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My route was around 35 miles - looking for houses where famous sportswomen and sportsmen lived. Eight were chosen. My route took me to Clapham Common, across Albert Bridge to Chelsea and Kensington, then west to Hammersmith and Ealing, south to Chiswick, across the River again at Mortlake, and on to Wimbledon. An elongated circular route.
https://connect.garmin.com/modern/course/32761078
First-up was Ted ‘Kid’ Lewis. One of Britain’s greatest boxers, he won numerous world titles between 1913 and 1929. Later he became a Hollywood celebrity - Charlie Chaplin was godfather to his son. Befriended by the notorious Kray twins in the ‘60’s, he is commemorated by a Plaque where he lived-out his life in Nightingale House, Clapham.
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Ted 'Kid' Lewis |
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17 Englewood Rd. - home to Jack Hobbs. |
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Sir Jack Hobbs |
Another cricketer, West Indian, Sir Learie Constantine, became Britain’s first black peer in 1969. His house in Lexington Gardens, Earls Court, was the childhood home of Leonard Woolf - who cropped-up in my last ‘Plaques’ blog.
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Learie Constantine - photo from 1932 |
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Fred Perry's house, Bentham Garden Estate, Ealing. |

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Fred Perry - creator of a famous sports brand! |
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55 York Ave, East Sheen - home to Kathleen Godfree. |
Kathleen Godfree, another famous tennis player, lived in East Sheen for 50 years. Winner of 5 Olympic tennis medals - this was only recently equalled by Venus Williams. In later life she was reported to be a familiar figure riding her bike around the local area.
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Kathleen Godfree - winning Wimbledon in 1923. |
A champion rower, Jack Beresford, lived near the Thames at Chiswick. His record of five Olympic medals between 1920 and 1936, was only bettered by Sir Steve Redgrave in 2000. He was presented to Hitler after winning his race in the 1936 Olympics.
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Jack Beresford - Olympian rower. |
The easing of lockdown resulted in noticeably more vehicles on the road during my ride - London awakes!
Author: Ged Lawrenson
4 Comments:
Simon L 14 May 2020 at 13:00 BST
Another interesting post Ged, and it looks like a nice ride too. It's a shame not to see some of the plaques in close-up, but I guess you have to be careful about pointing a telephoto lens towards someone's bedroom window!
I'm already looking forward to the next in the series, whatever that might be.
Ged Lawrenson 14 May 2020 at 17:06 BST
It is tricky not to appear snooping and invading people’s privacy. (My photo of the Kid Lewis plaque was awkward - a security jobs-worth challenged me on the public forecourt to the building saying no photos allowed. I challenged him back and carried on, and then rode off rather swiftly!).
Dave Vine 14 May 2020 at 21:29 BST
Another brilliant ride Ged. Much appreciate educating myself about the neighbours.
Brian 18 May 2020 at 17:28 BST
Some good material here for a London or winter A ride when interest and good roads are more important than distance. Not sure how the security man would react to 15-20 Wayfarers though.
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