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London History

London History

By: londonguidedwalks.co.uk
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The London History Podcast uncovers the stories, people, and places that have shaped London over 2,000 years. Hosted by historian & tour guide Hazel Baker, each 20–40 minute episode feels like an audio walking tour, covering everything from Roman Londinium and medieval guilds to Dickensian streets, Georgian scandals, and modern social change. Perfect for curious Londoners, visitors, students, and history lovers who want to go beyond the usual tourist highlights.155245 World
Episodes
  • 162: Building Tower Bridge
    Jun 26 2026

    How Tower Bridge Was Built: The Untold Story of London's Most Famous Bridge

    Discover the remarkable history behind Tower Bridge, one of London's most iconic landmarks. Learn how political battles, engineering innovation, and Victorian ambition transformed a transport crisis into one of the greatest bridge-building achievements of the nineteenth century.


    00:00 Building Tower Bridge

    01:00 Why London Needed a New Thames Crossing

    03:00 The Engineering Challenge

    05:00 Early Designs and Political Battles

    06:00 Choosing the Bascule Design

    06:30 Horace Jones and John Wolfe Barry

    08:00 The Tower Bridge Act of 1885

    10:00 Building the Foundations Beneath the Thames

    12:00 The Six Divers of Tower Bridge

    14:00 Constructing the Steel Superstructure

    16:00 The Revolutionary Hydraulic System

    18:00 Victorian Engineering and Safety Standards

    20:00 Costs, Delays and Human Sacrifice

    22:00 Legal Disputes During Construction

    24:45 Why Victorian Critics Hated Tower Bridge

    27:30 The Grand Opening of 1894

    29:00 Tower Bridge's Lasting Legacy

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    30 mins
  • 161: Life Below Stairs
    Jun 12 2026

    Below Stairs London: Tracing Victorian Servant Life in Belgravia and MayfairHazel Baker guides listeners through surviving street-level traces of Victorian servant London—area steps and railings, coal-hole covers, bell systems, mews alleys, and service districts—showing how London’s architecture encoded a rigid “upstairs/downstairs” hierarchy and enforced servant invisibility. Using census figures, she explains domestic service as Britain’s largest employer of women, driven by coal soot, class display, and tax incentives against male servants, then outlines household ranks from butler and housekeeper to scullery maid and mews staff. She describes the physical toll of long days, the servant supply chain at Shepherd Market, mews history and later gentrification, and surviving examples including Hyde Park Gardens Mews, Belgravia Mews West’s Star Pub, Bathurst Mews stables, and 18 Stafford Terrace (Sambourne House). She critiques period dramas for softening labor and highlights servants’ documented sexual vulnerability and limited protections.00:00 161: Life Below Stairs00:12 Introduction01:55 The Scale of Servant London14:20 The Architecture of Invisibility17:02 Coal Holes & Bell Systems22:38 The Mews28:50 Shepherd Market33:23 A Day in the Life37:00 Downton Abbey vs. Reality40:04 Sexual Vulnerability & Structural Silence44:47 Why Did Servants Stay?46:32 18 Stafford Terrace48:54 The Dual City51:43 Outro & Related Episodes

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    53 mins
  • 160: Soho Square’s Untold Stories: From Charles II to Mary Seacole
    May 29 2026

    Host Hazel Baker and Westminster guide Philip Scott record in Soho Square, tracing its shift from Middlesex countryside and royal hunting ground—where “Soho!” was cried—to a late-1600s development originally called King Square for Charles II, whose weathered statue remains after being moved and later returned.


    They highlight residents and landmarks, including Mary Seacole’s blue plaque and her Crimean War work after being refused by Florence Nightingale’s nurses: she built the British Hotel, treated soldiers and went to battlefields, later publishing her 1857 autobiography and receiving a benefit concert.


    They discuss Seacole’s rediscovery from the 1980s and her statue near Parliament, the square’s 1925 mock-Tudor gardener’s hut and tunnel myth, Huguenot immigration and the French-language Protestant church, Theresa Cornelis and Casanova, and trivia about entertainer Danny La Rue, buried near Seacole. The episode ends promoting a Soho walking tour.

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    29 mins
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Great stories. Loved the amateurish side of early spying..if you were in a Club then you're in

St Ermin's Hotel is a Must to Visit!

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