Caitlin Davies at the River Walks Festival

Caitlin Davies at the River Walks Festival

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More news about the River Walks Festival in April

thames sunset

The Footprints of London River Walks Festival opens on April 16th with a special event. Author Caitlin Davies will talk about her new book “Downstream: a history and celebration of swimming the River Thames” at one of London’s most atmospheric riverside pubs The Prospect of Whitby.

Tickets cost £12 and include a glass of wine

book here

caitlin davies downstream

Stretching 215 miles from its source in Gloucestershire, through England’s capital and across to the North Sea, the River Thames has always enticed swimmers. 

From bathing Kings to splashing school children, intrepid wild swimmers to international athletes, this famous river has long been a favourite. But it was the Victorian era that saw the birth of organised river racing with the launch of the long distance amateur championship of Great Britain. 

Soon floating baths were built in London; people swam at official bathing pools and islands at Oxford, Reading and Henley, dived off pontoons at Kingston and played at temporary lidos in Richmond. By the 1930s the Thames had become a top holiday spot for families with beaches at the Tower of London, Greenwich and Grays. Then in 1957 the river was declared biologically dead, organised racing was largely over, and swimming in the Thames was seen as dangerous. 

Yet today we have returned to the river in numbers not seen for a long time, some drawn by the thrill of wild swimming, others to compete in annual racing events. In Downstream, Caitlin Davies recounts the history of swimmers and the Thames, telling the stories of legends like Annette Kellerman and Matthew Webb, forgotten champions such as Agnes Beckwith and Lily Smith, as well as modern day charity swimmers and sport stars. 

Downstream explores the changing nature of swimmers’ relationship with the river, featuring previously unpublished archive images, and asks why it is that swimmers still love the Thames. 

Londoner CAITLIN DAVIES is a writer, teacher, journalist, and general fair-weather swimmer. She is the author of five novels and four non-fiction books, including Taking the Waters: A Swim Around Hampstead Heath. She is currently Royal Literary Fund Fellow at the University of Westminster, Faculty of Media, Arts and Design. www.caitlindavies.co.uk. @CaitlinDavies2

Footprints of London is delighted to have Caitlin open the River Walks Festival with this talk at The Prospect of Whitby. Tickets cost £12 and include a glass of wine. book here

The Footprints of London River Walks Festival will feature this talk and a series of walks that celebrate the way London’s Rivers have shaped London, from trade and exploration on the Thames, industry on the River Wandle and the spas of the River Fleet. Where better than the Prospect of Whitby to open the festival – one of our favourite London pubs.

More information about the festival can be found here http://footprintsoflondon.com/riverwalks

 

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