Sherlock Holmes' London
As the detective stalks movie theaters, our reporter tracks down the favorite haunts of Arthur Conan Doyle and his famous sleuth
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Stuart Conway
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
In 1891, following the breakout success of The Sign of Four, Conan Doyle moved with his wife, Louise, from Southsea to Montague Place in Bloomsbury, around the corner from the British Museum. He opened an ophthalmological practice at 2 Upper Wimpole Street in Marylebone, a mile away. (In his memoirs, Conan Doyle mistakenly referred to the address as 2 Devonshire Place. The undistinguished, red-brick town house still stands, marked by a plaque put up by the Westminster City Council and the Arthur Conan Doyle Society.) The young author secured one of London’s best-known literary agents, A.P. Watt, and made a deal with The Strand, a new monthly magazine, to write a series of short stories starring Holmes. Fortunately for his growing fan base, Conan Doyle’s medical practice proved an utter failure, affording him plenty of time to write. “Every morning I walked from the lodgings at Montague Place, reached my consulting-room at ten and sat there until three or four, with never a ring to disturb my serenity,” he would later remember. “Could better conditions for reflection and work be found?”
Between 1891 and 1893, at the height of his creative powers, Conan Doyle produced 24 stories for The Strand, which were later collected under the titles The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. As the stories caught on, The Strand’s readership doubled; on publication day, thousands of fans would form a crush around London bookstalls to snap up the detective’s latest adventure. A few months after arriving in London, the writer moved again, with his wife and his young daughter, Mary, to Tennison Road in the suburb of South Norwood. Several years later, with his fame and fortune growing, he continued his upward migration, this time to a country estate, Undershaw, in Surrey.
But Conan Doyle, a socially and politically active man, was drawn repeatedly back to the bustle and intercourse of London, and many of the characters and places he encountered found their way into the stories. The Langham, the largest and by many accounts best hotel in Victorian London, was one of Conan Doyle’s haunts. Noted for its salubrious location on Upper Regent Street (“much healthier than the peat bogs of Belgravia near the River Thames favored by other hoteliers,” as the Langham advertised when it opened in 1865) and sumptuous interiors, the hotel was a magnet for British and American literati, including the poets Robert Browning and Algernon Swinburne, the writer Mark Twain and the explorer Henry Morton Stanley before he set out to find Dr. Livingstone in Africa. It was at the Langham that Conan Doyle would place a fictional king of Bohemia, the 6-foot-6 Wilhelm Gottsreich Sigismond von Ormstein, as a guest. In “A Scandal in Bohemia,” published in 1891, the rakish, masked Bohemian monarch hires Holmes to recover an embarrassing photograph from a former lover. “You will find me at The Langham, under the name of Count Von Kramm,” the king informs the detective.
Another institution that figured both in Conan Doyle’s real and imagined life was the Lyceum Theatre in the West End, a short walk from Piccadilly Circus. Conan Doyle’s play Waterloo had its London opening there in 1894, starring Henry Irving, the Shakespearian thespian he had admired two decades earlier during his first London trip. In The Sign of Four, Holmes’ client, Mary Morstan, receives a letter directing her to meet a mysterious correspondent at the Lyceum’s “third pillar from the left,” now another destination for Sherlockians. Conan Doyle was an active member of both the Authors’ Club on Dover Street and the Athenaeum Club on Pall Mall, near Buckingham Palace. The latter served as the model for the Diogenes Club, where Watson and Holmes go to meet Holmes’ older brother, Mycroft, in “The Adventure of the Greek Interpreter.”
Although Holmes made his creator wealthy and famous, Conan Doyle quickly wearied of the character. “He really thought that his literary vocation was elsewhere,” says Lycett, the biographer. “He was going to be somebody a bit like Walter Scott, who would write these great historical novels.” According to David Stuart Davies, who has written five Holmes mystery novels and two one-man shows about Holmes, Conan Doyle “wanted to prove that he was more than just a mystery writer, a man who made puzzles for a cardboard character to solve. He was desperate to cut the shackles of Sherlock from him,” so much so that in 1893, Conan Doyle sent Holmes plummeting to his death over the Reichenbach Falls in Switzerland along with Professor Moriarty.
But less than a decade later—during which Conan Doyle wrote a series of swashbuckling pirate stories and a novel, among other works, which were received with indifference—popular demand, and the promise of generous remuneration, eventually persuaded him to resuscitate the detective, first in the masterful novel The Hound of the Baskervilles, which appeared in 1901, then in a spate of less well-regarded stories that he continued writing until he died of a heart attack in 1930 at age 71. In addition to the Holmes stories, Conan Doyle had written some 60 works of nonfiction and fiction, including plays, poetry and such science-fiction classics as The Lost World, and amassed a fortune of perhaps $9 million in today’s dollars. “Conan Doyle never realized what he’d created in Sherlock Holmes,” says Davies. “What would he say today if he could see what he spawned?”
Late one morning, I head for the neighborhood around St. Paul’s Cathedral and walk along the Thames, passing underneath the Millennium Bridge. In The Sign of Four, Holmes and Watson set off one evening on a “mad, flying manhunt” on the Thames in pursuit of a villain escaping in a launch. “One great yellow lantern in our bows threw a long, flickering funnel of light in front of us,” Conan Doyle wrote. The pursuit ends in “a wild and desolate place, where the moon glimmered upon a wide expanse of marshland, with pools of stagnant water and beds of decaying vegetation.” Today the muddy riverbank, with rotting wooden pilings protruding from the water, still bears faint echoes of that memorable chase.
I cross St. Paul’s churchyard, wind through alleys and meet Johnson in front of the stately Henry VIII gate at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital. Founded in 1123 by a courtier of Henry I, Barts is located in Smithfield, a section of the city that once held a medieval execution ground. There, heretics and traitors, including the Scottish patriot William Wallace (portrayed by Mel Gibson in the film Braveheart), were drawn and quartered. The square is surrounded by public houses—one half-timbered structure dates to Elizabethan times—that cater to workers in the Smithfield meat market, a sprawling Victorian edifice with a louvered roof where cattle were driven and slaughtered as late as the 1850s. In the hospital’s small museum, a plaque erected by the Baker Street Irregulars, an American Holmesian group, commemorates the first meeting of Holmes and Watson in the now-defunct chemistry lab.
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Comments (9)
Fans of the Great Detective may be interested in my latest book. It should be published before Christmas, 2011. The working title is "Seeing Sherlock Holmes's London". In it, I have identified over 400 SH sites in Greater London, given their GPS addresses, and in the e-book version, hyperlinked the sites to Google Maps Street Views. Enthusiasts can now "visit" Sherlock's London from their home computer, or for the lucky few, on their large screen internet TVs. I hope you enjoy it. TBW
Posted by Thomas Bruce Wheeler on August 14,2011 | 10:47 AM
Any list of modern screen and literary works featuring Conan Doyle's creation should surely include Laurie R. King's excellent Mary Russell novels (ten and counting), whose protagonist is the apprentice and wife of the retired but still active and brilliant Sherlock Holmes.
Posted by Cindy Payant on February 28,2010 | 09:52 PM
nice article i am really excited about is....
Posted by janneth mery on January 17,2010 | 01:46 AM
I've enyoyed a lot reading the article of Holmes. It was so interesting and catching.Let me tell you that if teachers of my english academy hadn't told me to read this article for homework , I would never realized what I've notice Actually my report would be of Holmes
Posted by wendy pelaez cruz - lima peru on January 17,2010 | 01:37 PM
For al IC people... we'd rather watch the movie!
spread the word and will see if you could go as a BIG group! xD
Posted by rn3sto on January 10,2010 | 05:41 PM
Your print edition lists five actors who've played Holmes. Your online video clip tells about even more. But you've somehow managed to leave out Vasily Livanov's portrayal. Not good.
Posted by Kino Reticulator on January 2,2010 | 10:31 PM
Having been an avid Sherlock Holmes reader since age 10, I have put a quotation from the great detective to good use in my 30 years of orthodontic practice. During it I charged the lowest fee in town (and, I believe, achieved the best result), except for children with any sort of congenital health problem, for whose treatment I refused any fee. When parents haggled about the fee, I replied "I never reduce my fee except when I remit it entirely." None of the hagglers ever recognized the source of the statement.
Posted by Robert Braun DDS on December 26,2009 | 05:34 PM
A great article on Holmes's London. My trip to The Sherlock Holmes Museum at 221b Baker Street was most enjoyable and I was intrigued to learn that their blue plaque marking the "original location" of 221b is the most popular plaque in London!
Can't wait to visit the landmarks mentioned in the article.
Posted by George Robertson on December 26,2009 | 04:40 PM
An EXCELLENT summary of a subject that would have been easy to trivialize, while not getting lost in trivialities. Keep up the GREAT work!
Posted by DrBOP on December 23,2009 | 11:14 AM