Walking Tour – Primrose Hill and the Navvies Who Built Canals and Railways

Walking Tour – Primrose Hill and the Navvies Who Built Canals and Railways

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Venue

Chalk Farm Station

Pavement outside on Adelaide Road, London, NW3 2BP

London, England, GB, NW3 2BP

Primrose Hill was born when navvies dug out the land by hand, bringing grime, racket, hard drinking and what some called Moral Depravity.

The neighbourhood radiates brilliant industrial solutions of Victorian engineers, but who built it? This walk puts hard-working navvies at the centre of the story and tells how the area developed in the face of the new railway’s soot and smoke. The walk follows a beautiful stretch of the Regent’s Canal, and from the top of the famous hill you have great views over London. You’ll see railway landmarks as well as the artists’ studios and pastel-painted streets that came later, in one of which lives Paddington Bear. Primrose Hill cherishes a high street largely free of chain shops and numerous good pubs. It’s all minutes from Camden Market but feels miles away.

Laura Agustín is an historian and anthropologist interested in illuminating the lives of unnamed people in history – the ‘ordinary folk’.

Thanks to Victorian Web for permission to use the photo from Dick Sullivan’s Navvyman.

The Naked Anthropologist is Laura’s longtime blog, now dedicated to historical walks that highlight issues of Gender, Sex and Class.

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