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London, England

Our visit to London was an exploration of new, old, older, and really, really old sights to see. We visited royal palaces, torture chambers, and so much more. London is a mix of so many things, its hard to describe.

Buckingham Palace

Not quite as straight as the rest
Changing of the guard
Keeping the commoners out
Mailbox outside of the palace
Royal guard in training

The Tower of London

Outside the Tower of London
Where the moat used to be
The original White Tower inside the current fortress, built by William the Conqueror in 1078
Inside the courtyard
Our Yeoman Warder guide
Kid-sized Armour
The original Tower of London chapel
Chapel window
A view of the Traitor’s Gate from the Thames River
Traitor’s Gate from the inside the walls of the London Tower…
…which leads directly to the Bloody Tower. The Tower of London wasn’t built to be a prison, but hundreds of people were imprisoned, tortured, and executed there.
The top of the iron gate
Part of the Bloody Tower dungeon
Prisoner “graffiti” on the wall while being held in the Tower of London awaiting execution
Some rooms are covered with messages from prisoners; this one from 1538
A memorial in the courtyard for royals who were executed with no proper cause…like Anne Boleyn and Lady Jane Grey who was only 16 years old

Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese Pub

Rebuilt shortly after the Great Fire of 1666, the pub is known for its literary regulars, including Charles Dickens and Mark Twain
The entrance from the alley
The view from our lunch table
Our visitor on our bench during lunch

Exploring London

Helpful reminders everywhere for the rest of the us who drive on the “wrong” side of the road
Queen Mother’s gate
Rows and rows of old chimneys no longer used due to new laws
Monument to women during WWII
The London School of Economics and Political Science has many notable graduates, including our very own JFK
Established in 1723, it’s now the oldest pub in London
Purchased by Thomas Twining in 1706, the little white building is one of the oldest shops in London still in its original location
According to the tour guide, this building was the inspiration for the original tiered cake design
St Paul’s Cathedral
Tower Bridge in the distance
The new buildings of downtown London
Big Ben getting a facelift
Shakespeare’s Globe theater
The South African consulate where Nelson Mandela made a speech on the balcony after being released from prison
The original Hard Rock Cafe
The top of the Great Fire monument
The dragon marking the border of the original square mile boundary of the City of London
Damage left on the church from WWII shelling
Used in filming Gringot’s bank for a Harry Potter movie
I looked up “bog roll”…apparently translates to toilet paper
Mind the gap
Pooped on the tour bus after a long day of sightseeing
Our hotel’s English breakfast
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