London, United Kingdom
Kenwood House
This former stately home, in Hampstead, London has been owned by a series of Earls and a member of the Guinness family, is now open to the public.
Adventurer since August 2023
This former stately home, in Hampstead, London has been owned by a series of Earls and a member of the Guinness family, is now open to the public.
Enjoy a long list of libations at what was voted the world's greatest bar.
AWA visted hereEurope's oldest umbrella maker is here to stay for a rainy day.
Built in 1695, Poplar Cottage is the last remaining weatherboard cottage in London's Charlton Village.
Touted as the most famous nightclub in the world, Annabel's counts Mick Jagger, Jack Nicholson, and the Royal Family among its members.
The invention of the letter slot dates back to 1840s England, but wasn't patented until 1892 by George Becket of Providence, Rhode Island.
An 18th century remodel turned this 16th century London manor house into a unique and unusual work of art.
This yellow telephone is found in the Chalk Farm London Underground station - one of three stations designed by English architect Leslie Green.
This British royal palace on the banks of the Thames is survived by the Dutch House, built in an Artisan Mannerist style dominated by Dutch gables.
Once a bustling railway station, this structure in Cheshire, England is now a visitor center in Wirral Country Park.
The Horniman Museum & Gardens in London, England is most well-known for its large collection of taxidermy.
Follow this arrow to trains in historic Covent Garden station in London, built in 1907.
This London Underground terminus station was the inspiration for a book about a fictional bear, and also is the location of the last railway band in England.
Exploring the history of urban transport from 1800 on, this transportation museum in London features over half a million items, including this restored tube carriage from 1938.
This police box is the last in existence of what was once a common fixture in England.
Now affluent, Notting Hill and its distinctive aesthetic used to be home to a humble brickworks and pig yards.
This fixture of British culture was nearly destroyed in World War II after five German bombs were dropped on the palace on Friday the 13th, 1940.
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