Download the map for the tour here to take with you.Location 1 (1.02): Liverpool Rd/Batchelor StThe former Agricultural Hall, site of the turnpike where Oliver made his entry into London.Location 2 (10.53): The Harlequin, Arlington WayThe popular plays put on in the cheap, non-West End theatres like Sadler's Wells hugely influenced Dickens's writing. One of Dickens's friends is remembered inside the Harlequin? the creator of the modern clown, Joe Grimaldi.Location 3 (16.25): Spa Green ParkA tiny surviving piece of the greenery on what was the edge of London. On the south-east side of the park stood a Quaker workhouse.Location 4 (21.03): Spa FieldsIn Oliver's time the buildings here were major prisons. The Clerkenwell House of Detention's huge underground chambers are still beneath the school playground here.Location 5 (25.10): Exmouth Market/Mount PleasantOn the site of Royal Mail's main sorting office stood an infamous prison, to deal with London's burgeoning crime problem in Oliver's time. Experimental treatments here included the silent system, and the treadmill ?Location 6 (31.38): The Coach & Horses, Ray StreetThis area was Hockley-in-the-Hole in Oliver's day, the worst kind of criminal slum, or rookery.Location 7 (37.35): The One Tun, Saffron HillSite of Field Lane, Fagin's headquarters. The One Tun itself may have been the original Three Cripples pub, headquarters of Bill Sikes.Location 8 (47.32): The Old Sessions HouseA purpose built 18th-century law court, sited just outside London in Dickens's time. The Artful Dodger involves Oliver in a pocket-picking incident on this site.Location 9 (54.24): Hatton PlaceThe site of the Hatton Garden Magistrates Court, presided over by a real magistrate, AS Laing, on whom Dickens based Mr Fang.Jon HenleyIain Chambers
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