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DUKAS_119994262_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
The Victorian Bath House near to St Botolph's without Bishopsgate Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994263_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Bus on Bishopsgate. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994261_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
'I Love You' graffiti on a wall on Alderman's Walk near to St Botolph's without Bishopsgate Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994235_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Seething Lane with All Hallows Church in the background. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994233_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994259_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
A homeless person's tent outside an HSBC bank on London Street, near to Fenchurch Street station. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994344_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
A homeless person's tent outside an HSBC bank on London Street, near to Fenchurch Street station. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994341_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
French Ordinary Court. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994260_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
French Ordinary Court. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994234_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
French Ordinary Court, an alley off Fenchurch Street. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. ItÕs gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of LondonÕs oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994232_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Seething Lane. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994237_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Seething Lane. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994213_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
St. Olave's Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. Charles Dickens was thrilled by the skulls over the entrance to the churchyard at St OlaveÕs Church.
The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. ItÕs gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of LondonÕs oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994211_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
St. Olave's Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994258_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994257_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
St. Olave's Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. Charles Dickens was thrilled by the skulls over the entrance to the churchyard at St OlaveÕs Church.
The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. ItÕs gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of LondonÕs oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994231_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
St. Olave's Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. Charles Dickens was thrilled by the skulls over the entrance to the churchyard at St OlaveÕs Church.
The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. ItÕs gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of LondonÕs oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994229_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Trinity Square Gardens. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994228_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Trinity Square. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994230_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
A fox on Savage Gardens. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994345_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
A fox on Savage Gardens. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994226_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
A fox on Trinity Square . Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994227_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
All Hallows Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994256_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
All Hallows Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994253_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994255_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
All Hallows Church with The Shard in background. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994212_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
All Hallows Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994254_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
All Hallows Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_119994210_EYE
I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company. I walk around London at midnight – with my father's ghost for company.
All Hallows Church. Night walks in the City of London. Magical Mysterious Tour with Barbara Nadel. London. The magic takes hold as soon as I step into All Hallows by the Tower churchyard. It’s gone midnight and at first I look right towards one of the City of London’s oldest churches. Then I turn left, with a coldness trickling down my spine as I stare deep into my own past. My father, nearly 20 years dead now, used to take me on both day and nighttime jaunts through London. A thin, stylish East Ender, he was the sort of man who could produce a coin from your ear, magic away sickness and reveal the weird glories of London. Dad found the miraculous in everything, which is why I always carry him in my head when I go on these midnight yomps through the City.
© David Levene / Guardian / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_118915050_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915045_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915025_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915023_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915030_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915048_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915028_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915027_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915066_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915043_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915046_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915044_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915049_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020. Kirsten Honey, Paranormal Manager.
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DUKAS_118915064_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_118915047_EYE
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020.
© Jim Wileman / Guardian / eyevine
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Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall
Inside the revamped Bodmin jail, one of Britain's 'most haunted' buildings. 18th-century prison with gory history reopens as £8.5m visitor attraction in Cornwall. Most visitors to Cornwall head to the surf beaches, the picturesque fishing harbours, art galleries, gardens or castles in search of light and joy. However, a murkier side of life in the south-west of Britain is being told from within the towering granite walls of an 18th-century prison, which is reopening as a new visitor attraction on Thursday. The £8.5m Bodmin jail recounts tales of crime and punishment in Cornwall from the 1700s to the early 20th century. Visitors are treated, if that is the right way to put it, to a subterranean “dark walk” that uses special effects to expose the lives and deaths of some of those once imprisoned here. They are invited to stroll in and out of the cells where prisoners once lived and to inspect the artefacts found in excavations of the prison including bunches of rusty keys and even what might be the skull of the fabled Beast of Bodmin. The most daring can take part in paranormal events or watch horror films, as the jail claims to be one of the most haunted places in the UK.The new Bodmin Jail attraction, in Cornwall, which is due to open on the 1st October, 2020.
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