The Olympic rings were installed but not yet dropped down . |
Greenwich is one of those places that was on my list to visit, but it wasn't until last summer that I discovered the incredible history of this maritime town. I've been there three times now and every time I discover another part of history. Greenwich is on the Thames and a forty-five minute boat ride from Westminster Pier. Taking one of the boats down the Thames is a wonderful way to see some landmarks of London and to get a feeling of how London is laid out. Our trip was just a month before the Olympics and we as passed through Tower Bridge the drawbridge was being raised.
When you disembark at Greenwich, you see the Old Royal Naval College (formerly the Old Royal Naval Hospital for Sailors) designed by Sir Christopher Wren. The Royal Naval College no longer needs it so it is now the home of The University of Greenwich and Trinity Music College. The white building in between the two domed buildings is the Queen's House, built by Anne of Denmark, wife of James I.

The Chapel of the Royal Naval College is a place of worship still today and also hosts many concerts with Trinity College of Music. The original chapel was finished in 1751 but burned in 1779. After extensive renovation in the 1950's it looks almost as it did when it reopened after the fire
The organ in the Chapel is made of Spanish mahogany and the organ gallery is supported on six fluted marble columns. It was completed by Samuel Green, the leading organ builder of the day, in 1789 and is used almost every day by organ scholars.
As we headed back to Westminster Pier in central London, it was easy to see why Greenwich played such an important part in maritime history of this area. It has a strategic location out of the city of London on the way to the sea. If you look closely, you'll see the Royal Observatory in the far distance (it's on a big hill) on the far right. The Cutty Sark is to left of that. The Royal Naval Hospital and Queen's House is on the left.
"On Thames's bank, in silent thought we stood
Where Greenwich smiles upon the silver flood;
Struck with the seat that gave Eliza birth,
We kneel, and kiss the consecrated earth,
In pleasing dreams the blissful age renew,
And call Britannia's glories back to view,
Behold her cross triumphant on the main,
The guard of commerce and the dread of Spain."—Dr. Johnson's "London."
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