This house has seen the best of times — and the worst of times. A stately London mansion tied to one of Charles Dickens’ most infamous fictional financiers has hit the market with a roughly $25 ...
From this Friday, the Charles Dickens Museum in Bloomsbury will exhibit several surviving items of the novelist’s clothing ...
Dating back to the 1820s, the white stuccoed dwelling sits right next to the prized Regent’s Park and overlooks a large boating lake. Beyond the storied pad’s creamy, centuries-old facade, the ...
When Charles Dickens died on 9 June 1870, aged just 58 years old, it was a shock to the entire world. The author had suffered a stroke the previous day — while having dinner at home at Gad's Hill ...
This Georgian townhouse in Regent’s Park, London, which once hosted Charles Dickens, offers a country-like escape without leaving the city. . The Victorian novelist rented the house in 1861 for the ...
Exhibition includes linen shirt collar from when author suffered a fatal stroke along with other personal items Rare surviving items of Charles Dickens’ clothing, including the linen shirt collar worn ...
Ever wished you could travel back to the mean streets of Victorian London, the one described by the era’s most beloved writer, Charles Dickens? One place to start would be the townhouse at 48 Doughty ...
Seven Dials, in central London, was synonymous with poverty and crime, a black hole to most Londoners. Charles Dickens stormed it with pen and paper. The Print Collector / Alamy Seven Dials, in ...
"A Christmas Carol," a globally celebrated timeless tale of heartwarming human redemption crafted as a haunting holiday ghost story, was published in London on this day in history, Dec. 19, 1843.