, informative walk through London. Thank you John
Cheers Lionel
Thoroughly enjoyed this Flaneur with you John , especially that remote corner of Westminster. With all restrictions off in England, you all take care and stay safe.
Thanks David - I’ll certainly be very cautious
The first place I landed in London was on the Royal Court steps. Went off to a video shoot and ate prawns in their shells for the first time. Lovely walk this.
Interesting walk today John,as it brought back old memories when I used to work at Peter Jones in Sloane Square,hope you enjoyed a well deserved pint!!!
Thanks Mam - I remember going in there on a trip to Kings Road with my Mum in 1986.
Nice switch to random evening sojourns. More fantastic content. Soundly knocks anything on TV into a cocked hat. Lovely stuff, John. 🇯🇪
Big shout out to I'Klectik, the art space in the misleadingly entitled 'Paradise Yard' (slap bang in the middle of William Blake territory) in south Lambeth. Have seen and heard some lovely free improvised music there, a really hidden gem. Shame that the proposed Phillip Jeck gig there tomorrow night has been postponed.
Thanks again John.
good call Trevor - I filmed a great poetry event there a couple of years ago - the video is on my channel here
I was just thinking that Passport to Pimlico might've been based on the docker's cutting off of the Isle of Dogs & you run across a statue of Mr. Cubitt!
Spooky 😎
Dexy's midnight runners filmed their video (Come on Eileen) in Lambeth. The little shop they filmed at is still there but boarded up.
Loved this. My old stomping ground when i was a kid 👍😊
I see the millbank properties have finally been cleaned and washed, with the london soot until the 2000s they were always forboding, and a contrast to Smith Square behind and Westminster , etc.
Excellent...lovely to see my old manor of Kennington/Lambeth. Thanks mate! We're locked down here in Sydney, a vicarious stroll is just the ticket.
Love this. I used to work in Lambeth Bridge House and Marsham Street. Have an old London map with Bedlam on it. Thames House used to be Dept of Energy til coal mine closeure. I went into Thames house as they used to do themed lunches i.e American, Mexican. Chinese etc each day.
Another fabulous video John. Well spoken and so informative! I really appreciate all of your knowledge and information. Looking forward to the next one! x
Thanks very much Timothy
Great video John. Absolutely essential Sunday evening viewing - thank you!
Thanks formdemon
You must have been posh to have lived in South Kensington. In my first year as a student at Imperial College I lived in Evelyn Gardens. The rent was £9 per week. The Paris Pullman cinema was just around the corner. In 1983/84 I lived in Princes Gardens. The room was free as I was Hon Sec of Imperial College Students Union. I used to walk across Princes Gardens each morning to my office that looked onto the Royal Albert Hall. Many mornings I would stop to say hello to an old lady, with her cat, named Eva. She was lovely and it was only years later I found out she was a movie star. She lived in a small mews house behind the halls of residence.
Very enjoyable journey house's of great character and style round every corner .Now to watch Passage to Pimlico
Nevah on the Agenda... I like that!
Another personable peripatetic perambulation of my favourite Flâneur!
... bet that pint didn't come cheap! 🍻
Thank for taking me on another urban ramble in the sin city love the mix of history and views
I always wondered about those chequered flats on my daily lunchtime walks when I worked in the area. I invariably found Pimlico interesting, especially St John's Square. Thank you for the information and trip down memory lane. 😊
I recently moved back to London after a few years away and used to live in the Old Chelsea area, some fascinating history around there if you ever venture that far up from Kings Road, and some Peabody flats tucked away down the back streets very close to Cheyne Walk.
I love pimlico I always stay there when in London I would love to lived there thanks for vlog my friend
Wonderful mate, you deserve that beer, London never ceases to amaze me....I can vaguely remember some of the areas you walked, but my memory, like time itself has become a mist in/of the past.
Watching you and your videos, the forgetten pasts of places and people that came before us, reminds me of how transient life is and helps me appreciate my own life that little bit more. Cheers John!
I so enjoyed this walk. Nice to see both unknown and known areas. Thanks John.
Loved this thanks John. Captures the spirit and tone of this part of London. I love that time between rush hour home and the later evening delights. A sense of calm and anticipation. Keep them coming!
Lovely, makes me want to explore London, or anywhere really, thank you. X
Excellent John, great balance of history, music and commentary as always thanks matey.
Cheers Dave
109 Lambeth Road has several functions within the Metropolitan Police. It's their 24 hour emergency communication centre as well as being home to one of their larger Forensic Labs.
In the late 1980's I was based at Chelsea Barracks for a short period of time which is just around the corner from Sloane Square. Needless to say that a soldiers pay didn't lend itself too well to being able to socialise locally.
Such a lovely walk, really enjoyed it. Thanks John. You seem to roam a city in the same way as I roam a city.
A very enjoyable ramble. Thanks John.
Cheers
So many memories stirred. Thanks again, Roger...
Cheers Emm Jay