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Hunt Column: London-Getting Aquainted!

Mountain Media, LLC by Mountain Media, LLC
April 17, 2024
in Local Stories, Opinion
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By Jim Hunt for the News and Journal

Landing at Heathrow Airport around 8:00AM, we gathered our luggage and headed out

to find a cab, or hackney, as it is called on that side of the pond. Lined up outside the

terminal was several black cabs and the driver jumped out and started to help us with

our luggage. The unique cars are very common in London and any movie or news story

about the city will inevitably have either a red double decker bus or a black cab in the

background. We made our way to the hotel about 9:30AM and checked our luggage

with the clerk, as our room would not be ready until around 3:00PM. The hotel was still

serving breakfast and we enjoyed our first meal in England at the breakfast buffet and it

was delicious.

 

We ventured out to do a few hours of sightseeing before getting into our room and our

first stop was the Waterloo Train Station. The station was opened in 1848 and rebuilt in

  1. Serving over 55 million passengers in 2023, the station is a busy hub of activity

and has an array of shops, restaurants, and stores, in addition to dozens of train

platforms and an underground station, far below the ground floor. 

 

The station is somewhat haphazardly built and does not have a grand entrance like Union Station in Washington, DC or Grand Central Station in New York City. You approach it from the

street, and it looks like a warehouse or some other type of industrial building with aging

brick arches and graffiti sprayed randomly on the walls. 

 

Despite this, we fell in love with the station, and it provided us a launching space for our daily adventures.

 

A short fifteen-minute walk from our hotel and we were standing on the sidewalk next to

the Thames River. It reminded me, a little, of the Seine River in Paris, but there is a

distinct brownish color to the water that is indictive of the pollution in the water, due to

the growth of the population growth of London. Big Ben sits proudly along the river and

is one of the most distinctive sites in the city. We also were near the London Eye, the

world’s largest cantilevered observation wheel and the most popular paid for visitor

attraction. We had purchased tickets for later in the week and our granddaughter was a

little skeptical after seeing how high it was.

 

Being Easter Sunday, we headed across the Westminster Bridge to see Westminster

Abbey and arrived just as Sunday services were letting out. Westminster Abbey is an

incredible building with a history dating back to the 13 th Century. It has been the site of

every Coronation starting in 1066 and it still has regular worship services each day. The

building itself is one of the most beautiful structures in the world and is the burial site for

over 3000 kings, statesmen, poets, scientists, and warriors. We got to see the ministers

greeting the worshippers at the church door, dressed in their Easter garments.

 

As we made our way back to the hotel, we looked at our watch and realized that we had

walked over six miles, getting acquainted to our home for the next seven days. London

is such a large and interesting city that it is impossible to see it all in one trip, but we

filled each day with new and exciting discoveries. Stay tuned…

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