Destinations Magazine

Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

By Lwblog @londonwalks

Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas CarolDC Editor Adam writes…
A couple of Christmases ago, in honor of Bob Cratchit, Scrooge's impoverished clerk in A Christmas Carol, I attempted to trace his footsteps on his journey home from Scrooge's Cornhill office to his humble abode in Camden Town.
Here's Bob (pictured) whooshing down the slide at Cornhill in a Tube doodle I made on the way to the start of the walk.
No precise details of his journey are listed in the text of A Christmas Carol, so here's the route I planned before setting off…


And here's the route I ended up following…



Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol


It's probably not as direct a route as that Bob himself would have chosen, but I tailored it to go through my beloved Clerkenwell.
On the way I snapped a few piccies of Bob Cratchit's London Christmas past, present and yet to come. I hope you enjoy them. Happy Christmas!



Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

Christmas Present: Bob would have known the Royal Exchange…



Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

… and the Mansion House (without cranes, buses and vans, of course)…





Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

… here's a more contemporary view





Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

Xmas Yet To Come… 1 Poultry, which replaced the English Gothic splendour of the old Mappin & Webb building. 




Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

Mappin & Webb had yet to set up shop at Poultry in 1843 (when A Christmas Carol was published) but was already a going concern having been founded in Sheffield in 1775.





Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

The view from London Wall looking toward Camden Town… slightly (ahem) obscured in the 21st Century



Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

St Paul's – part of Bob's Xmas Present surrounded by the architecture & transport of his Xmas Yet To Come





Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

Xmas past… 18th century headstones in Postman's Park



Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

Little Britain – and we nod to Great Expectations as we pass





Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

St Bartholomew-the-Great… and its literary neighbour…





Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

Given Dickens's subject matter, was it a coincidence that I should happen upon the HQ of Save the Children in St John's Lane EC1 along the route of my Bob Cratchit stroll?
Or was it my own version of a Christmas visitation?
Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

It's Save The Children's Christmas Jumper Day on the 14th December 2018. Here's how to join in…
https://christmasjumperday.org/




Onward to Clerkenwell Green…


Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

Past AND Present – a father explains to his daughter what these weird red cupboards are all about on Clerkenwell Green



Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

Spirit of Xmas Past: Do you recognize this place?
Scrooge: Recognise it?! I was apprenticed here!
My own Christmas past… 34 Clerkenwell Close (pictured above) is the first office in which I worked in London. The building is a former ink factory and it was from here that I first explored London on foot, stumbling upon so many Dickens locations in my lunch hour wanders that golden hindsight tells me that every day was a literary fireworks display.
This is where I fell in love with London and I will find any excuse to pass through this most wonderful of London neighbourhoods.

Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

A tree grows in Clerkenwell
Scrooge asks: Are there no workhouses? Are there no prisons? On the right of the shot above stood Clerkenwell Prison – or The House of Detention. Torn down in 1890, the vaults still exist, beneath what was the playground of the Hugh Myddleton School, now flats. In the 1860s, the prison looked like this…

Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol


Next, my route went via…
Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

… and past George Gilbert Scott's St Pancras hotel…
Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

… via the British Library…
Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

This excellent British Library film looks at The Origins of A Christmas Carol

On to Somers Town…  
Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

… and St Mary's Church, a building personally familiar to the young Dickens, who lived at Cranleigh Street…
Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol


… in conditions far from affluent. The plaque was unveiled in 2013 by actor Simon Callow. 
All told it was a walk of some 3.7 miles. So Bob's commute was at least 7 miles on foot every day.




Here's another link to Save the Children.
Bob Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill to Camden in A Christmas Carol

If any of you Daily Constitutionalists end up doing your own version of Bob's walk, do drop me a line at the usual address, send me your pics, or leave a comment below…
Merry Christmas!

From the London Walks Podcast Archive… A Christmas Carol. Listen here…










Keep In Touch…
Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill Camden Christmas Carol
Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill Camden Christmas Carol
 
Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill Camden Christmas Carol
Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill Camden Christmas Carol
 
Cratchit's Commute From Cornhill Camden Christmas Carol
 

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