Those of you who listened to my podcast recently with my friend, the gorgeous and very funny Tom Houghton
( https://honourabletom.com/) will know that he invited me to visit him at the iconic Tower of London – yes, that one! To cut a long story short, Cinders did go to the ball and got to spend an hour behind the scenes at one of the most well known tourist attractions in the UK and also one of the historic royal palaces.
To give those who maybe are reading this without knowing quite how popular it is, pre Covid, it had nearly three million visitors in one year…and on the day I went, it was pretty busy too, but the first thing I noticed as I walked through the East gate entrance, escorted by my generous host, was how quiet it was once you were within the walls.
Tom and his Father, General Sir Nicholas Houghton, Baron of Richmond, GCB, CBE, DL (and yes, I did have to google his full title) who is the current Constable of the Tower, live in the building known as Queens house, this dates back to Tudor times and is believed to have been built around 1530. I felt slightly out of place as I had to walk past the Tower guard wearing his bearskin hat at his post and through the front door.
Being the complete nerd you all know and love, it was some of the antique furniture that was blowing my mind, that was until I was shown the cell of Sir Thomas More. This part of the tower is not accessible to the general public as you have to go through Queens House to access it, moreover you are asked not to take photos as it is seen as a Catholic shrine, and had been since 1885 when More was beatified by Rome. I will not go into a long history lesson as to who More was, other than to say he was the one who wrote the History of Richard III (which I may have referred to in my book, the Battle for Bosworth Hall), Lord High Chancellor and a noted philosopher, but also fell out of favour with execution happy Henry VIII when he refused to take the oath of supremacy, he basically signed his death warrant and was beheaded on the 6th July 1535, sixteen months after being taken prisoner and kept in the Tower.
Whilst I am anything but religious, I found this particular room with its high stone walls, uneven floor and ground level windows that meant you could still hear all the sounds from outside, quite relaxing and not feeling like the place a man who was going to be killed stayed. For those of you who like to read, it was the kind of space that I could quite happily nestle down in a comfy chair, with a long drink and lose myself in a good book.
The next area I got to see had a very different atmosphere, it was the cell in which Lady Jane Grey, the nine day queen, was kept before her execution courtesy of her cousin Mary, 12th February 1554. She was declared monarch on 10th July 1553, although many historians have pointed out that her rule could be backdated to the date of Edward VI’s death on the 6th July 1553. She was only 16 or 17 years old when she died, and being Queen had not been a role she coveted or ever expected, plus if her father had not been involved in the Wyatt Rebellion, she may have been spared.
It was in here that I had a weird experience, and one that worried Tom a little bit. I felt the over whelming urge to cry, not to shed tears in a hysterical kind of way, but a gentle sobbing of despair and desolation, I had to restrain myself from pacing the floor with tears brimming in my eyes. I felt such a strong sense of melancholy, that I asked to leave the room as it was getting so powerful, and the minute I walked out I was back to normal. There is a belief that this austere hang out had held not only Queen Elizabeth 1st but also WW2 Nazi, Rudolf Hess, but that was not what I think affected me so badly, I do wonder if I had tapped in to some energy remaining from poor Jane.
Here's something for you to ponder however, why is she never known as Queen Jane I? the argument is that she was never coronated, but neither was Edward IV’s son (the infamous half of the Princes in the Tower), yet he is mentioned in history books as Edward V, bit of misogyny going on by historians maybe, Quelle surprise….
That is just a little bit about my once in a lifetime visit behind the walls of this historically abundant castle, and I want to thank Tom for being true to his word – if you like a laugh, go and grab a ticket to his new tour, dates are on his website.