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Paddington Totally Explained
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Everything about Paddington totally explainedPaddington is a district in the City of Westminster, London. Its name was first recorded as 'Padington' in the year 1056. Three important features in the Paddington district include; London Paddington station, designed by the British Engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel and opened in 1847; St Mary's Hospital and Paddington Green police station (considered the most important high-security police station in the United Kingdom).
Associated people
Paddington has had several famous sons, daughters and associated residents;
- Michael Bond, OBE; The English Author of both children’s' adult stories, most famously the iconic Paddington Bear, the stories of a guinea pig named Olga da Polga, and the adventures of Parsley the Lion and The Herbs. Born in Newbury, England and educated in Reading, Bond moved to an area of Paddington called Little Venice in later years. A solitary teddy bear sitting on an empty shelf in one of Paddington Station’s shops on Christmas Eve was the source of his inspiration for the character.
Robert Browning; The British Poet, lived at Beauchamp Lodge on the junction of two canals. The Paddington precinct known as Little Venice was so named by the great Victorian poet himself.
C.R. Alder Wright; The British Chemist who, in 1874, first discovered Heroin (Diacetylmorphine) at St Mary's Hospital on Praed Street in Paddington.
Dr. Edward Wilson; The British Polar Explorer, Physician, Naturalist and Ornithologist who, along with Captain Robert Scott, Captain Lawrence Oates, Lieutenant Birdie Bowers and Petty Officer Edgar Evans died in 1912, in Antarctica during their ill-fated British Antarctic expedition. Dr. Wilson both lived and worked in Paddington during his lifetime, in recognition of which the Senior Street primary school was renamed the Edward Wilson School in 1952.
John Netley; was a carriage driver in London in 1888. Netley has been connected by some authors with the 'Whitechapel Murders' committed by Jack the Ripper. He is usually included in the Royal conspiracy theory. According to this theory Netley drove the coach in which Sir William Gull carried out the actual killings.
Sir Alexander Fleming; The Nobel Prize winning British (Scottish) scientist who first isolated penicillin (Penicillium Chrysogenum) in 1928, in his laboratory at St Mary's Hospital on Praed Street in Paddington.
Sir Alec Guinness; The British Academy Award, Tony Award and BAFTA Award winning Actor. Guinness was born in Paddington on 2 April, 1914 and during his lifetime starred in such films as Great Expectations, Oliver Twist, The Ladykillers, The Bridge on the River Kwai, Lawrence of Arabia, Doctor Zhivago, Cromwell, Scrooge and A Passage to India.
Emma Thompson; The British Emmy Award, BAFTA Award and Academy Award winning Actress, Comedian and Screenwriter. Thompson was born in Paddington on 15 April, 1959 and has starred in such films as Henry V, Howards End, The Remains of the Day, In the Name of the Father, Sense and Sensibility, Love Actually, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.
Margaret Jay, fomer Labour leader of the House of Lords and daughter of James Callaghan has the title of Baroness Jay of Paddington and lives in the area.
Kiefer Sutherland; The Canadian Emmy Award and Golden Globe Award winning film and Television Actor. Sutherland was born in Paddington on December 21, 1966 and has starred in such films as Stand By Me, The Lost Boys, Young Guns, A Few Good Men and Phone Booth as well as the critically and commercially successful series 24.
Zara Phillips MBE; The British European Eventing and World Eventing Gold medal winning Equestrienne. Zara Phillips was born in Paddington on 15 May, 1981 and is currently 11th in the British Order of Succession and Patron of Great Ormond Street Hospital in London.
Prince William of Wales; Prince William was born in St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London on 21 June, 1982 and is second in the Line of Succession.
Prince Henry of Wales; Prince Harry was born in St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London on 15 September, 1984 and is third in the Line of Succession
References in fiction
Possibly the most famous fictional reference to Paddington comes from Michael Bond's Paddington Bear books. In the story, Paddington is named after the station where he was found and adopted.
In the BBC mini-series of John le Carré's Smiley's People, the General lives off Westbourne Terrace, and Smiley later visits, with scenes also filmed around Paddington Station and Craven Road.
In the Railway Series books by Rev. W. Awdry, the character Duck the Great Western Engine is said to have once lived here.
In the Sherlock Holmes short story "The Stockbroker's Clerk", Dr. Watson mentioned that he purchased a practice in the Paddington district.
4.50 from Paddington is one of the most well-known of Agatha Christie's Miss Marple mystery novel series.
In the original stage version of Oliver!, Oliver meets the Artful Dodger outside what is now Paddington Green; this is changed in the 1968 film version, in which Oliver meets him in the marketplace of London.
Paddington station
Paddington has a main-line railway station, Paddington station, with commuter service to the west of London (for example Slough, Maidenhead, Reading, Swindon) and main-line service to Oxford, Bristol, Bath, Taunton, Exeter, Plymouth, Cornwall and South Wales (including Cardiff and Swansea). There is also the Heathrow Express service to Heathrow Airport.
Also in the station can be found statues of its designer Isambard Kingdom Brunel and the children's fiction character Paddington Bear.
Education
Further Information
Get more info on 'Paddington'.
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