LOOSE IN LONDON: BELOW STAIRS AT OSTERLEY PARK

Kristine here, picking up at Osterley Park where Victoria left off. We took the train out to Osterley and walked to the estate from the station. It was a glorious walk and seeing the grounds from different viewpoints was indeed special.
MAP OF ESTATE, CROPPED
As we began our walk towards the house, we noticed horses loose in the paddock and, of course, we were compelled to speak to them, to pet them and to take about 718 photos of them.

As you can see by the photos, the horses were quite friendly. I was a tad surprised
 to see a Palomino in England, but then, why shouldn’t there be?

Further up the drive, we spotted a pair playing table tennis. 
At last, we reached the house, as you are well aware after Victoria’s fabulous photos that ran in last Friday’s post. The house was just stunning and I spent much of our time there taking pictures of the architectural details and of the views from various windows, all of which I’ll be sharing here soon.
Osterley’s downstairs is as fabulous as its upstairs as the domestic areas in the basement remain relatively in their original state – and there are so many of them, more than can be seen in other stately homes.

I apologize for the shaky photos, but they may still go a ways towards showing you how well turned out some of the “servants” rooms were. Above is the game keepers room, the house keepers salon below. 

You can tell that the servants were valued at Osterley Park – 
they actually had windows to provide light, fresh air and a view. 

Here is the wine room – barrels of wine and beer would have been fitted into each compartment. 

More wine! And champagne! Sadly, there was no tasting on this tour. 

Even the Osterley horses were well regarded, as evidenced by the grand stable block above, now fitted out with a gift shop and tea room.  
As you can see by the photos below, Victoria and I stopped by the Osterley farm stand on our way back to the station.  The fruit and veg were simply gorgeous and Victoria and I snapped away with our cameras until I had a laughing fit. 
“What’s so funny,” Victoria asked as I doubled over with laughter.
“We’re taking a hundred pictures of cabbage,” I said, tears running down my face.
“So?” Victoria replied, snap snapping away with her camera.
“Oh, God,” I said, “Veg! We’re photographing veg. Would you take pictures of cabbage and potatoes if we were in the produce section at Publix?”
Victoria finally saw the humour and began laughing herself. “But it’s British veg.”
“I know! That’s what’s so funny. If anyone saw us, they’d think we were from some third world country where onions are a luxury. Thank God no one else is here – they’d think we were mad.”
“Now you’re worried about that? It’s too late. People who know us already think we’re mad.”

More Loose in London Coming Soon!


LOOSE IN LONDON: STROLLING LONDON

After leaving Sir John Soane’s House, Victoria, Marilyn and myself made our way over to Covent Garden – land of flower sellers, ladies of ill repute and some nefarious goings on. And that’s just today. Seriously, though, it would have been nice to see some of the old street sellers who once haunted this market. As usual, I found that with a little imagination, there are glimpses of the old market to still be seen today.

Before we explored any further, we decided that a spot of lunch wouldn’t go amiss and we left the Market in search of food.

We soon found ourselves in front of the Marquess of Angelsey pub. Now, this would have been a spot that spoke to Waterloo hearts if Victoria and I hadn’t known what was waiting for us just a street away.

The Blue Plaque explains that the offices of Charles Dickens’ magazine, All The Year Round, were once located in this building.
And just down at the corner . . . . . our favourite Duke of Wellington pub, not to be confused with the Duke of Wellington pub near our hotel in Kensington where we’d already eaten twice.

It was a glorious day and we opted for an outside table, where we ordered small plates and shared a meal.
Afterwards, we went back to Covent Garden so that Marilyn could see more of it.
Buskers/mimes in front of St. Paul’s Church, Covent Garden
We were lucky enough to be strolling by as an opera singer was belting out Ave Maria.
 The flower market now (above) and then (below).
We strolled by the ubiquitous Covent Garden pigeons. Alas, no Audrey Hepburn in sight.
The entrance to St. Paul’s Churchyard, now (above) and then (below).

Rear of St. Paul’s Church, Covent Garden which opens on a small rose garden that happened to be gloriously in bloom when we visited.

Roses behind St. Paul’s Church
Leaving the churchyard, we found ourselves near Bedford Court, where we grabbed a cab and went to my favourite antique dealer in Cecil Court.
To my great delight, they had a Copeland bust of the Duke of Wellington after Comte D’Orsay, 1846.
The Duke and all his acquaintances thought that D’Orsay’s work was the best likeness of Wellington. I did, too, and so Reader, I bought it. I was smart enough to ask them to hold on to the bust until my return to London in a week’s time.  
Being that Victoria and Marilyn were still in a shopping mood, we hoofed it over to Liberty’s before meeting up with Diane for dinner at Burger Lobster in Curzon Street.  Diane had been meeting with her Mills and Boon editors in Richmond, so she had lots to tell us in between our accounts of a busy day.  Here’s her website and book info.

After a fabulous meal, Victoria and I took Diana and Marilyn on an impromptu walking tour of Mayfair, which included a stroll past Beau Brummell’s house in Chesterfield Street.
The Beau’s House, #4 Chesterfield Street, sports two blue plaques: one for the Beau (1778-1840), the other for former PM Anthony Eden, Lord Avon (1897-1977), in office 1955-57.
At the top of the street, we turned onto Charles Street, which is chock full of period architectural detail. Here is #22 Charles Street, once the home of
HRH Prince William, Duke of Clarence,
 later King William IV who reigned from 1830-37.
We walked the Regency streets for a while longer, but by this time, we were all fairly tired and so we headed back to the hotel and called it a day. And what a day it had been. Needless to say, the four of us laid our tired heads upon our pillows and looked forward to our next adventure.
More Loose in London coming soon!

LOOSE IN LONDON: THE TALE OF THE SHOES

So, the tale of Kristine’s shoes continues. If you thought, because my feet hadn’t been mentioned in the last few posts, that the problem had resolved itself, not so. I was still in pain, still bandaging my feet every morning and every eve. When last we left you, we had all been reunited with Victoria in the tea tent behind Buckingham Palace. Whilst I was glad to be reunited with Victoria, I was having a hard time keeping the grimace off my face. I had that morning decided to wear a shorter pair of black boots for our Royal Day Out, and they worked out fine – until the late afternoon, when they began to attack all the spots on my feet that hadn’t been torn to shreds previously. By the end of our day, I was in real pain.

I must say that the Royals have really got the tourist dollar thing down to a science. When you end the tour of Buckingham Palace, they see that you exit at the tea tent, which leads down a lane to a huge gift shop, which then exits you onto a path through the royal gardens behind the Palace. All of which would have been a delight if every single step wasn’t outright torture.

You’ve no idea how happy I was when we made a pit stop at the Bag O’ Nails in Buckingham Palace Road for a much needed drink.

Now, I’m skipping ahead a bit here in order to tie up the tale of the shoes and for all of us to be done with the state of my feet. If you recall, our Royal Day Out took place on the Sunday, so all shops were shut. No hope of buying an alternate, comfortable pair of shoes. Next day, Victoria, Marilyn and I visited the Soane Museum, Covent Garden, the Duke of Wellington Pub and Cecil Court, amongst other places. I promise that we’ll be covering all that in full in the near future. For now, know that at the end of that day, I made a pit stop at the Peter Jones department store in Sloane Square, just doors away from our hotel.

I was after a pair of flip flops. I’d go so far as to say that at that moment, I lusted after a pair of flip flops. Which was pretty funny actually, as I live in Florida and own numerous pairs of flip flops. In fact, as I’d been packing for this trip, a little voice in my head had encouraged me to throw a pair of flip flops into my suitcase. Don’t be daft, I’d told myself, what are you going to do with flip flops in England? Throw in another pair of boots instead. Oy vey.

But I digress (again). I took the escalator up to the shoe department only to find that the selection of summer shoes was slim, indeed. Finally, I found a too large pair of plain flip flops and grabbed at them as if they were pure gold. Eureka!

Now, these are not the exact pair I bought, but they’re close enough. Just a plain old pair of flip flops, the sort you can buy at any store in Florida for $7.99. These cost me twenty pounds – or roughly $35.00. A crime, really, but well worth the price for comfort alone.

I’d like to be able to tell you that the Tale of the Shoes ended there, but it didn’t. A few days on, when the Duke of Wellington Tour actually started, we visited Apsley House. I’d been wearing my flip flops every day since I’d bought them, but really, one can’t wear flip flops to Apsley House. It just wasn’t done, or so I thought. So I put my short, black boots on for our private tour of the house. Again, Victoria and I will be covering our visit to Apsley House and the Wellington Arch shortly, but for now you should know that I did pretty well with the boots on until we got to the striped drawing room just beyond the dining room. My feet began to yell in protest and I made a beeline to the settee you can see in the photo below.

You may recall that this is the same settee that Hubby and I had sat upon together during a previous trip when we paused to admire the Thomas Lawrence portrait of the Duke below.
Upon leaving Apsley House, we were scheduled for a private guided tour of the Wellington Arch.
We made our way through the pedestrian underpass to the Arch, when I finally took my boots off and walked the rest of the way barefoot. I hoped that the Duke wouldn’t perceive this as a mark of disrespect but, knowing how he felt about his soldiers being well shod, I took the chance that he’d appreciate my predicament.
 Across the lawn I walked, barefoot, heedless of what, exactly, I was stepping upon.
Once inside the Arch, we climbed, and climbed, and climbed to the top. Reader, I would never had made it had I still been wearing my boots.
At the top, we had a true bird’s eye view of the Guards as they made their way back to the barracks from the Palace. All went well until we reached the ground again and I discovered that the Guards, or rather their horses, had left me a few things to be avoided, especially whilst barefooted.
 Back across the grass I walked until we’d reached our tour bus, where I put my flip flops back on and left them on for the remainder of the trip. And that, dear Readers, ends the tale of my feet. And shoes. Your sympathy has been much appreciated.
More Loose In London coming soon!

ROYAL DAY OUT, PART TWO: THE QUEEN'S GALLERY

Victoria here.The second venue in our Royal Day Out was the Queen’s Gallery, actually, like the Mews, a part of the Buckingham Palace complex, and one that you may visit almost year-round.  

Below, a view of the entrance to the Queen’s Gallery when Kristine and I visited for the exhibition Victoria and Albert: Art and Love in 2010.

The First Georgians celebrated the tricentennial of the accession of the House of Hanover to the English Crown, When Queen Anne died in 1714, it had been decided that her successor would be Electress Sophia of Hanover or her issue.  Despite at least seventeen pregnancies, none of Anne’s children had survived to adulthood.  The British Parliament was determined the monarchy would not go to a Roman Catholic so they disallowed all the family of the former king, James II and the Stuarts.

Queen Anne of Great Britain and Ireland (1665-1714) c. 1702-04
by Sir Godfrey Kneller (1646-1723)
Sophia Electress of Hanover (1630 -1714)
attributed to Noel III Jouvenet
Sophia was the granddaughter of King James I.
George I of Great Britain and Ireland (1660-1727)
Studio of Sir Godfrey Kneller
To quote from the text panel, “Dressed like a Roman Emperor, the new king is represented as ‘Defender of the Faith’ ready to champion the Protestant cause.” George I never learned to speak English well and spent a great deal of time in his home state of Hanover.

Dr. Lucy Worsley’s series The First Georgians ran on the BBC in  2014.
Click here to watch.

From Dr. Worsley’s website: “The series tells the story of George I, George II and their family…  I was given access to treasures from the Royal Collection as they were prepared for a new exhibition at the Queen’s Gallery, Buckingham Palace – providing a rare and personal view of George I and his feuding dynasty.The Hanoverians arrived at a moment when Britain was changing fast. We looked at satire, gin-drinking, smallpox, the slave trade, the crushing of rebellion and the building of an empire – all at a time when Britain was embracing freedom of speech and modern cabinet government.”

Dr. Worsley, chief curator at Historic Royal Palaces, also writes of the First Georgians on her blog, here.

Two pictures above: Mirror, Table and Candle-Stand
by John Gumley and William Turing, c. 1727

George II 1683-1769, c. 1760
by Louis-Francois Roubiliac 1702-62
The Music Party: Frederick, Prince of Wales with His Three Eldest Sisters, 1733
by Philippe Mercier (1689-1760)

David Garrick with His Wife Eva-Marie Veigel c. 1757-64
by William Hogarth 1697-1764
The Queen’s Gallery was crowded with viewers, most eager to get along to the next stage of the 
Royal Day Out: Buckingham Palace.  But wait until you hear what happened to me! Remember, I am the one who insists on reading (almost) every word of every text panel along the way.

More Loose In London Coming Soon!