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Dickens at Christmas: 7 Places to Visit Around England

Is there any novelist more closely linked with Yuletide than Charles Dickens? His story, A Christmas Carol, was an instant hit in 1843 and helped make Christmas fashionable again.

Is there any novelist more closely linked with Yuletide than Charles Dickens? His story, ‘A Christmas Carol’, was an instant hit in 1843 and helped make Christmas fashionable again. It remains hugely popular, with its perennially relevant call for greater kindness and the end of greed.

It’s perhaps less well-known that Dickens wrote about Christmas many times, often with radical intent and without the sweet gloss the ‘Carol’ would get from later adaptations.

To help you explore what the season meant to Dickens, here are seven ideas from the Charles Dickens Museum for winter trips to the places that inspired his Christmas stories.

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The Ghost of Christmas Present visits Scrooge © Charles Dickens Museum.

Royal Exchange and Cornhill, London

The story of A Christmas Carol is told through dreams. So how much is it possible to detect any real places that may have inspired it? Tony Williams, expert on Dickens’s London, says they probably can’t be pinned down absolutely for such a great work of the imagination. But, he says, Dickens does give a few clues.

Take Scrooge, for example. His place of business is in the vicinity of the Royal Exchange in the heart of London’s financial district. Williams says, Newman’s Court off Cornhill gives a good sense of where Scrooge might have had his counting house. The alleyways nearby, particularly Ball Court and The George and Vulture pub, still have a strong atmosphere of the times.

From here you can explore the City of London, with its layers of history from the very ancient to the very new.

The Cornish Coast

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Rame Head via wiki commons

The description of the mining community in A Christmas Carol draws on a visit Dickens made to Cornwall in 1842 to investigate working conditions, particularly for children.

The story describes a lighthouse built ‘upon a dismal reef of sunken rocks’. A probable model for it is the former Eddystone lighthouse off Rame Head.

Birmingham Town Hall

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Birmingham Town Hall, 1890-1910. (C) Historic England Archives OP14768

Dickens devoted much of his later life to giving public readings, beginning with A Christmas Carol at Birmingham Town Hall in December 1853.

He made the performance to raise funds for the proposed Birmingham and Midland Institute to carry out pioneering work in adult education,  insisting there were tickets available at a low enough price for working people to afford.

St James’s Church, Cooling, Kent

Great Expectations opens on what is perhaps literature’s most miserable Christmas Eve. The book’s main character, Pip, is tending the graves of his parents and brothers when he’s surprised by the horrifying presence of the escaped convict.

The debate continues over where exactly inspired the setting. But a likely choice is St James’s Church in the village of Cooling near Rochester, on the marshes between the Thames and the Medway estuaries. Most significantly, the church has the ‘little stone lozenges’ which mark children’s graves.

Six Poor Travellers House, Rochester, Kent

copyright-christopher-hilton
Six Poor Travellers House © Copyright Christopher Hilton

Dickens’s story ‘The Seven Poor Travellers’ begins with the narrator reading a sign over the door of the charity house he’s about to enter at Christmas Eve.

It says the charity will provide for ‘Six poor Travellers, who not being ROGUES, or PROCTORS, may receive gratis for one Night, Lodging, Entertainment, and Fourpence each.’

The actual sign from 1579 is still there above Six Poor Travellers House in Rochester.

The town of Rochester is also the model for Cloisterham in The Mystery of Edwin Drood. Dickens wrote about Christmas for the last time in that novel, again darkly as it turns out.

This, however, is Cloisterham on Christmas Eve:

Lavish profusion is in the shops: particularly in the articles of currants, raisins, spices, candied peel, and moist sugar. An unusual air of gallantry and dissipation is abroad; evinced in an immense bunch of mistletoe hanging in the greengrocer’s shop doorway

48 Doughty Street, London

What was the season like in the author’s own home? Dickens loved entertaining, and Christmas gave him an ideal excuse to ‘[break] out like a mad man’, to quote him.

His daughter Mary recalled, ‘he [acted] always as master of ceremonies, and calling upon first one child, then another for his or her contribution to the festivity.’ She wrote, ‘O, those merry, happy times, never to be forgotten by any of his own children, or by any of their guests.’

To experience their home at Christmas, visit the Charles Dickens Museum, 48 Doughty Street, London. This is the historic house where Dickens lived with his young family from 1837 to 1839, and where he wrote Oliver Twist, Pickwick Papers and Nicholas Nickleby. It’s dressed for Christmas with lively events through the season.

Further Reading

4 comments on “Dickens at Christmas: 7 Places to Visit Around England

  1. A.K.A. Demik

    There is an OUP collection of all of the Xmas books by Dickens; & probably other collections. But what I would like to know – probably nothing to do with Dickens – is what the picture is at the top: it looks very much like a canonical Dutch winter scene (Holland is my home country), but is it British?

    • Hello, thanks for getting in touch. The header image is one from the Historic England Archive! The full record can be viewed here http://bit.ly/2gwVl4W – it captions the image as ‘A group of skaters on a frozen over backwater of the Thames at Abingdon’, Oxfordshire 1895.

  2. Reblogged this on Karl Quinney.

  3. My dream to visit these Nice places

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