Thursday's London Walks
THE THURSDAY EXPLORER DAY - Away We Go!
THE THURSDAY MORNING LONDON WALKS
THE THURSDAY AFTERNOON LONDON WALKS
THE THURSDAY EVENING LONDON WALKS
SPECIAL THURSDAY WALKS
THE BATH EXPLORER DAY
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9 am on Thursdays (from June 19th - August 21)*
from Paddington Railway Station
meet by the main ticket office - it's by Platform One
 
Bath is like being in heaven without going to all the bother and expense of dying. A scoop of pure honey set in a green bowl, it's the world's most perfect Georgian city. A graceful and airy miracle of Palladian grandeur, it's a world of arcades and crescents, of Assembly Rooms and Pump Rooms. In the 18th-century it was the focus of the Age of Elegance. Today's it's our turn to to savour the accreted delights of the slow centuries as we explore this exquisite place and its stunningly cosmopolitan Roman foundations, folded into a time-warp in the lovely Somerset hills. Bottom line: a trip to Bath is an event. European cities don't come any more provocative. Or profound. Or poetic. And wonder of wonders: the Spa has reopened!
 
The Bath Explorer Day takes place
 every Thursday (from June 19th through August 21st) at 9 am.
 
To go on the Bath Explorer Day meet Richard
by the main ticket office of Paddington  Railway Station at 9 am
 
(N.B., the main ticket office is right by Platform One)
 
Guided by Richard
 
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OLD MAYFAIR - "the best address in London"
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10.30 am on Thursdays 
from Green ParkTube
(meet Russell on the corner, just outside the north exit)


Now here's a champagne cocktail of a walk. It's a marriage made in heaven: "the best address in London" and a top drawer guide - a chevalier and a place where Old Masters and old money, Rolls Royces and glamour, titles and butlers are par for the course. It's hob-nobbing with knobs on it - because Mayfair's been home to Clive of India, Disraeli, Handel, Florence Nightingale, Jimi Hendrix, Dodi Fayed, and the Earl Mountbatten, to name but a few. Last but certainly not least, it boasts London's best village within a village - Shepherd Market, a charming little nest of alleys that hasn't lost a jot of its 18th-century scale and village atmosphere, let alone its raffishness.

The Old Mayfair walk takes place
every Thursday at 10.30 am
and every Monday at 10.30 am.

Meet Russell or Graham on the corner
just outside the north exit of Green Park
Tube.

Green ParkTube  is on the
Victoria
, Piccadilly & Jubilee Lines

Guided by Russell on Thursdays
Guided by Graham on Mondays

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THE NATIONAL GALLERY TOUR
"Sex and Violence in Trafalgar Square"
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10.45 am on Thursdays
from EmbankmentTube

"You've been nailed again, eye-popped. Life has just been adjusted."

As the wonderful Simon Schama puts it, "Great art has dreadful manners. The hushed reverence of the gallery can fool you into believing masterpieces are polite things, visions that soothe, charm and beguile, but actually they are thugs. Merciless and wily, the greatest paintings grab you in a headlock, rough up your composure and then proceed in short order to rearrange your sense of reality." And on that note (warning?) you are cordially invited to a levee withe the likes of Rembrandt, Rubens, Leonardo da Vinci, Van Dyck, Goya, Constable, Turner, Monet, Renoir and Van Gogh.
  

Which is by way of saying, "In the National Gallery, as perhaps nowhere else, you can walk through seven centuries of European painting, on the mountain-tops. And, as always on the mountains, it's useful to have a guide, a companion who can spot things that you might miss and trigger thoughts that might not occur to you on your own." Let alone the fact that the National - "the single best picture gallery in the world" - covers 10 acres, has 75 galleries, and houses 2,300 of the world's greatest paintings!

The National Gallery Tour
takes place every Thursday at 10.45 am.

Meet just outside the exit of EmbankmentTube.

EmbankmentTube is on
theCircle, Bakerloo, District & Northern Lines

Guided by HelenaMargaret, Molly or Tom

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HISTORIC GREENWICH
"Versailles with a riverscape"
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10:45 am on Thursdays
from Tower HillTube

We begin with an overture: the best boat ride in London. The Tower, Tower Bridge, Docklands, and then, three miles downstream, the Thames bursts into one of the sublime sights of English architecture: "the most stately procession of buildings in England." Moments later, another frisson: the mast and spars, the web of rigging of the Cutty Sark, the hauntingly beautiful old tea clipper. As the poet said, "they mark our passage as a race of men; earth will not see such ships again." Welcome to Greenwich! Maritime Greenwich. Royal Greenwich. Greenwich the home of time and centre of space. The Greenwich of crooked lanes, bric-a-brac shops, and bustling antique and flea markets. Greenwich the "green village." Greenwich of the Queen's House, Old Royal Observatory, Royal Naval College, the world's largest nautical museum, the Millennium Dome, and the Cutty Sark itself! Gillian or Nick or Chris or Hilary will turn the pages of its history for you.

The Historic Greenwich Walk takes place every Thursday,
every Sunday and every Tuesday at 10:45 am.

Meet your guide just outside the exit of
Tower Hill
Tube at 10:45 am.

Tower Hill Tube is on the Circle & District Lines

N.B. The boat trip costs £3 (a huge discount);Your guide - Gillain or Chris or Nick or Hilary - goes with you on the boat.

 Guided on Thursdays by Nick or Hilary
 Guided Sundays and Tuesdays by Gillian or Chris

 

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THE FAMOUS SQUARE MILE - 2,000 Years of History
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11 am on Thursdays
from Monument Tube, Fish Street Hill exit

This is the great classic London Walk. It explores the very heart of the City - the most historic part of the capital. Threading their way through an intricate network of narrow alleys and cobble-stone lanes, Tom, Judy and Fiona chronicle the 2,000 years of London's rich and tumultuous history. And illustrate it by drawing upon everything from street names to ancient customs to the frozen music of London's great buildings, among which are the ruins of the Roman Temple of Mithras, the Bank of England, the Lord Mayor's Mansion House, and ancient Guildhall. (The walk includes, whenever possible, a visit inside Guildhall!)

The Famous Square Mile Walk takes place
every
Thursday at 11 am
and every Sunday at 10.30 am.

Meet Tom, Judy, Fiona or Graham outside the main exit - the Fish Street Hill exit - of MonumentTube.

Monument Tube is on the Circle & District Lines

Guided on Thursdays by Tom, Judy or Fiona

Guided on Sundays by Graham

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THE BEATLES MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR
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11 am on Thursdays
from Tottenham Court RoadTube
 
Meet Richard just outside exit 3, by the Dominion Theatre.

Guided by "the pied piper of Beatlemania", this is a chance to Imagine Beatlemania and the Swinging 60s. It's a Magical Mystery Tour of the Beatles" London haunts: their Apple offices, where they played the famous rooftop session Paul McCartney's headquarters; and the world famous Abbey Road Studios and the Abbey Road crosswalk. Richard P, recaptures the era when London was the cultural capital of the world and the "Fab Four" were its rulers.  Here's a "grab" from the walk. And if you'd like to know more about the area where you'll be meeting Richard, well simply click me!

The Beatles Magical Mystery Tour takes place
every
Thursday at 11 am,
every
Sunday at 11 am,
and
every
Wednesday at 2 pm.

Meet Richard P. just outside exit 3 - the Dominion Theatre exit -

of Tottenham Court RoadTube.

Tottenham Court RoadTube is on the
Central & Northern Lines 
 

N.B. We make a short tube journey to Abbey Road, so getting a "ticket to ride" - i.e., using your Oyster Card or getting a 2-Zone Travel Card - is a good idea.

Guided by Richard P

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OLD WESTMINSTER - 1,000 Years of History
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2 pm on Thursdays
from WestminsterTube, exit 4

This is the cornerstone, the seminal London Walk. Miss it and you've missed London. For Old Westminster is London at its grandest: the place where kings and queens are crowned, where they lived, and often were buried. It's the forge of the national destiny, the place where the heart of the Empire beat, the Mecca of politicians throughout the ages. The past here is cast in stone and we take it all in: ancient Westminster Hall, the Houses of Parliament, the Jewel Tower, and Westminster Abbey. And to see it with a great guide is to have that past suddenly rise to the surface...like seeing a photographic print come up in a darkroom. It doesn't get any better than this. And embarras de richesse, we'll also explore the private face of Westminster - the London equivalent of Georgetown! Unlike the tourist hordes, we'll get to see the hidden and ever so picturesque Georgian back streets where all the political salons are! We end at the Cabinet War Rooms, the fortified bunker that housed Winston Churchill's centre of operations during the war. You'll get a brilliant discount on the price of admission if you want to visit the War Rooms

And fancy a listen? Try this. It's the opening of the Secret Westminster chapter in our book, London Walks London Stories. A chapter that was inspired by - and draws on - this walk.

The Old Westminster Walk takes place
every Thursday at 2 pm; 
every Saturday at 11 am;
every Sunday at 2.45 pm;
and every Tuesday at 2 pm. 

Meet your guide just outside exit 4 of WestminsterTube.

WestminsterTube is on the Circle, District & Jubilee Lines.
 

Guided on Thursdays by Shaughan or David
Guided on Saturdays by Simon
Guided on Sundays by Graham
Guided on Tuesdays by Judy

 
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OLD KENSINGTON - London’s Royal Village
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2 pm on Thursdays 
from High Street KensingtonTube
Meet in the rotunda just beyond the ticket barrier (by Pret a Manger)

This one's special. It's rarely the first - or even the second or third - walk people go on, but when they do get round to taking it, they often say it's the one they liked the most. And no wonder, because Royal Kensington is London at its best - picturesque, stimulating, and full of character. Its parts are as delightful as London can provide: everything from warmly handsome old Kensington Palace (home to the late Diana, Princess of Wales) to Kensington Gardens (all meadows, shaded walks, bowers, and flower gardens, it might be the grounds of a stately home in some rural shire) to cobbled little soigne lanes and mews, girt with pretty cottages and charming old shops; and from millionaires" row and regal avenues to beautifully kept squares and a clutch of the world's greatest museums; let alone a garden in the sky (the largest and most breathtaking roof garden in Europe); the secluded town house of the greatest Londoner of the 20th-century, an American president's flat, the most astonishing small literary house in the world, acres of gentility, a secret trap-door into a hidden world, and more history and colourful characters than you can shake a stick at. And afterward you can visit the State Apartments or take tea at the Orangery at Kensington Palace! Now who's for a visual or two? Or if  you'd like another word or two, click here. Or here. And finally, how about some audio?  There's going to be a chapter on Kensington in our forthcoming book, London Walks London Stories. It's one of the five chapters that have fallen to me, David, to write. The which I've done. Anyway, here's a tri-partite taster - of Kensington, of the walk and of the book. In short, here's how the chapter opens.

The Old Kensington - London's Royal Village Walk
takes place every Thursday at 2 pm
and every Saturday at 2 pm.

Meet David or Angela or Adam in the rotunda just beyond the ticket barrier ("subway turnstile" in North American parlance) of High Street KensingtonTube.

High Street Kensington Tube  is on the Circle & District Lines 

Guided on Thursdays by David or Adam
Guided on Saturdays by David or Angela


"Kensington, especially in a summer afternoon, has seemed to me as delightful as any place can or ought to be, in a world which, sometime or other, we must quit." Nathaniel Hawthorne, Our Old Home, 1863

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THE BLITZ - London at War
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"send every bloody pump you've got,
the whole bloody world's on fire" 

London Fireman during a Luftwaffe raid 8 September 1940

2.15 pm Thursdays
from St. Paul'sTube exit 2
 
The dome of St. Paul's seemed to ride the sea of fire like a great ship. Ludgate Hill was carpeted in hosepipes. Two hundred people died that night. On the north side of the cathedral 63 acres became a waste of smoking ash and rubble. Another 100 acres were completely devastated in other raids that autumn. At the finish, out of the City's tight-packed 461 acres, 164 were reduced to ruin. And this was just 1940. And now, over to Helena, who's going to take us through a great city in its finest and most desperate hour. Some of what you see and hear may be disturbing.

And just to get you primed, here are the three best paragraphs ever written on London and The Blitz. Nobody told it like it was like V.S. Pritchett and in this passage he's crystallised it: this is what London was like, this is what it felt like to live through that terrible time.

And then there's this. Warning: it hardly bears thinking about.
 
The Blitz - London at War takes place
every Thursday
at 2.15 pm from just outside exit 2 of St. Paul'sTube.

St. Paul's Tube is on the Central Line 

Guided by
Helena

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"It is a hobby of mine", said Holmes,
"to have an exact knowledge of London

 Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1890


IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF SHERLOCK HOLMES
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2.30 pm on Thursdays
from EmbankmentTube

"The game is afoot!" It's time to go sleuthing with Corinna or Richard IV and their Baker Street Irregulars! You'll explore an area whose "everchanging kaleidoscope of life" intrigued Holmes and Watson. You'll follow their adventures in Charing Cross, the Strand's gas-lit alleys, and Covent Garden with its Opera House and colourful market stalls, ending, where else? at the superb re-creation of Sherlock Holmes's study. Housed in the building immortalised in The Hound of the Baskervilles and featuring many artefacts donated by the Conan Doyle family, it's a place "where a dream becomes reality". And best of all, it's free to visit! Now to whet your appetite,  here's a bite of sound!

The In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes Walk takes place
every Thursday afternoon at 2.30 pm.


Meet Richard IV or Corinna just outside EmbankmentTube.

Guided by Richard IV or Corinna

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"What do you say to a ramble through London?"
Sherlock Holmes


THE ANCIENT CITY AT NIGHT
Take Another Look!
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6.30 pm on Thursdays 
from BankTube
(meet Peter G.
by the Wellington statue outside exit 3)

If I were going to take Julius Caesar, Charlemagne, Dante, Elizabeth I, Adam Smith, George Washington and Claude Monet on a London Walk this is the one I'd plump for. Because of where it goes and what we see. Historically this is the oldest part of London; but it's also the most aggressively modern part. And after hours - which is when we're heading in there - it's transfigured: crystalline, transparent as a dragonfly, submerged in its past. We can peer into its depths. And then rub our eyes and wonder at a church that "transcends originality", at the only private house in the country with its own court and cells, at a lost river, at a jewel box of a market (going there is a little touch of Harry Potter in the night), at Dirty Dick"s, at the architectural equivalent of a butterfly collection. And to see it at night - washed in blue and green light - it's like moving, stunned, through the crevasses of a mountain glacier!. And that's just first impressions, a quick scratch at the surface. The behind-the-scenes stuff - hidden courtyards, dimly lit alleyways and wonderful old pubs* - will take us right down into the depths of London's ancient past. Guided by Peter G.
 
*Yes, pubs are included on this walk; a post-walk curry is an optional extra (which is by way of saying, the walk ends near that little parade of the best - and best value - curry houses in London!) 
 
The Ancient City at Night - Take Another Look! takes place
every Thursday evening at 6.30 pm.
 
Meet Peter G. by the Wellington statue -
it's just outside exit 3 of BankTube.

Bank Tube is on the Central & Northern Lines

Guided by Peter G.

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"Cities, like cats, will reveal themselves at night."   Rupert Brooke

OLD MARYLEBONE VILLAGE - The Pub Walk
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7 pm on Thursdays
from Bond StreetTube, Oxford Street north exit

On the A-List. That's Marylebone. It's that most enticing of combinations - it's very appealing and it's little known. Finding it - finding your way into it - from brash, crass, tacky Oxford Street is like coming through a mountain pass at night and there it is, up ahead of you, all aglow - a cozy, unexpected, inviting, well nigh perfect village. The hyperbole is deserved. Quietly, unobtrusively, classic, historic old Marylebone has become the most successful and attractive nieghbourhood in London. How so? Well, there's something about Marylebone. That something is vibrancy. Some well-heeled neighbourhoods are so rich they're lifeless - embalmed in their wealth. Not so Marylebone. It's got a buzz, it's connected, it's inviting (its pubs are as welcoming as classic old country inns) - it's got makes-you-feel-good-to-be-there villagey warmth. Let alone gusto! Here's an audio taster - a "grab" from near the beginning of the walk.

The Old Marylebone Village Pub Walk takes place
every
Thursday evening at 7 pm.

Meet Andrew just outside the Oxford Street north exit* of
Bond StreetTube.

*Meet by the HMV shop in Stratford Place

Bond Street Tube Stop is on the Central & Jubilee Lines
 
 Guided by Andrew
 
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"The only plagues of London..."

"Everywhere outside their houses are the citizens" gardens, side by side yet spacious and splendid and set about with trees. There are also in the northern suburbs of London splendid wells and springs with sweet healing, clean water…[where]…crowds of schoolboys and students and young men of the City take the air on summer evenings…The only plagues of London are the immoderate drinking of fools and the frequency of fires."
William Fitzstephen, Preface to the Life of Thomas a Becket, c. 1180

APPARITIONS, ALLEYWAYS & ALE
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7.30 pm on Thursdays
from EmbankmentTube

Dead men walking. Ghosts. Poltergeists. That's what these crepuscular, crooked little alleyways are known for. And that's why Russell speaks in a low voice - lest they hear us and come calling. And best stay close together because stuff happens on this walk. Like seeing a gray procession of headless figures! I don't know whether it's atmospheric conditions or the power of suggestion or Russell's sepulchral voice, but it's happened more than once. Or a creepy churchyard where the gaslights are guttering and the shadows are deeper than they should be. Give it a wide berth. One of our guides had the most terrifying experience of his life in there. Russell gets you safely past it - and if he feels up to it - he just might tell you about it. Ditto the haunted old pub where we'll fortify our - er - spirits...before heading into the spooky "old palace quarter". N.B., Variations on a theme...which is by way of saying this walk is similar but not identical to Monday night's Ghosts of the West End walk. The chief difference being that Apparitions, Alleyways & Ale has a ghost-busting pit stop. Halfway through the walk, Russell will take us into that haunted old pub where things go bump in the night.

Now who's for some audio? Here's Adam, pinch hitting for Russell on December 16, 1897. Funny thing that. Because when we turned into this alley it was June 26, 2008. Was. That's creepy old London for you. You're not careful where you're going - you turn certain corners - and time bends. What's this? It's a gas lamp. Here's Adam. And there's the famous actor, William Terriss. William Terriss, who's just been murdered tonight, right here, December 16, 1897.

The Apparitions, Alleyways & Ale Walk takes place
every Thursday evening at 7.30 pm.

Meet Russell just outside the exit of EmbankmentTube.

Embankment Tube is on the Circle, Bakerloo, District & Northern Lines

 

Guided by Russell 

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JACK THE RIPPER HAUNTS
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7.30 pm nightly
from Tower HillTube 

Please tread carefully and keep away from the shadows - you are about to enter the abyss...

He came silently out of the midnight shadows of August 31, 1888. Watching. Stalking. Butchering raddled, drink-sodden East End prostitutes. Leaving a trail of blood that led...nowhere. Yes, something wicked this way walked, for this is the Ripper's slashing grounds. We evoke that autumn of gaslight and fog, of menacing shadows and stealthy footsteps as we inspect the murder sites, sift through the evidence - in all its gory detail - and get to grips, so to speak, with the main suspects. Afterward you can steady your nerves in The Ten Bells, the pub where the victims - perhaps under the steely gaze of the Ripper himself - tried to forget the waking nightmare. And for a pictorial or two, click here.

The Jack the Ripper Haunts Walk takes place
every* single night at 7.30 pm.

N.B. on Saturday afternoons there's also a Ripper "matinee".
I.E. we also do the Ripper walk every Saturday afternoon at 3 pm.

Meet the guides - on Thursday evenings it's Angela and Shaughan - 
just outside the exit of Tower HillTube.

Tower Hill Tube is on the Circle & District Lines

*except December 24th & December 25th

Guided by Donald or Molly on Mondays
Guided by Donald or Molly on Tuesdays
Guided by Steve on Wednesdays
Guided by Angela and Shaughan on Thursdays
Guided by Donald or Shaughan on Fridays
Guided by Fiona or Peter G. on Saturday afternoons
Guided by Steve on Saturday evenings
Guided by Donald on Sundays

N.B., Let's call a spade a spade. Going on Donald Rumbelow's walk is as close as you're going to get to nailing the Ripper. Donald is the author of the best-selling The Complete Jack the Ripper, the definitive book on the subject. He's been the chief consultant for every major television and film treatment of the Ripper for the last 20 years. In the words of The Jack to Ripper A to Z (the bible of Ripperology studies): "Donald Rumbelow is internationally recognised as the leading authority on the subject". The former Curator of the City of London Police Crime Museum and a two-time Chairman of the Crime Writers" Association, Donald is Britain's most distinguished crime historian. And I hasten add, he's not some dry-as-dust academic. He spent 25 years on the City of London Police Force - which in effect means you'll be taken over some of the most famous crime scenes in the world by a law enforcement professional...who just happens to be the world's leading expert on those particular crime scenes! Oh and I almost forgot - he's also a top-flight professionally qualified Blue Badge Guide!

But a word of warning: never part with your money or set off with anyone until you're absolutely certain you're with Donald or - if it's another night - one of his London Walks colleagues. Donald (and co.) will be holding up copies of the distinctive white London Walks leaflet. And remember, Donald and his colleagues never ever start the Jack the Ripper walk before 7:30pm. In short, don't let anyone pull a fast one on you.

 

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ADDITIONAL WALKS ON SELECTED THURSDAYS
   
DATE TOUR  TIME STATION
Nov. 22 The Cambridge Explorer Day - "can such places be?" 9.15 am King's Cross  Railway Station meet by the ticket office by Platform 9
Nov.  22 All Change at St. Pancras 2 pm King's CrossTube Euston Road north exit
Dec. 20 The St. Albans Explorer Day - "an England in miniature" 10 am West HampsteadTube
Dec. 20  The Christmas Carol Pub Walk - with hot mince pies! 7 pm St. Paul'sTube, exit 2
Dec. 27 The Cotswolds & Oxford Explorer Day 9.30 am  Paddington
Railway Station meet by the ticket office by Platform 1
Feb. 21 The Cambridge Explorer Day - "can such places be?" 9.15 am King's Cross Railway Station meet by the  ticket office by Platform 9 
Mar. 27 The Cambridge Explorer Day - "can such places be?" 9.15 am King's Cross Railway Station meet by the ticket office by Platform 9