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Great Stink

Great Stink

Step back into Victorian London with a gripping guided coach tour exploring the infamous Great Stink of 1858. As you travel through the capital, your guide brings to life the sights, smells, and social turmoil that overwhelmed the city when the Thames became a toxic, unbearable hazard. Discover how this crisis sparked revolutionary engineering, transformed public health, and reshaped London forever..

How to grow the best tomatoes

 

Two thousand years ago the Romans enjoyed indoor plumbing but until a couple of hundred years ago Londoners were still emptying their chamber pots out of the window.  At the Great Exhibition of 1851 the new flush loo was a big hit.  There was however a bigger problem.   You could now flush the waste from your house but without a sewage removal and treatment infrastructure the waste ended up in London's rivers.

 

During the hot summer of 1858 the amount of human waste being flushed directly into the River Thames became a national scandal and was known as The Great Stink.

 

We begin our day in Central London tracking London’s lost rivers, cruise the Thames to Greenwich and drive across to the old  Crossness Engines.

 

We meet our Blue Badge Tour Guide at 10.30am in the City for morning coffee (included).

 

We tell the story of spending a penny from Roman times to the coming of the flush loo.   We trace London’s lost rivers, tell the story of The Great Stink and show you how Victorian engineer Sir Joseph’s Bazalgette achieved one of the most remarkable feats of civil engineering ever seen.   

 

Bazalgette stopped London’s waste running into the Thames by building massive intercepting sewers beneath new Embankments created by pushing back the mighty Thames behind stone walls.

 

On Bazalgette’s Victoria Embankment, we board a Thames Pleasure Cruiser to Greenwich.   You must bring packed lunches today to eat during the cruise.

 

From Greenwich our coach whisks you further east past Woolwich to the Thames Marshes and the Cathedral of Sewage.

 

Here you will discover some of our most spectacular ornamental Victorian cast ironwork and possibly the world’s largest surviving beam engines.   There’s a museum and a social story here too – the workers lived on site in terraced cottages built right above the massive sewage storage tank.   Mesh at the windows kept the flies at bay.   It must have stunk to high Heaven but my goodness they grew good tomatoes!

 

A most unusual day comes to a conclusion with tea and biscuits at Crossness included in the tour fee before heading home at 4.30pm.

Below is a list of pick-up points available on this tour.

Below is a list of pick-up points available on this tour.

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Name Address
Arlesey Mill Lane, Arlesey
Hatfield Galleria North Hatfield Galleria Bus Stop G (Northbound)
Stevenage Bus Stop L Stevenage Bus Stop L Southbound
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09 Sep 2026 £75.00 Loading
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