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Charles Dickens London Map

Explore the London of Charles Dickens

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Charles Dickens London Map The Adelphi Astley's Royal Equestrian Amphitheatre Bank of England Barnard's Inn Bayham Street Bedlam Belgrave Square Bentinck Street Bethnal Green Bevis Marks Billingsgate Bishopsgate Blackfriars Bridge Bleeding Heart Yard Bloomsbury Blackfriars Road Bond Street The Borough Borough High Street Brick Lane British Museum Buckingham Palace Buckingham Street Bull Inn Camden Town Cannon Street Cavendish Square Cecil Street Chancery Lane Charing Cross Cheapside Chelsea Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese Chester Place The City City Road Clare Market Clerkenwell Clifford's Inn Cornhill Covent Garden Crystal Palace Devonshire Terrace Doctors' Commons Thames Street 48 Doughty Street Drury Lane Fenchurch Street Finsbury Square 13 Fitzroy Street Fleet Prison Fleet Street Foundling Hospital Furnival's Inn George and Vulture George Inn Borough Market 57 Gloucester Place Golden Square 4 Gower Street North Gray's Inn Green Park Grosvenor Square Guildhall Guy's Hospital Hanover Square 3 Hanover Terrace Holborn Horsemonger Lane Gaol Houses of Parliament Hungerford Bridge Hungerford Market Hyde Park 5 Hyde Park Place 16 Hyde Park Gate Islington Jacob's Island 29 Johnson Street Kensington Kings Bench Prison Lambeth Lambeth Palace Lant Street Leadenhall Street Austin Friars Leicester Square Lincoln's Inn Fields Little Britain 37 Little College Street London Bridge Ludgate Mansion House The Marshalsea Middlesex House of Correction Millbank Millbank Penitentiary The Monument Newgate Prison 10 Norfolk Street The Obelisk 9 Osnaburgh Terrace Oxford Street Paddington Pall Mall Park Lane Paternoster Row Pentonville Piccadilly The Polygon Pool of London Portland Place Portman Square Regent's Park Regent Street Royal Exchange St Bartholomew's Hospital St George's Church St James's Hall St James's Palace St James's Park St James's Square St Lukes St Luke's Church St Paul's Cathedral St Saviour's Church Scotland Yard 11 Selwood Terrace Seven Dials Smithfield Snow Hill Soho Square 16 Somers Place Somerset House Somers Town Southwark Southwark Bridge 6 Southwark Place Spitalfields Staple Inn Strand Tavistock House The Temple Temple Bar Threadneedle Street The Tower of London Tottenham Court Road Trafalgar Square Tyburn 30 Upper Norton Street Vauxhall Bridge Vauxhall Gardens Walworth Wapping Warrens Blacking Factory Waterloo Bridge Wellington House Academy Westminster Westminster Abbey Westminster Bridge Whitechapel Whitehall Whitehall Banqueting House Windsor Terrace Aldersgate Street Barbican Warren's Blacking Factory 2 The Boot Wellington Street Essex Street Goswell Street Harley Street Hatton Garden 70 Gloucester Crescent

Additional information available at each location:

Zoom - See the selected location on maps from 1862, 1843, and 1827.

Dictionary - Description of that location taken from the 1879 Dickens's Dictionary of London by Charles Dickens Jr compiled for the web by Lee Jackson, who has also compiled The Victorian Dictionary.

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See this page for London locations listed by novel

Map last updated April 2021

Dickens London Map

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The Adelphi (Map: E-7) - Elegant housing complex along the Thames built by the Adam brothers in the 1760s and torn down in the 1930s.

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Aldersgate Street (Map: C-10) - Named for one of the gates in the City wall.

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Astley's Royal Equestrian Amphitheatre (Map: F-7) - Popular outdoor amphitheatre which mixed theatre with circus including equestrian performances. Robert Astley, who opened the theatre in 1774, is considered a pioneer of the modern circus.

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Austin Friars (Map: D-11) - Street named for a Augustinian monastery founded here in 1253. The friary was dissolved by Thomas Cromwell in 1538 and later became home to the Dutch Church.

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Bank of England (Map: D-10) - Established in 1694, and known as the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, the Bank was privately owned until 1946 when it was nationalized and came under government control.

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Barbican (Map: C-10) - Area named for an outer fortification of the City. The area was heavily damaged by German bombs in 1940.

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Barnard's Inn (Map: D-8) - One of the medieval Inns of Chancery dating back to the 13th century. In Dickens' time it had effectively become residential chambers.

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16 Bayham Street (Map: A-5) - Four-roomed house in Camden Town that the Dickens family rented for £22 a year upon their move from Chatham in 1822.

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Bedlam (Map: G-8) - Officially Bethlehem Hospital, a hospital for the insane, founded in 1247. Originally the hospital was near Bishopsgate. It moved to Moorfields in 1676, and then to Southwark in 1815. The hospital moved to its present location in Croyden in 1930. Dickens uses the term "bedlam" to describe any act of lunacy.

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Belgrave Square (Map: G-4) - Fashionable square in Belgravia, named for Lord Grosvenor who also had the title of Viscount Belgrave. Formerly a swamp filled in and developed by Thomas Cubitt in 1825.

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18 Bentinck Street (Map: D-4) - John Dickens moved his family here at the beginning of 1833 and Charles celebrated his twenty-first birthday with a party here four days after the fact on February 11, 1833.

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Bethnal Green (Map: B-13) - Area in London's east end and one of the poorest parts of the metropolis in Dickens' time.

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Bevis Marks (Map: D-11) - Street in the Aldgate ward of the City.

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Billingsgate (Map: E-11) - City Ward and London's official fish market since 1699. By the 16th century ships were becoming too large to pass under London Bridge making Billingsgate the most important harbour in the City.

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Bishopsgate (Map: D-11) - London Ward named for the northern gate in the walled medieval city. In Dickens' time the area included many coaching inns convenient to passengers travelling on the Old North Road.

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Blackfriars Bridge (Map: E-9) - Bridge over the Thames built in the late 1700's, demolished in 1863 and rebuilt in 1869. The Black Friars were Dominican monks who set up a priory in the area in 1221. The name distinguished them from the adjacent priory of Carmelite monks, the White Friars, at Bridewell.

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Blackfriars Road (Map: F-9) - Road in Southwark that runs from Blackfriars Bridge to the Obelisk. Formerly known as Great Surrey Street.

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Bleeding Heart Yard (Map: C-8) - A cobbled courtyard off Greville Street in the Farringdon area of the City of London. The courtyard is probably named after a 16th-century inn sign dating back to the Reformation that was displayed on a pub called the Bleeding Heart in nearby Charles Street. The sign showed the heart of the Virgin Mary pierced by five swords.

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Bloomsbury (Map: C-6) - Residential area of Holborn. Charles Dickens lived at Doughty Street (now the Charles Dickens Museum) here from 1837-1839 and at Tavistock House here from 1851-1860.

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Bond Street (Map: E-5) - Area of Fashionable shops in Northwest London. It is referred to in Dickens' works as a well to do area of London.

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The Boot (Map: B-7) - The original Boot tavern in Cromer Street opened in 1724 and was rebuilt in 1801.

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The Borough (Map: G-10) - Area south of London bridge in Southwark.

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Borough High Street (Map: F-10) - Major thoroughfare in Southwark and the only connection from the south bank to the City of London until Westminster Bridge was completed in 1750.

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Borough Market (Map: F-10) - May be the oldest fruit and vegetable market in London. The original market had spread to the southern end of London Bridge by 1276. By the mid 18th century the market was causing such a disruption to traffic that it was closed. The City granted the parishioners of St Saviour's church to set up a new market in a different location which still exists.

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Brick Lane (Map: C-12 ) - Street in London's East End named for local brick manufacture in the 15th century. During Dickens' time the area was home to a heavy Irish and Jewish population.

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British Museum (Map: C-7) - The collection was originally housed at Montagu House, Bloomsbury and opened in 1759 although public access was limited. The current neo-classical building was completed in 1852.

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Buckingham Palace (Map: F-5) - Built by John Sheffield, 1st duke of Buckingham, in 1703. Purchased for the royal family in 1761 by George III. It became the official London residence of the monarchy in 1837 when Queen Victoria moved there. Dickens had a private audience with the Queen at Buckingham Palace in 1870.

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Buckingham Street (Map: E-7) - Street in West London running from the Strand down towards the Thames.

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Bull Inn (Map: D-12) - Coaching Inn in Aldgate. It was at its zenith shortly before the advent of railways, when Mrs Anne Nelson, coach proprietor, was the landlady. It has been said that she could make up nearly 200 beds there, and she lodged and boarded about three dozen of her guards and coachmen. Most of her business was to Essex and Suffolk, but she also owned the Exeter coach.

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Camden Town (Map: A-6) - Rural suburb in northwest London at the start of the nineteenth century. Urban sprawl encroached first by Regent's Canal in 1816 and in the 1840s by the railroad. Dickens' family lived here in the early 1820s at 16 Bayham Street. Twelve-year-old Charles had lodging at 37 Little College Street with Mrs Roylance while his father was in prison for debt and Charles worked at Warren's Blacking Factory.

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Cannon Street (Map: D-10) - Street leading from St. Paul's-churchyard to the end of King William-street. Its construction relieved Cheapside of the greater part of the heavy traffic.

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Cavendish Square (Map: D-5) - Fashionable square in West London. Developed by John Prince beginning in 1717.

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Cecil Street (Map: E-7) - Former street leading from the Strand down to the river. A young Charles Dickens took lodgings in Cecil Street briefly in 1832 while working as a parliamentary reporter.

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Chancery Lane (Map: D-8) - London street associated with the legal profession. In Dickens' time Chancery cases were heard at Lincoln's Inn Hall off Chancery lane.

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Charing Cross (Map: E-6) - District of London named for the last of the stone crosses erected by Edward I in 1291 to mark the stops of Queen Eleanor's funeral procession from Nottinghamshire to Westminster Abbey. The original Charing Cross was taken down and demolished during the English Civil War in the 1640s. An equestrian statue of Charles has stood on the spot since 1675. The present Eleanor Cross was erected in 1865 a little ways down the Strand from the original.

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Cheapside (Map: D-10) - Medieval London's shopping district, ceap was Old English for market.

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Chelsea (Map: H-4) - Residential area of West London where Dickens married Catherine Hogarth in 1836.

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Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese (Map: D-9) - This charming little pub was frequented by Dickens. The present building dates from 1667 when it was rebuilt after the Great Fire.

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1 Chester Place (Map: B-5) - Elegant address on the east side of Regent's Park. Dickens and Catherine came from Paris and took lodging here for three months in 1847 while 10-year-old Charley recuperated from scarlet fever.

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The City (Map: E-10) - Area of London comprising the walled Medieval city, most of which was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666. In Dickens' time the City was evolving from a residential area to a banking and finance center, the former residents moving to the western and northern suburbs and commuting to the City as mass transportation was introduced.

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City Road (Map: B-9) - Road, built in 1761, that enters central London from the north.

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Clare Market (Map: D-7) - Primarily a meat market in a very poor area of London. The market dated from 1657 and the area was razed in the early 1900s to make way for Aldwych and Kingsway.

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Clerkenwell (Map: B-8) - Suburb in North London urbanized in the 1700s and a center for clock and watch makers. It is home to Charter House, a historic school and hospital, founded in 1611 and originally a Carthusian monastery.

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Clifford's Inn (Map: D-8) - Clifford's Inn was previously an Inn of Chancery. Founded in 1344 and dissolved in 1903, most of its original structure was demolished in 1934. It was both the first Inn of Chancery to be founded and the last to be demolished.

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Cornhill (Map: D-11) - Well-known thouroughfare in The City named for a corn market once held there. Cornhill is the highest hill in the City.

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Covent Garden (Map: E-7) - District of London named for a fruit, vegetable and flower market designed by Inigo Jones in 1632. The Covent Garden Theatre is located here.

Dickens description of Covent Garden in Martin Chuzzlewit where Tom Pinch and his sister Ruth enjoy frequent walks: Many and many a pleasant stroll they had in Covent-Garden Market: snuffing up the perfume of the fruits and flowers, wondering at the magnificence of the pine-apples and melons; catching glimpses down side-avenues, of rows and rows of old women, seated on inverted baskets shelling peas; looking unutterable things at the fat bundles of asparagus with which the dainty shops were fortified as with a breastwork; and, at the herbalists’ doors, gratefully inhaling scents as of veal-stuffing yet uncooked, dreamily mixed up with capsicums, brown-paper, seeds: even with hints of lusty snails and fine young curly leeches. Many and many a pleasant stroll they had among the poultry markets, where ducks and fowls, with necks unnaturally long, lay stretched out in pairs, ready for cooking; where there were speckled eggs in mossy baskets; white country sausages beyond impeachment by surviving cat or dog, or horse or donkey; new cheeses to any wild extent; live birds in coops and cages, looking much too big to be natural, in consequence of those receptacles being much too little; rabbits, alive and dead, innumerable. Many a pleasant stroll they had among the cool, refreshing, silvery fish-stalls, with a kind of moonlight effect about their stock in trade, excepting always for the ruddy lobsters. Many a pleasant stroll among the waggon-loads of fragrant hay, beneath which dogs and tired waggoners lay fast asleep, oblivious of the pieman and the public-house.

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Crystal Palace (Map: F-3) - The exhibition hall built in Hyde Park by Joseph Paxton for the Great Exhibition of 1851. The exhibition was the idea of Prince Albert, who conceived it to celebrate the Industrial Revolution. Dickens visited the Exhibition in 1851. The Crystal Palace was moved to Sydenham, in south London, in 1854 and accidentally burned down in 1936.

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Devonshire Terrace (Map: C-5) - Dickens home from 1839 to 1851 located opposite the York Gate entrance to Regent's Park. Five of Dickens' children were born here. The house was destroyed in 1960.

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Doctors' Commons (Map: E-9) - The College of the Doctors of the Law, founded in the thirteenth century and received a Royal charter in 1768 with headquarters near St Paul's Cathedral. Dickens had an office here when he was a reporter. The College was abolished in 1858 and the building was demolished in 1867.

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48 Doughty Street (Map: C-8) - Dickens' home from 1837 to 1839. Dickens' early fame allowed him to take a three year lease here. His beloved sister-in-law, Mary, died here. The home was purchased by The Dickens Fellowship and was opened to the public as the Dickens House Museum in 1925. It operates today as the Charles Dickens Museum.

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Drury Lane (Map: D-7) - London street named for Sir Robert Drury who built a mansion on the lane in 1500. The Drury Lane Theatre is located here. In Dickens' time Drury Lane was a slum known for prostitution and gin palaces.

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Essex Street (Map: E-8) - Street off of the Strand built about 1680 on the site of Essex House which was once the Outer Temple of the Knights Templar. It ran to the river ending at Temple Pier before the construction of the Victoria Embankment.

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Fenchurch Street (Map: E-11) - Ancient street in the City of London, first mentioned as Fancherche Street in 1276.

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Finsbury Square (Map: C-11) - Square designed by George Dance the Younger and others 1777-91. Said to be the first public place where gas lighting was permanently installed.

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13 Fitzroy Street (Map: C-5) - Charles Dickens briefly moved back in with his parents here in 1834 after a brief period of living on his own at Cecil Street.

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Fleet Prison (Map: D-8) - The oldest of London's prisons, built in 1197 on the bank of the Fleet river. Used as a debtor's prison in Dickens' time, in use until 1842, it was demolished in 1846.

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Fleet Street (Map: D-8) - Situated between The City and Whitehall. Fleet Street was home to London's newspapers and, working as a young reporter, Dickens was well acquainted with this area.

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Foundling Hospital (Map: C-7) - Orphanage established in 1739 by Captain Thomas Coram, retired merchant seaman.

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Furnival's Inn (Map: C-8) - One of the Inns of Court, its use as a legal community was discontinued in 1818 and the buildings were rented out as chambers. Dickens moved into dilapidated chambers at 13 Furnival's Inn, with his younger brother Frederick, in December 1834. In anticipation of his marriage to Catherine Hogarth Dickens took larger quarters at 15 Furnival's Inn until the young couple, along with Frederick and sister-in-law Mary Hogarth, moved to 48 Doughty Street in April 1837. Most of Pickwick Papers was written here.

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George and Vulture Inn (Map: D-11) Historic pub off Lombard Street and still operating today. There has been an inn on this site since 1142.

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George Inn (Map: F-10) Last of the galleried coaching inns that dotted Borough High Street in Dickens' time. In the era before the coming of the railroad (1830s) coaching inns offered food, drink, and warmth to travellers coming into London by coach. It is supposed that Shakespeare appeared in plays which were a frequent attraction in the yards of these inns.

In Pickwick Papers Dickens describes these old coaching inns: "In the Borough especially, there still remain some half-dozen old inns, which have preserved their external features unchanged, and which have escaped alike the rage for public improvement and the encroachments of private speculation. Great, rambling queer old places they are, with galleries, and passages, and staircases, wide enough and antiquated enough to furnish materials for a hundred ghost stories, supposing we should ever be reduced to the lamentable necessity of inventing any, and that the world should exist long enough to exhaust the innumerable veracious legends connected with old London Bridge, and its adjacent neighbourhood on the Surrey side."

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57 Gloucester Place (Map: D-3) Street built in 1810 and named for William, Duke of Gloucester, brother of George III. Charles Dickens took lodgings here for the "London Season" in 1864 while working on Our Mutual Friend.

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70 Gloucester Crescent (Map: A-5) House taken by Catherine Dickens after her separation from Charles in 1857. In her book The Other Dickens, Lillian Nayder describes it as "more modest than either Devonshire Terrace or Tavistock House, but for a middle class household of four—Catherine, Charley, and two live-in servants—it was spacious enough" (Nayder, 2011, p. 257).

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Golden Square (Map: E-5) Once fashionable square in London's West End that was in decline in Dickens' time.

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Goswell Street (Map: C-9) Follows the path of an ancient road leading from the City to the north.

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4 Gower Street North (Map: C-6) The Dickens family moved here just after Christmas 1823 when Charles was eleven years old. As John Dickens descent into debt continued his wife, Elizabeth, decided to open a school for girls here. Charles remembered a plaque being affixed to the street door that read "Mrs Dickens Establishment." He also recollected that ...nobody ever came to the school, nor do I recollect that anybody ever proposed to come, or that the least preparation was made to receive anybody. On February 9, 1824, two days after his twelfth birthday, Charles began work, pasting labels on bottles of boot-black, at Warren's Blacking Factory to help support the family.

Finally, John Dickens' financial difficulties came to a head and he was imprisoned in the Marshalsea debtors' prison on February 20, 1824. For a short while the rest of the family remained at Gower Street but in early April Elizabeth took the younger children and went to live her husband in the Marshalsea. Charles older sister, Fanny, was still enrolled at the Royal Academy of Music and Charles was sent to live with a family friend, Mrs Roylance, on Little College Street in Camden Town.

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Gray's Inn (Map: C-8) - One of the four Inns of Court, Dickens was a solicitor's clerk here in 1828.

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Green Park (Map: F-5) - One of the royal parks, officially the property of the Royal Family. Originally part of the grounds of St. James Palace.

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Grosvenor Square (Map: E-4) - The heart of the Grosvenor family's Mayfair Estate, this area was the center of London high society for over two centuries.

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Guildhall (Map: D-10) - Ceremonial and administrative center of the City of London. The present building was completed in 1440. It was damaged in the Great Fire of London in 1666 and restored, it was damaged again during a Luftwaffe strike in 1940 and again restored.

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Guy's Hospital (Map: F-11) - Teaching hospital in Southwark endowed by wealthy printer and publisher Thomas Guy (1645-1724) and built in 1721-24.

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Hanover Square (Map: D-5) - Developed soon after the elector of Hanover (Germany) accended to the throne as George I in 1714. Development of the square was swift due to a building boom in London's West End in the 1720s. The fashionable church of St George is adjacent to the square.

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3 Hanover Terrace (Map: B-3) - Posh development overlooking Regent's Park and designed by John Nash in 1822. In early 1861 Dickens took number 3, a "really delightful house" for the London Season.

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Harley Street (Map: C-4) - Known since the middle of the 19th century for its large number of medical offices.

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Hatton Garden (Map: C-8) - Named for Sir Christopher Hatton, Chancellor for Elizabeth I, the area is famous for being the center of London's jewelry, precious metal, and diamond trade.

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Holborn (Map: C-8) - Area of London named for a thoroughfare running from Tottenham Ct. Road to Newgate.

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Horsemonger Lane Gaol (Map: G-10) - Prison in Southwark completed in 1799 and in use until 1878. Dickens witnessed the execution of the Mannings here in 1849.

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Houses of Parliament (Map: G-7) - The old Houses of Parliament burned down in 1834 and were housed in temporary structures until the present Houses were completed in 1860. Dickens worked as a parliamentary reporter 1831-36.

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Hungerford Bridge (Map: E-7) - An elegant footbridge, designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, opened in 1845 to serve Hungerford Market. It was replaced by a railway bridge designed by Sir John Hawkshaw to serve the new station at Charing Cross. The new bridge, considered the worst eyesore in London, opened in 1864.

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Hungerford Market (Map: E-7) - Built in 1682 by Sir Edward Hungerford the market was meant to rival Covent Garden. Hungerford Stairs led from the market down to the river. The market was rebuilt in 1833 and demolished in 1860 to make way for the Charing Cross Railway Station.

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Hyde Park (Map: E-3) - The largest of the London parks, Hyde Park was once a royal deer park enclosed by Henry VIII. It was opened to the public in the early 17th century. Its famous bridle path, Rotten Row, and man-made lake, The Serpentine, are among its most popular attractions. The Great Exhibition was held here in 1851.

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16 Hyde Park Gate (Map: F-1) - Fashionable address where Dickens took temporary residence in February 1862 while doing public readings in London so that his daughter Mamie and sister-in-law Georgina could be in town for the season. In a letter to his friend W.F. De Cerjat Dickens reveals his feelings for the house: "Behold me therefore, established in an odious little London box, which I so thoroughly detest abominate and abjure that I have not settled down to write one word until this very day."

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5 Hyde Park Place (Map: D-3) Charles Dickens took lodgings here overlooking Hyde Park in early 1870 so that his daughter Mary could be in town for the "London Season" and to prevent his having to travel by railroad between London and Gads Hill while he finished the last of his farewell readings at St James's Hall. With his health deteriorating rapidly he was writing The Mystery of Edwin Drood here.

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Islington (Map: A-9) - Suburb in north London which expanded greatly during the nineteenth century due in part to the railroad and Regent's Canal that passes through this area. Islington sits on a hill that has long supplied London with water.

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Jacob's Island (Map: F-12) - Notorious slum next to the river in Bermondsey, the area was redeveloped in the 1860s. In Oliver Twist Dickens describes the area: In such a neighborhood, beyond Dockhead in the Borough of Southwark, stands Jacob's Island, surrounded by a muddy ditch, six or eight feet deep and fifteen or twenty wide when the tide is in, once called Mill Pond, but known in the days of this story as Folly Ditch. It is a creek or inlet from the Thames, and can always be filled at high water by opening the sluices at the Lead Mills from which it took its old name.

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29 Johnson Street (Map: A-6) - House in Somers Town where the Dickens family moved in late 1824. Charles Dickens continued to work at Warren's Blacking Factory and later attended school at Wellington House Academy while living here. The family was evicted for nonpayment of rent in 1827 and lived briefly at The Polygon but were soon back in Johnson Street where they remained until 1829. It was in this house that John Langstaff established the David Copperfield Library, supplying books to the poor children in the area, in the early 1900s. The house was demolished in 1932 and the street is now named Cranleigh Street.

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Kensington (Map: G-1) - Fashionable suburb in west London.

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The Kings Bench Prison (Map: F-10) - Debtor's prison in Southwark built in 1758 to replace a medieval prison. It was renamed the Queen's Bench Prison in 1842, closed in the 1870s, and demolished in 1880.

Dickens describes the Rules of the King's Bench in Nicholas Nickleby: The place to which Mr Cheeryble had directed him was a row of mean and not over-cleanly houses, situated within 'the Rules' of the King's Bench Prison, and not many hundred paces distant from the obelisk in St George's Fields. The Rules are a certain liberty adjoining the prison, and comprising some dozen streets in which debtors who can raise money to pay large fees, from which their creditors do not derive any benefit, are permitted to reside by the wise provisions of the same enlightened laws which leave the debtor who can raise no money to starve in jail, without the food, clothing, lodging, or warmth, which are provided for felons convicted of the most atrocious crimes that can disgrace humanity. There are many pleasant fictions of the law in constant operation, but there is not one so pleasant or practically humorous as that which supposes every man to be of equal value in its impartial eye, and the benefits of all laws to be equally attainable by all men, without the smallest reference to the furniture of their pockets.

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Lambeth (Map: H-7) - Slum district of river warehouses across the river from Westminster.

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Lambeth Palace (Map: G-7) - The official residence of the archbishop of Canterbury.

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Lant Street (Map: F-10) - Street in the Borough where 12-year-old Dickens had lodgings in a rented attic while his father was in the Marshalsea prison for debt.

Dickens describes Lant Street in Pickwick Papers: There is a repose about Lant Street, in the Borough, which sheds a gentle melancholy upon the soul. There are always a good many houses to let in the street: it is a by-street too, and its dulness is soothing. A house in Lant Street would not come within the denomination of a first-rate residence, in the strict acceptation of the term; but it is a most desirable spot nevertheless. If a man wished to abstract himself from the world--to remove himself from within the reach of temptation--to place himself beyond the possibility of any inducement to look out of the window--we should recommend him by all means go to Lant Street.

Lant Street photographed in 1935 for MGM Studios in preparation for filming the 1935 film David Copperfield.

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Leadenhall Street (Map: D-11) - Street and market in the City.

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Leicester Square (Map: E-6) - Square laid out in the late 17th century (pronounced les-ter square). In Dickens' time it contained an equestrian Statue of George I which was removed in the late 19th century after being vandalized.

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Lincolns Inn Fields (Map: D-8) - Designed by William Newton in the early 1600's as a compromise between the lawyers of Lincoln's Inn and developers wanting to build in the area. Newton was allowed to build around the perimeter of the Fields as long as the central part remained forever open.

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Little Britain (Map: D-9) - London street situated just outside London Wall. In Dickens' time the street was mainly home to goldsmiths and clothiers.

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37 Little College Street (Map: A-6) - Street in Camden Town. In 1824 twelve-year-old Charles Dickens lived here with Mrs Roylance, a friend of the family, while his father, John Dickens, was imprisoned for debt at the Marshalsea Prison and Charles worked at Warren's Blacking Factory. He spent Sundays with the family in the Marshalsea. For a time after John Dickens' release from prison the entire family lived here. Mrs Roylance became the model for Mrs Pipchin in Dombey and Son.

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London Bridge (Map: E-11) - Until 1750 London Bridge was the only bridge over the Thames in London. A bridge at this site dates from Roman times. The first stone London Bridge was built in 1176. This bridge eventually had houses, shops, and a church built upon it until they were removed in 1763. In 1831 it was replaced by a granite bridge designed by John Rennie. The Rennie London Bridge was replaced in 1972 and Rennie's bridge was dismantled and rebuilt in Lake Havasu, Arizona. One of the arches of the Rennie London Bridge still supports the southern end of the current London Bridge (photos).

London Bridge is one of the most often-mentioned locations in Dickens' work. We will list a few examples:

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Ludgate (Map: D-9) - Hill and street named for a gate in the medieval city's wall (removed in 1780) where Fleet Street joins the City. London's first daily newspaper, the Daily Courant, began publication near Ludgate in 1702 thus Fleet Street became the home of London's press.

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Mansion House (Map: D-10) - Official residence of London's Lord Mayor. Built in the mid 18th century by George Dance the Elder. In Dickens' time it also housed a police court over which, as chief magistrate, the Lord Mayor presided and contained holding cells for prisoners.

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The Marshalsea (Map: F-10) - Debtor's prison in Southwark where Dickens' father was imprisoned in 1824. The prison dates from medieval times and was closed in 1842.

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Middlesex House of Correction (Map: C-8) - Founded in the early 17th century, the prison was rebuilt in 1794 and extended in 1850. It principally housed minor offenders with sentences ranging from one week to three years.

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Millbank (Map: H-6) - Area along the north side of the Thames south of Westminster.

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Millbank Penitentiary (Map: H-6) - The Millbank Peniteniary was built between 1812 and 1828, it closed in 1890 and was demolished two years later. Today the Tate Britain museum stands on this spot.

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The Monument (Map: E-11) - 200 foot high Doric column on Fish Street Hill, designed by Christopher Wren, marking the site of the origin of the devastating fire that destroyed much of London in September, 1666.

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Newgate Prison (Map: D-9) - Notorious London prison originally built at the new gate in the Medieval city's wall. It was the site of public executions in the 19th century. The prison was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666 and rebuilt. It was destroyed again during the Gordon Riots of 1780 and rebuilt. New thinking in the way of the correction of prisoners in the early nineteenth century spelled the decline of Newgate. From 1850 it was used primarily to hold prisoners awaiting trial or execution. Newgate was sold to the City of London in 1898 for £40,000 and was demolished in 1902. The Old Bailey, London's Central Criminal Court located next door to the prison, was expanded on the site. For more information see Newgate - London's Prototype of Hell by Stephen Halliday

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10 Norfolk Street (Now Cleveland Street) (Map: C-5) - Charles' family lived here from 1814 to 1816, while Charles was from two to four years old. The family lived here, over a greengrocer's shop, a second time in the early 1830s. Charles gave this as his residence when he applied for a reader's ticket at the British Museum in 1830. The building survives as 22 Cleveland Street.

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The Obelisk (Map: G-9) - London landmark which stands in the center of St. George's Circus in Southwark. It was moved to a park in front of the Imperial War Museum in 1905 but was returned to its original location in the late 1990s.

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9 Osnaburgh Terrace (Map: B-5) - In anticipation of the family's year-long trip to Italy Dickens rented out his home at Devonshire Terrace and took temporary lodgings here from the end of May until the departure for Italy in early July 1844.

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Oxford Street (Map: D-4) - A residential street in Dickens' time, development beginning in the early 18th century when fields in the area were purchased by the Earl of Oxford.

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Paddington (Map: C-1) - Area of west London which saw a surge in development after the opening of the Grand Junction Canal in 1801. Paddington Railway Station opened in 1838 and the first underground line, the Metropolitan, opened in 1863.

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Pall Mall (Map: E-6) - Broad, elegant street known for fashionable residences and gentlemen's clubs. It derives its name from the Italian ball games played by Charles II.

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Park Lane (Map: E-4) - Unremarkable street along Hyde Park's east edge until the 1820s when a high brick wall along the park was replaced with iron railings and old terrace houses were remodeled or replaced making the street one of the most fashionable in London.

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Paternoster Row (Map: D-9) - Long the center of London's publishing and bookselling trade.

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Pentonville (Map: A-7) - During Dickens' time a new and fashionable area of north London. Developed by Henry Penton, a member of the House of Commons from 1761 to 1796 who owned an estate in the area.

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Piccadilly (Map: F-4) - London street in the West End. Named for a 17th century tailor who had a shop there and made high ruff collars called piccadillies.

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The Polygon (Map: B-6) - Fifteen-sided three-story building comprising 32 homes in Somers Town. The Dickens family had lodgings at number 17 briefly in 1827 after being evicted from 29 Johnson Street.

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Pool of London (Map: E-11) - Dock area below London Bridge, farthest point upriver navigable by large ships.

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Portland Place (Map: C-5) - Wide, grand street laid out by Robert and James Adam about 1778 and named for the Duke of Portland.

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Portman Square (Map: D-4) - Square built between 1765 and 1784 on land belonging to Henry William Portman.

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Regent's Park (Map: B-4) - London suburb laid out by John Nash (1752-1835) in 1811 during the Regency period. George III, incapacitated by mental illness in 1810, was replaced by his son (called the prince regent), later George IV. The period between 1810 and 1820, when George III died, became known as the Regency period. The Zoological Gardens opened in Regent's Park in 1828.

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Regent Street (Map: D-5)- Fashionable street built between 1813 and 1819, during the Regency period and designed by John Nash.

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Royal Exchange (Map: D-11) - Referred to as Change, it was the meeting and bartering place for the merchants in the City. The present building dates from 1840.

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St Bartholomew's Hospital (Map: D-9) - Founded in 1123, "St Bart's" is London's oldest hospital.

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St George's Church (Map: F-10) - Officially St. George the Martyr, this is believed to be the third church built on this site. The present building dates from the 1730s.

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St James's Hall (Map: E-6) - Concert hall designed by Owen Jones and opened in March 1858. Famous for being the home of the Christy Minstrels. The hall was demolished in 1905.

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St James's Palace (Map: F-5) - Built during the reign of Henry VIII and designed by Hans Holbien the Younger. Became the official residence of the monarchy after a fire destroyed Whitehall palace in 1698. It remained the official royal residence until 1837 when Queen Victoria moved to Buckingham Palace.

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St James's Park (Map: F-6) - Originally part of the grounds of St James's Palace. The park was landscaped for public use in 1829 by John Nash.

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St James's Square (Map: E-6) - Laid out in the 1660's on land owned by Henry Jermyn, Earl of St. Albans. The land was given to the Earl by Charles II after the Restoration because Jermyn had remained loyal during Charles' exile.

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St Lukes (Map: B-10) - St Luke's Lunatic Asylum was founded in 1751. The patients were transferred to other institutions in 1916 and the buildings sold to the Bank of England and used to print bank notes. The building was demolished in 1963.

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St Luke's Church (Map: H-2) - Stone church built in the 1820s and designed by James Savage. A spire was planned but never built. Charles Dickens married Catherine Hogarth here on April 2, 1836.

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St Paul's Cathedral (Map: D-9) - Long the focal point of the London skyline, the present St. Paul's Cathedral, built by Sir Christopher Wren from 1675 to 1711, replaced the old gothic cathedral which burned in the Great Fire of 1666. St. Paul's is part of the background scenery in many of Dickens' works.

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St Saviour's Church (Map: E-10) - Second oldest Gothic church in London after Westminster Abbey, it dates from the 12th century. The church achieved cathedral status, becoming Southwark Cathedral, in 1905. William Shakespeare's brother Edmund is buried here.

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Scotland Yard (Map: E-7) - Home of the London's Metropolitan Police, created by Sir Robert Peel in 1829. Named for a Medieval palace on this site in Whitehall reserved for visiting kings and queens of Scotland.

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11 Selwood Terrace (Map: H-1) - Dickens took lodgings here for six months in 1835 to be near his fiance Catherine Hogarth, paying rents both here and at Furnival's Inn (Ackroyd, 1990, p. 171).

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Seven Dials (Map: D-7) - Infamous slum and criminal district where seven streets converge at St. Giles.

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Smithfield (Map: C-9) - London's live cattle market. Cattle were driven through the streets until the mid 19th century. The market was moved to slaughterhouses in Islington in 1855. Smithfield was also the site of the annual Bartholomew's Fair from the 1600's until 1855.

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Snow Hill (Map: D-9) - Steep and busy street leading from Holborn down to Farringdon Street.

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Soho Square (Map: D-6) - Area in West London that changed from farmland into a royal park during the reign of Henry VIII and developed into an area of fashionable homes in the late 1600s. Soho transitioned into an entertainment district during the 19th century.

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16 Somers Place (Map: D-2) Charles Dickens took lodgings here in March 1865 for the "London Season" while working on Our Mutual Friend and suffering from severe pain in his left leg and foot that would plague him for the rest of his life.

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Somerset House (Map: E-8) - Originally built in 1550 and was once a royal residence. It was demolished in 1775 and rebuilt, completed in 1836 to house government offices. Dickens' father and uncle were employed there.

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Somers Town (Map: B-6) - Suburb in the north of London with a large population of Spanish refugees. The Dickens family lived for a short time in The Polygon in Somers Town in 1827.

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Southwark (Map: F-9) - District south of the Thames which includes the Borough. Southwark (pronounced suth-uck) was the scene of dense riverside warehouses and slums in Dickens' time.

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Southwark Bridge (Map: E-10) - Designed by John Rennie, built in 1815-1819 and replaced in 1912. Sometimes referred to as Iron Bridge, the bridge was referred to in Dickens as a quiet place due to the fact that crossing required payment of a penny toll whereas nearby London and Blackfriars bridges had no toll.

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6 Southwark Place (Map: D-2) Charles Dickens took lodgings here in the spring of 1866 for the "London Season." According to Peter Ackroyd, in his biography Dickens, it was no coincidence that Southwark Place was just around the corner from Somers Place where he had rented the year before. This area, know as Tybernia because of its proximity to the old Tyburn gallows, was considered to be one of the healthiest parts of London (Ackroyd, 1990, p. 973).

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Spitalfields (Map: D-12) - Area east of the city named for the Priory and hospital of St Mary Spital. The area was resettled in the 17th century by French Huguenot refugees (protestants persecuted in France) who established a silk weaving industry there.

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Staple Inn (Map: D-8) - One of the medieval Inns of Chancery dating back to the 12th century. Although heavily damaged during WWII the building survives to the present day. Dickens describes Staple Inn in The Mystery of Edwin Drood: Behind the most ancient part of Holborn, London, where certain gabled houses some centuries of age still stand looking on the public way, as if disconsolately looking for the Old Bourne that has long run dry, is a little nook composed of two irregular quadrangles, called Staple Inn. It is one of those nooks, the turning into which out of the clashing street, imparts to the relieved pedestrian the sensation of having put cotton in his ears, and velvet soles on his boots. It is one of those nooks where a few smoky sparrows twitter in smoky trees, as though they called to one another, ‘Let us play at country,’ and where a few feet of garden-mould and a few yards of gravel enable them to do that refreshing violence to their tiny understandings. Moreover, it is one of those nooks which are legal nooks; and it contains a little Hall, with a little lantern in its roof: to what obstructive purposes devoted, and at whose expense, this history knoweth not.

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Strand (Map: E-7) - Wide thoroughfare that connects Westminster to Fleet Street and the City. As a child Dickens worked at Warren's Blacking factory at Hungerford stairs in the west side of the Strand. As a young man he worked for several publications that had offices in this area. Later the offices of Household Words and All the Year Round, his weekly journals, were located in Wellington Street in the Strand.

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Tavistock House (Map:B-6) - Dickens' home from 1851 to 1860 located at Tavistock Square. While living here Dickens and his wife, Catherine, separated. He purchased Gads Hill Place, near Rochester, in 1856 and for four years maintained both residences. Tavistock House was demolished in 1901.

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The Temple (Map: D-8) - Legal district in London originally occupied by the Knights Templar, who protected pilgrims on their journey to the Holy Land. The Temple consists of two Inns of Court, Inner Temple and Middle Temple, with Temple Church between them. In Dickens' time the Temple included residential accommodation.

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Temple Bar (Map: D-8) - Archway, designed by Wren, used to mark the border between the City and Westminster where Fleet Street becomes the Strand. The heads of executed criminals once announced their example from pikes on Temple Bar. The archway caused major traffic congestion and was removed in 1878. It now stands in Paternoster Square near St Paul's Cathedral.

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Thames Street (Map: E-10) - Street running along the river in the City from Blackfriars Bridge to the Tower of London.

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Threadneedle Street (Map: D-11) - Street in The City whose main feature is the Bank of England, known as "The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street".

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The Tower of London (Map: E-12) - Built on the site of Roman fortifications, the central part of the Tower, known as the White Tower, was built in 1078 by William the Conqueror. Subsequent rings of fortification were added later. It was used as a royal residence as well as a prison and place of execution until Elizabethan times. England's child king, Edward V, and his brother were murdered in the Tower in 1483 supposedly by their uncle, Richard III. The crown jewels are guarded here by the Beefeaters.

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Tottenham Court Road (Map: D-6) - Street running north from St Giles Circus. A market street in Dickens' time.

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Trafalgar Square (Map: E-6) - Created during the 1830's and 1840's the Square replaced the royal stables. It is named for the Spanish cape Trafalgar. It was off this cape that Admiral Nelson defeated the Spanish and French fleets in 1805. Nelson's Column, at the Square, commemorates this victory.

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Tyburn (Map: D-3) - Place of public execution until 1783. Prisoners were conveyed, often accompanied by merry-making from crowds along the route, in carts down Oxford Street from Newgate Prison. After 1783 executions were carried out at either Newgate Prison or Horsemonger Lane Gaol.

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30 Upper Norton Street (Map: C-5) - Now called Bolsover Street. With the birth of their son Charley the Dickens family had outgrown their chambers at Furnival's Inn. Dickens rented temporary lodgings at 30 Upper Norton Street during March of 1837 until the family took possession of their new home at 48 Doughty Street in early April.

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Vauxhall Bridge (Map: H-7) - A cast iron bridge built in 1811 and was originally called Regent's Bridge. It was replaced in 1906.

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Vauxhall Gardens (Map: H-7) - Fashionable garden resort of the 18th and early 19th centuries. Jonathon Tyers made extensive improvements in the gardens in the early 1700's and it became one of London's favorite public attractions. Concerts, plays, and even fireworks entertained the crowds there. By the mid 1800's the park had fallen out of favor and drew more disreputable crowds. The gardens were closed in 1859.

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Walworth (Map: H-10) - Area of south London popular for the Surrey Zoological Gardens from the 1830s. Competition from the Crystal Palace in the 1850s caused a decrease in popularity and the animals and gardens were auctioned off in 1856. The Surrey Gardens Music Hall, which could accommodate 12,000 people, was built on the site.

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Wapping (Map: F-13) - East London riverside district, home of the London Docks built between 1800 and 1820.

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Warren's Blacking Factory (Map: E-7) - Boot polish factory where 12-year-old Dickens was sent to work, fixing labels to bottles of blacking, to help support his family while his father was in the Marshalsea debtor's prison. Dickens had dreams of becoming a gentleman and was humiliated to be working with the rough men and boys at the factory. The experience had a major impact on Dickens later life and works and also on his relationship with his mother who, after Charles left the factory as the result of a quarrel between his father and the owners of the factory, argued unsuccessfully to have him sent back. Warren's Blacking Factory was located at 30 Hungerford Stairs, the Strand. A ferry operated at the stairs until 1845 when Hungerford foot bridge opened , hoping to spur trade at Hungerford Market. The market was torn down in 1860 to make way for Charing Cross railway station and the footbridge was replaced by a railway bridge in 1863. The railway company argued that few people used the footbridge due to the smell from the river.

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Warren's Blacking Factory 2 (Map: E-7) - During Dickens' time at the boot-blacking factory the establishment moved from Hungerford Stairs to this location on Bedford Street. At this location 12-year-old Charles was forced to perform his duties before a window opened to the public street, humiliating him further. After John Dickens was released from the Marshalsea he happened to pass this window and see his son at work which led to Charles being taken from the factory and returned to school...although his mother was "warm for his being sent back."

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Waterloo Bridge (Map: E-8) - Designed by John Rennie, Waterloo Bridge opened in 1817. Originally to be named Strand Bridge, the name was changed to commemorate Wellington's victory over Napoleon in 1815 at Waterloo. It was demolished in 1939 and was replaced in 1945 by a bridge designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott.

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Wellington House Academy (Map: A-5) - Charles Dickens was enrolled here after leaving the Blacking Factory and while living in Johnson Street. The school was run by stern headmaster William Jones who would later be immortalized as Creakle of Salem House Academy in David Copperfield. Dickens attended the school for two years roughly 1824-26.

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Wellington Street (Map: D-7) - Built in 1833-35 over the site of the English Opera House which burned down in 1830. The Northern section was originally name Charles Street after Charles I, it was renamed in 1844. Editorial offices for Dickens' weekly magazine All the Year Round were located at number 26 (formerly 11). Dickens kept an apartment over the office during the 1860s following his separation from his wife Catherine. The building now houses the Charles Dickens Coffee House.

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Westminster (Map: G-5) - Originally the city of Westminster before London expanded during the 19th century and absorbed it. Whitehall, St James's Palace, Buckingham Palace, and Westminster Abbey are located here.

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Westminster Abbey (Map: F-6) - The most famous of England's churches. Originally built by Edward the Confessor in 1050, the abbey was rebuilt in its present Gothic style starting in 1245. Henry VII added his Chapel shortly before his death in 1509. England's monarchs since William the Conqueror in 1066 have been crowned here. Many of England's kings and queens are buried at Westminster Abbey as are many of its famous citizens including Chaucer, Newton, and Darwin. Charles Dickens was buried in Poet's Corner, in the Abbey on June 14, 1870.

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Westminster Bridge (Map: F-7) - Westminster Bridge was the second bridge over the Thames, after London Bridge. Built of stone, work began in 1739 and was completed in 1750. This bridge was replaced in 1862.

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Whitechapel (Map: D-13) - City located outside the walled city at Aldgate. Named for the whitewashed Chapel of Ease that became a parish church in 1320. Noted for many coaching inns to accommodate travelers in Dickens' time. It was later made famous for the Jack the Ripper murders.

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Whitehall (Map: F-6) - Thoroughfare through Westminster named for the royal palace built here in 1532 by Henry VIII. The prime minister's residence of number 10 Downing street and other government offices are located here.

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Whitehall Banqueting House (Map: F-7) - Designed by Inigo Jones in 1622 and featuring ceiling paintings by Peter Paul Rubens, it survived a fire that destroyed much of Whitehall in 1698. Charles I was beheaded on a scaffold in front of the building in January 1649.

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Windsor Terrace (Map: B-10) - Street off of City Road in north London.

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Notes:

1 - Drawings of old London by Philip Norman. Victoria and Albert Museum. Dept. of Engraving, Illustration, and Design,Norman, Philip, 1842-1931



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