
Saturday morning. We stopped for a great breakfast at our favorite place, Peyton and Byrne, which was right around the corner from our hotel.

Great breakfast options, incredible baked goods and good coffee. And check out that herringbone floor. May I have one for my cottage, please?
We headed toward Parliament Square and Westminster Abbey. After standing in line for a while, we paid for our tickets and went inside.

I didn’t know until after I took this picture that you’re not supposed to take photos. (I’m glad I got one in.)
It’s glorious, isn’t it? It’s simply stunning. So many famous people are buried and/or memorialized there. I can’t list them all, but Queen Elizabeth I? Mary, Queen of Scots? Richard II? The two young princes who were murdered in the Tower of London? Not to mention all the actors and poets and political figures and, most recently, Stephen Hawking. Everywhere you turn, there’s a marker and a story and you realize the enormity of history that is a part of Westminster Abbey. We were easily there for well over two hours.
I had to pay homage to my ancestor, Sir Rowland Hill, who is buried there. Rowland is a family name and it was my father’s middle name. Arthur and Frederick are also family names – two of my uncles had those names, and those were the names of two of Sir Rowland’s brothers.
He was a social reformer; both in education and in the postal system. He invented the Penny Post. At that time, the postage for letters was based on distance and the number of sheets of paper used and the receiver had to pay the postage, not the sender. Often, the receiver couldn’t afford the postage charges, so the letter never got to them. Fraud was commonplace. The system itself was in need of change. Hill proposed a system based on weight, not distance, and changing to a uniform rate of postage of a penny per half ounce. He is responsible for the what we now call the modern postal service. The adhesive postal stamp was his creation. The first adhesive stamp – the Penny Black, with a portrait of Queen Victoria – came into being in May of 1840.
You can find out more here.
There is a bust of Sir Rowland in the Abbey and a marker.
I placed my hand on the bust of my ancestor to acknowledge him and, though I wasn’t supposed to, snuck a photo of his marker.

When I was in London in 1991, I went to the Postal Museum and bought packets of commemorative stamps that were issued in 1980 – one for me and for each of my family members.

They are framed and hang in our upstairs hallway. I also bought a biography of Sir Rowland, which sits on my bookshelves in the den.
After our visit to the Abbey, we had lunch in one of the cafes there. Delicious.

As we emerged from the Abbey, we ran smack dab into a huge Brexit Protest Rally in Parliament Square. We knew there was going to be a rally, but had no idea just how big it would be. This was one of those moments in our trip where we just stopped and let the day evolve based on what we were encountering – in this case, the rally. Too important to ignore. Theresa May was in Brussels at the time, meeting with members of the European Union, so this march and rally was timed to coincide with that.

The protestors were asking for a second vote on Brexit. Many were carrying the flag of the European Union. All were peaceful.

This statue of suffragist Millicent Fawcett is the first statue of a woman in Parliament Square. It was unveiled earlier this year.

As we walked against the direction of the marchers, we saw that they were coming from Trafalgar Square and beyond. We later learned there were anywhere from 500,000 to 750,000 marchers that day. Extraordinary.

We kept walking toward the Strand and eventually, we split off from the march. Don said it well: We spent the morning immersed in British history and emerged to see what will be significant political history happening in the now. Very powerful.

As the Strand became Fleet Street, evidence of its long association with the Press.

That night, dinner at a favorite restaurant, Caravan. It’s just down the street from our hotel – such delicious food with exotic flavors. Very inventive and such a fabulous interior!
A few shots from the next morning:


Can’t help thinking of The Barretts of Wimpole Street.

All encountered on our walk toward the Tube and our destination: South Kensington.
More tomorrow!
Happy Monday.
















