Cricket, Coffee & Canals: Gobbets of the week #16

Here are links to the top ten gobbets of London history we liked this week: 

1. Time Warp: it’s a Lord’s Ashes Test weekend, so a timely piece on the home of cricket’s famous weathervane  Old Father Time

  

2. OK, not (yet) history, but we loved the taxonomy and geography of London’s hipster coffee shops

3. The antiquarian book shops of Old London

4. Plague and pestilence at the Guildhall Library’s new exhibition

  

5. Canals of London, Part 1: great new video by Geoff Marshall of Londonist. 

6. Some great detective work to identify William Hogarth’s frame-maker

  

7. The Man Who Drew London: a look at Wenceslaus Hollar.

8. Lovely film on the heights of North London, 1850-1939. 

9. Now viewable online: London on the C14th Gough Map, the oldest road map of Britain. 

10. More cricket: a lovely old London trade  card of a Brick Lane cricket bat maker. 

More? If you like our weekly gobbets, you might also like some of our longer posts on London’s history: 

London’s bare necessities

The Dragon and the Grasshopper

A Load of Old Billingsgate

Gobbets of the week #8! 

 

 Here are links to our top 10 gobbets of London history this week: 

1. Re-imagining Elizabethan London with Mathew Lyons…

2. The lost world of the alleys. @thegentleauthor ventures into one of Spitalfields’ darkest corners.

  

3. Side by side as equals: Darwin and Wallace in Westminster Abbey. 

4. Cleaning Justice at the Old Bailey

5. The 7 tallest buildings ever demolished in London…

6. An interactive map of C16 London. 

  

7. A lovely painting of Old London Bridge. 

8. Bedlam’s Big Dig – Crossrail article in the New Yorker…

9. Pipe Dreamsa short film commissioned by the Barbican to mark the passing of Crossrail’s Tunnel Boring Machines beneath the Barbican Estate. 

10. The quirky moles of Sub-Brit visit the Clapham South deep level air raid shelter.