Thursday, 17 November 2022

Sherlockian Sojourns #46: “The train steamed off again on its way”

Having spent the morning exploring The Strand, it was time for two mini-sojourns to two canonical railway stations that I had not previously visited, both reachable from Peckham Rye station, and within Zones 2-4.

The first was a fifteen minute ride to Beckenham Hill, which Mr. Melas, the eponymous Greek interpreter, travelled to with Holmes and Watson, in order to revisit the house where he acted as interpreter for the kidnapped Paul Kratides, in an attempt to rescue him and the mysterious Sophy. [GREE]

 


‘It was a quarter to ten before we reached London Bridge, and half past before the four of us alighted on the Beckenham platform’.  [GREE]

 

It was then a fifteen minute journey back to Peckham Rye, where I changed trains, riding twenty minutes to Norbury, where Holmes and Watson travelled to assist Grant Munro in understanding his wife’s strange behaviour and a yellow face seen at a window, in ‘The Yellow Face’. Holmes’ pre-conceived ideas about the case were all proven to be erroneous, with him commenting to Watson, “If it should ever strike you that I am getting a little over-confident in my powers, or giving less pains to a case than it deserves, kindly whisper ‘Norbury’ in my ear, and I shall be infinitely obliged to you.”

 

   

 

‘(Grant Munro) was waiting on the platform (at Norbury) when we stepped out, and we could see in the station lamps that he was very pale, and quivering with agitation’.  [YELL]

 

More photos taken, and I caught a train back to Peckham Rye and the Peckhamplex Cinema where I enjoyed ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’, featuring Martin Freeman. Film completed, I caught a bus home, passing my old workplace of ten years.

Sherlockian Sojourns #45: ‘Let’s All Go Down The Strand’

Linking the City of Westminster and the City of London, The Strand is one of London's main highways. It is less than a mile in length, and was in the twelfth century, no more than a bridle path beside the river. However, by the eighteenth century it had become a fashionable shopping street, with the New Exchange built by Robert Cecil, and Thomas Twining's tea business, which has remained at No 216 since 1706 (making it the oldest rate-payer in City of Westminster).  It also had multiple links to Sherlock Holmes, being mentioned in the first chapter of the first Sherlock Holmes story, ‘A Study in Scarlet’, and gave its name to the magazine that first published the sixty short stories and third and fourth novels. Sir Henry Baskerville also bought a pair of new boots at a shop in the street [HOUN], and Holmes once asked a disguised John Clay for directions to The Strand [REDH]. A stroll down The Strand was therefore called for.

Catching the Northern Line from Morden, I made my way to Charing Cross Station at the Trafalgar Square end of The Strand. The original Charing Cross Station building was built on the site of the Hungerford Market by the South Eastern Railway and opened on 11 January 1864. The station was designed by Sir John Hawkshaw, with a single span wrought iron roof arching over the six platforms on its relatively cramped site. It is built on a brick arched viaduct, the level of the rails above the ground varying from 13 feet (4m) at the north-east end to 27 feet (8.2m) at the bridge abutment at the south-east end. A year later the Charing Cross Hotel, designed by Edward Middleton Barry, opened on 15 May 1865 and gave the station an ornate frontage in the French Renaissance style.

It was in the waiting room of Charing Cross Station, that Holmes had his canine tooth knocked out by a villain named Matthews [EMPT]. It was also from this station that Irene Adler and her new husband Godfrey Norton made their escape [SCAN], Mme. Fournaye began her journey back to Paris [SECO], and from where Holmes and Watson travelled to both The Abbey Grange [ABBE] and Yoxley Old Place [GOLD].

  


"My collection of M's is a fine one. Moriarty himself is enough to make any letter illustrious, and here is Morgan the poisoner, and Merridew of abominable memory, and Mathews, who knocked out my left canine in the waiting-room at Charing Cross, and, finally, here is our friend of tonight." -Holmes [EMPT]

 

Crossing the road, I reached #447 The Strand, which was formerly the Charing Cross Telegraph Office, from where telegrams were sent by Cyril Overton [MISS] and John Scott Eccles [WIST], as well as an anonymous threat to Sir Henry Baskerville [HOUN], all had 'a Strand postmark'. It is now a branch of ‘Accessorise’. Also, the American Exchange in The Strand was the correspondence address for Enoch Drebber and Joseph Stangerson whilst they were in London [STUD]

A little further along was the former site of the Lowther Arcade, through which Watson dashes in ‘The Final Problem’, was eighty feet long and surmounted by glass domes, opening in 1830. However, it was demolished in 1904 to make way for Coutt's Bank.

 

Retracing my steps, I made my way onto Adelaide Street, and the exit from the Lowther Arcade where Watson met a brougham driven by a disguised Mycroft Holmes.  [FINA]

  

“In the morning you will send for a hansom, desiring your man to take neither the first nor the second which may present itself. Into this hansom you will jump, and you will drive to the Strand end of the Lowther Arcade, handing the address to the cabman upon a slip of paper, with a request that he will not throw it away. Have your fare ready, and the instant that your cab stops, dash through the Arcade, timing yourself to reach the other side at a quarter-past nine”  - Holmes [FINA]

 

In the 1830's, improvements were made to the west end of The Strand, with Charing Cross Hospital being built by the ubiquitous Decimus Burton, in the triangle bounded by Agar Street, William IV Street (which I turned into) and Chandos Place. Doctor Mortimer previously worked at Charing Cross Hospital [HOUN], and it was here that Holmes was carried after a murderous attack [ILLU]. The hospital is now Charing Cross Police Station.


  


Returning to The Strand, I made my way along to the Adelphi Theatre. The Strand is currently well known for its theatres, including the Adelphi, where Watson's literary agent, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle mounted a theatrical production of ‘The Speckled Band’, when an earlier effort, ‘The House of Temperley’ (based on ‘Rodney Stone’) was a critical disaster, and he had over five months of his sub-letting of the theatre to go. This performance with its rubber snake was more of a success. The Adelphi currently plays host to ‘Back to the Future – The Musical’ (Highly recommended)


Walking past two other places of interest but wanting to see them in a more chronological order, I turned left up Burleigh Street (after taking a photo of the corner) until I reached #12. The first offices of ‘The Strand Magazine’ were here (along with those of ‘TitBits’). This was a monthly magazine founded by George Newnes, composed of short fiction and general interest articles, which saw the first publication of all Sherlock Holmes short stories. It was published in the United Kingdom from January 1891 to March 1950, running to 711 issues, though the first issue was on sale well before Christmas 1890. Sales increased in the early months, before settling down to a circulation of almost 500,000 copies a month which lasted well into the 1930s. It was edited by Herbert Greenhough Smith from 1891 to 1930. The street took its name from Lord Burleigh, a leading statesman in the time of Elizabeth I, who lived on the site of the office of the Magazine. The cover of the Magazine included a Burleigh Street sign, an arrow pointing towards number 12, and the number 359 representing the number of the property on the Strand that was on the corner illustrated by George Haité.

 




Continuing up Burleigh Street, I turned left onto Tavistock Street, then left again onto Southampton Street. After just under a year, Newnes expanded, launching more magazines and had to move out of the Burleigh Street office. The company didn’t go far – just two streets along the Strand, to 7-12 Southampton Street. The street name was altered on the Magazine cover to match the new address, and the number 359 taken off the building wall. In addition, the company’s new name and address was printed along the bottom of the cover.


   

Continuing down Southampton Street, I rejoined The Strand, and the part known for its hotels, namely the Strand Palace, and most impressively, The Savoy, which when it opened in 1886 with 600 bedrooms was the largest in Europe. Before meeting Holmes, Watson had been residing in a private hotel in The Strand (so presumably not one of these) [STUD].



“I naturally gravitated to London, that great cesspool into which all the loungers and idlers of the Empire are irresistibly drained. There I stayed for some time at a private hotel in The Strand, leading a comfortless, meaningless existence, and spending such money as I had, considerably more freely than I ought.” - Watson [STUD]

 

Crossing the road again, I reached Simpsons-in-the-Strand, which originally opened as a home of chess, not becoming one of London's most famous restaurants until 1848, when its good roast beef and saddles of mutton became world-famous. The premises were demolished in 1900 to allow for widening of the road, but the restaurant was rebuilt and reopened in 1904, from which time it became the meeting and luncheon place for gentlemen, including King George IV, Charles Dickens, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and even the world's 'first consulting detective' and his medico assistant. Holmes and Watson regularly attended 'Simpsons', even going as far as to label it 'our Strand restaurant'. [DYIN, ILLU]. Unfortunately, the restaurant has not yet re-opened after it was forced to close due to the Covid 19 lockdown, with its future seemingly in doubt. I have eaten at Simpsons only once, as part of the Sherlock Holmes Society of London’s Jubilee Weekend in 2011.

 


"I think that something nutritious at Simpson's would not be out of place..." - Holmes [DYIN]

“It was not possible for me to follow the immediate steps taken by my friend, for I had some pressing professional business of my own, but I met him by appointment that evening at Simpson's, where, sitting at a small table in the front window and looking down at the rushing stream of life in The Strand, he told me something of what had passed” - Watson [ILLU]

 

Back on the other side of the road, I turned left into Wellington Street, reaching the Lyceum Theatre. It was at the third pillar from the left that Holmes, Watson and Mary Morstan waited to meet her mysterious benefactor. [SIGN]  It was also where William Gillette's play, 'Sherlock Holmes' was performed in 1901. The Lyceum is currently the long-term home of ‘The Lion King’. (Also highly recommended)

 


Back on The Strand, I crossed over the road on Waterloo Bridge, reaching Somerset House. This building, originally the site of a Tudor palace, was designed by Sir William Chambers in 1776, and further extended with Victorian wings to the north and south. It is here that Holmes would have inspected the will of Helen Stoner's dead mother [SPEC]. I have also visited on a previous sojourn as the courtyard doubled for the exterior of the Diogenes Club in 'The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes' (1970), the 'Light Well' served as the filming location for Blackwood's cell in ‘Sherlock Holmes’ (2009), and the frontage appeared as Buckingham Palace in 'Holmes and Watson' (2018).

 

Continuing along The Strand, passing the abandoned Aldwych Station which appeared in ‘Sherlock: The Empty Hearse’, I reached St. Mary-le-Strand Church, which is the second to have this name, the first having been situated a short distance to the south. The date of its foundation is unclear but it was mentioned in a judgement of 1222, when it was called the Church of the Innocents, or St Mary and the Innocents. It was pulled down in 1549 by Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset to make way for Somerset House. The parishioners were promised a new church, which was never built, forcing them to move to the nearby church of St Clement Danes and afterwards to the Savoy Chapel. Its canonical connection is its appearance on the front cover of 'The Strand Magazine', with the steeple of St. Clement Danes (see below).



Continuing to the extreme end of The Strand, I reached Australia House, a Grade II listed building which contains the High Commission of Australia, the diplomatic mission of Australia in the United Kingdom. It is both Australia's first diplomatic mission and the longest continuously occupied diplomatic mission in the United Kingdom. The foyer of the Australia House was used as the interior of the auctioneers in ‘Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows’ (2011). However, signs visible through the impressive entrance doors indicated that visitors needed an appointment and that all photography was prohibited inside. I therefore made do with photos of the outside.

The imposing Exhibition Hall of the building with its chandeliers and Australian marble columns appeared in ‘Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone’ (2001), as the interior of Gringotts Bank.

A short distance away was my final stop, St. Clement Danes Church, whose steeple appears behind that of St. Mary-le-Strand on the cover of ‘The Strand Magazine’. The current building was completed in 1682 by Sir Christopher Wren. Wren's building was gutted during the Blitz and not restored until 1958, when it was adapted to its current function as the central church of the Royal Air Force.

The church is sometimes claimed to be the one featured in the nursery rhyme "Oranges and Lemons" (‘Oranges and Lemons say the bells of St. Clements’), and the bells do indeed play that tune every day at 9 am, noon, 3pm and 6pm—as reported in 1940 the church's playing of the tune was interrupted during World War II due to Nazi bombing. However, St. Clement's Eastcheap, in the City of London, also claims to be the church from the rhyme. St. Clement Danes is known as one of the two 'Island Churches', the other being St. Mary-le-Strand.



This brought my walk to an end, but I continued for another 10 minutes to City Thameslink Station, where I caught a train to Peckham Rye and the start of another Sojourn.