Full Steam Ahead – Railways, Reading Rooms & Remains  New Walk!

(17 customer reviews )

Meet at the top of the escalator at the entrance/exit to Euston Underground Station

Guided by Andy Hotels

Adult: £20 · Students & Seniors: £15 · Children: £5

Walk Times

Day Walk Type Start Time End Time
29 March 2026 Special 10.45 am 12.45 pm Winter
18 April 2026 Special 10.45 am 12.45 pm Winter
30 April 2026 Special 10.45 am 12.45 pm Winter
9 May 2026 Special 10.45 am 12.45 pm Summer
31 May 2026 Special 10.45 am 12.45 pm Summer
21 June 2026 Special 10.45 am 12.45 pm Summer Reserve Online
5 July 2026 Special 10.45 am 12.45 pm Summer Reserve Online

London didn’t always move the way it does today.

Once the canals carried the cargo, the railways roared in with new speed and ambition, and the Underground quietly took its first breath beneath the streets.

Regent’s Canal lock and restored Victorian gas holders near St Pancras in London

Regent’s Canal at St Pancras – where London’s waterways, railways and industrial past meet.

Within a few minutes’ walk of where we start, a monster was imagined, thousands of graves were moved, canals carried the cargo of empire and the railway age burst dramatically into London.

This walk explores the moment when London learned to move – and how those revolutions reshaped an entire neighbourhood.

We begin at Euston, where the railway age arrived in London with extraordinary confidence. From here we explore the fascinating territory between Euston and St Pancras – Somers Town – a district where canals, railways, roads and tubes collided, transforming the lives of the people who lived here.

One of the surviving lodges from the original Euston Arch at Euston Station in London

A surviving lodge from the original Euston Arch – a fragment of London’s first great railway terminus.

Along the way we encounter lost communities, grand Victorian engineering and curious survivals from earlier London. There are stories of burial grounds disturbed by railway building, and a young architect who found an unusual solution when thousands of gravestones had to be moved.

The Hardy Tree surrounded by displaced gravestones at St Pancras Old Churchyard in London

The Hardy Tree at St Pancras Old Churchyard

Literary echoes are never far away here. The neighbourhood has an unexpected connection to Mary Shelley, whose imagination produced one of the most famous monsters in literature.

We’ll also uncover quieter corners of the story: reading rooms, remnants of London’s industrial past, and traces of the waterways that once carried goods through the capital.

The grand staircase inside the Midland Grand Hotel at St Pancras Station in London

The spectacular staircase of the Midland Grand Hotel at St Pancras – Victorian railway luxury at its most exuberant.

And then there is one of the great showpieces of Victorian London: St Pancras Station and the Midland Grand Hotel, a flamboyant Gothic masterpiece that announced the triumph of the railway age.

The Midland Grand Hotel clock tower at St Pancras Station, London

St Pancras Station and the Midland Grand Hotel – Victorian railway ambition in red brick and Gothic stone.

But behind all the engineering and ambition lies a very human story. We finish amid the revitalised landscape around St Pancras and King’s Cross – canals restored, coal drops reborn and old industrial spaces finding new life.

A walk for anyone interested in transport history, Victorian ambition and the making of modern London.

IT ALL COMES DOWN TO THE GUIDING

Your guide, Oxford-educated historian Andy Williamson (aka Andy Hotels) has been exploring London’s highways and byways for more than 30 years. His writing ranges from ocean liners and grand hotels to the golden age of travel, and he is the resident historian at Brown’s Hotel. Andy is also the creator of the popular Secrets of London’s Luxury Hotels walks.

DON’T JUST TAKE IT FROM US

Andy Williamson, London Walks guide and historian of London’s luxury hotels, outside Brown’s Hotel

London Walks guide Andy Williamson – historian of London’s great hotels and resident historian at Brown’s Hotel.

MEET YOUR GUIDE

Here’s a fab interview with Andy Hotels

17 reviews for Full Steam Ahead – Railways, Reading Rooms & Remains

  1. Mike Newman

    Excellent

  2. Brian Altchuler

    I enjoyed this walk. Andy is a very good guide, managing a large group with his clarity, interesting anecdotes and humour. I particularly enjoyed his history of Euston station and seeing the contrasting architecture around Somers Town. Highly recommended.

  3. Paul Osman

    Friendly and informative, a great tour

  4. Keith

    Andy is a very knowledgeable guide. He is well versed in matters to do with railways and canals and their social consequences, and he took us to places I for one knew little or nothing about. And he creates a convivial atmosphere along the way.

  5. Richard

    This was our second walk with Andy. On both occasions he provided perfect weather – I know, down to luck, but nothing wrong with a lucky guide. This walk was a delightful mixture of gentle strolling, absorbing the environment between Euston and St Pancras, interspersed with informative stops where Andy delivered detailed but easily absorbable background to the history and key events at the stopping point. We discovered a lot of territory that we hadn’t visited before and picked up a lot of facts that were new to us. Two hours very well spent. A heartily recommended walk.

  6. Alan

    The walk was excellent. I thought I knew something about the area, history, buildings etc. but Andy was so knowledgeable and provided a brilliant walk with the right balance of information & facts all delivered in an enlightening way with some light hearted interaction (& the odd little “prize” too!) – well done Andy.
    Please consider this new walk – you will not be disappointed.

  7. Helen

    Fabulous walk full of wonderful information and great sites Andy is a great tour guide.

  8. Justin Whitmarsh

    Another excellent walk. Almost redundant to say, but for those who’ve not experienced London Walks I guess it needs to be said.
    Oh, and this walk has Dad jokes too!

  9. Helen Moran

    An absolutely fabulous London Walk – one of the very best of the very many I have been on. The subject matter was so interesting and well presented; Andy is a superb guide. So much to enjoy and take in across the whole walk with Andy full of information and able to field all questions that came up. Fantastic and I highly recommend.

  10. Robert

    Thanks Andy for a great new walk. Really informative and lots of ideas for follow up visits.

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