London by Guide: Guided by Isobel

My podcast about tours, walks and odd snippets of information about London and beyond.

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Episodes

Jun 11, 2025

24 min

Walworth, today one of the most densely populated parts of London, has a surprisingly rich horticultural heritage.
This podcast is based on a walk I did for the Walworth Community Garden Network a few years ago. Following the success of that walk, I was asked to create a podcast to allow people to follow the route independently.
 

Bermondsey

Aug 24, 2020

Aug 24, 2020

2 min

Bermondsey lies just to the east of Tower Bridge. South of the river, for much of the twentieth century it had a poor reputation. It was badly bombed in the Blitz. The Bermondsey spirit came to the fore then with local people caring for each other in hard times.
Today Bermondsey is seen as a desirable place to live, close to the City and by the river. But you only have to scratch the surface to find that spirit and the fierce pride people have for their neighbourhood.

Aug 20, 2020

6 min

In 1787, in the City of London, twelve men formed the Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade,  motivated by empathy, sympathy and compassion for their fellow human beings.
This taster is for a tour about about the horrors of this evil trade, and the legacies it has left; about members of the society, the struggles they faced and the methods they used to reach their goal. 
For more information and how to join this tour, visit https://londonbyguide.wordpress.com

At Bank Junction

Jul 12, 2020

Jul 12, 2020

9 min

Bank Junction lies at the heart of the City of London. It is dominated by a triumvirate of buildings - the Bank of England, the Royal Exchange and the Mansion House. It is also the site of the first municipal toilets in the country. Above and below ground this area is a window into London’s varied history.
To learn more about booking this or any other tour, please contact me via http://Londonbyguide.wordpress.com

Jun 24, 2020

7 min

This episode is taken from a walk I do around The Cut, Lower Marsh and Waterloo. The arrival of the railway did more than open up the country and allow people to travel further in a day than ever before, it also meant dead Londoners could be buried in cemeteries miles from the capital, their bodies transported by the Necropolis railway.

Jun 17, 2020

7 min

Street names can tell us much about our neighbourhoods’ histories.this podcast is about some streets in my neighbourhood of Walworth, with a brief foray into Camberwell, and how a county cricket club came into being.

Jun 4, 2020

4 min

This is a very short episode about Walworth, the neighbourhood where I live. Walworth is one of those overlooked parts of London, but as I hope you’ll understand from this short episode, it’s a place of character, warm people and has very much its own identity.

May 29, 2020

13 min

This episode is about some of the women I talk about on my various walks and tours. Some are role models, others definitely not. With women stories so often excluded from mainstream history, I find it fascinating to learn about how they have contributed to the world.

May 15, 2020

5 min

Sir Claude Champion de Crespigny, military man, adventurer and sportsman, was one of the Champion de Crespigny family who once resided at Denmark Hill. He was a larger than life character, who sounds as though he belongs in Michael Palin’s series Ripping Yarns. I reluctantly exclude him from my Denmark Hill and Camberwell Walk on the grounds that he deserves more time than I would have to give him there. So this is an opportunity to acquaint a wider audience with his remarkable man.

Apr 23, 2020

9 min

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