BBC Broadcasting House London W1A 1AA - nearest tube Oxford Circus
Guided by Adam
Adult: £20 · Students & Seniors: £15 · Children: £5
Day | Walk Type | Start Time | End Time | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 May 2025 | Special | 10.45 am | 12.45 pm | Summer | Reserve Online |
5 June 2025 | Special | 10.45 am | 12.45 pm | Summer | Reserve Online |
29 June 2025 | Special | 10.45 am | 12.45 pm | Summer | Reserve Online |
27 July 2025 | Special | 2 pm | 4 pm | Summer | Reserve Online |
21 August 2025 | Special | 10.45 am | 12.45 pm | Summer | Reserve Online |
28 September 2025 | Special | 2 pm | 4 pm | Summer | Reserve Online |
23 October 2025 | Special | 10.45 am | 12.45 pm | Summer | Reserve Online |
“Sexual intercourse began
In nineteen sixty-three…
Between the end of the “Chatterley” ban
And the Beatles first LP.”
Phillip Larkin, Annus Mirabilis 1967 (pub. 1974)
This tour contains frequent and explicit references to recreational drug use and sex. There are also descriptions of scenes of a violent nature.
London’s achievements in music and fashion during the early 1960s reverberated around the world…
This walking tour pays tribute to – and then goes beyond – those achievements. The ground-breaking pop music of The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, as well as the game-changing work of fashion designer Mary Quant form our backdrop. But we will also take a trip beyond in to architecture, politics, spying, scandal, drugs and sex.
Swinging through two London neighbourhoods, we’ll zoom-in on the period 1962 to 1969. From the polite early 1960s to the days of the hippies, we’ll capture the city dubbed by Time Magazine in 1966 as Swinging London. Travelling from from the coldest winter on record (this wouldn’t be England if we didn’t talk about the weather!) to the shimmering Summer of Love.
East End gangsters are rubbing shoulders (and more) with peers of the realm; in Soho they’re sloshing Coca Cola into perfectly good Scotch; they’re dropping their T’s at the BBC and pillars of the Conservative establishment are dropping their drawers in shabby Marylebone mews flats.
Meanwhile, pop singers are invited to Buckingham Palace to meet The Queen.
Boys’ hair is long, miniskirts are short and to be “Far Out” is to be “In”.
The old emblems of Empire can be acquired and worn for a couple of bob* in the new-fangled “boutiques” of Chelsea and Carnaby Street. The Union Jack suddenly adorns everything from plastic bags to the cover of Vogue magazine. And presiding over it all, a portly little socialist from the provincial North.
Somewhere over the wonderful Day-Glo rainbow of Swinging London, we’ll find both the most mythologised, and the most misunderstood period of the 20th century. And we will ask… was it all the work of “Third-rate minds in a third-rate decade**”? Or was it truly One Brief Shining Moment?
(*Translation: Bob was the old slang word for a shilling which is about 5p in modern money.)
(**Quote from Conservative politician Norman Tebbit.)
In just two hours, Twiggy, Barbara Hulaniki and Jean Shrimpton will revolutionise the way we look; photographers David Bailey and Terence Donovan will capture the visuals; we’ll follow Mick Jagger as he struts from boutique to street riot and Mary Quant as she proves once-and-for-all that less most definitely is more. We’ll encounter Groovy Bob, the Old Etonian art dealer who counted working-class Paul McCartney among his clients.
At the hub of our story, two women and one man whose intertwined lives will change the morality of Britain forever and bring a Conservative government crashing down – Christine Keeler, Mandy Rice Davies and John Profumo. The so-called Profumo Affair, and the attendant sexual shenanigans reported in the newspapers, shocked Britain. This story was as seismic in the life of ordinary British people as Vietnam and riots were in America.
From LsD (which until the 1960s stood for Pounds, Shillings and Pence) to LSD (that’s Lysergic Acid Diathylamide) our scandalous tour is awash with money and drugs… is it too late to issue a content warning for this walk?
In terms of the social history of 20th Century Britain, we’ll stroll through a kaleidoscopic period where the boundaries between working-class and upper-class became porous in a way never seen before or since. We’ll also trace the origins of 21st Century gentrification and piece together the ingredients that went in to the Molotov cocktail of the youth culture explosion.
The two West End neighbourhoods we will visit are…
Side One: Marylebone… to see the little back street where 13 years of Conservative government collapsed amid a scandal of sex, lies and spying; we’ll also get a view of a modern architectural and communications wonder rising to dwarf St Paul’s on the London skyline, like a vast, grey middle finger “saluting” the old order; and we’ll watch as pirates board the BBC.
Side Two: Mayfair… where the class system is challenged as working class girls from Neasden and boys from Dartford cosy up with Old Etonians and where protestors rampaged in the streets of sleepy London Town.
We’ll span the political spectrum from the Labour government’s decriminalisation of homosexuality, legalisation of abortion and abolition of hanging to Enoch Powell’s infamous Rivers Of Blood speech. As Harold and Ted look on we’ll meet everyone from Mick and Keith to Ron and Reg.
Drugs, the law, fashion, media, politics, race, architecture, class, society, showbiz, protest, music and sex…
If you can remember the 60s… you weren’t there.
If you can’t remember the 60s… join this NEW walking tour.
This tour ends at the Jimi Hendrix Blue Plaque in Brook Street, Mayfair. The closest Tube to the end point is Bond Street.
Hello everyone, I’m looking forward to welcoming you back to Swinging London on this walking tour. It’s one of my favourite periods in London’s story. From the pop music of the period to the fashions, from politics to literature and media, I have studied and written about the swinging sixties since my student days in the 1980s. I wrote my dissertation on the playwright Joe Orton and changing British society. I’ve had such fun this past year-or-so bringing the stories to life on this walking tour – it’s been particularly pleasing to hear so many reminiscences from you guys on the tour. Having said that, it is the only one of my tours for which I issue a “content warning” – there will be repeated and explicit discussion of sex and drug taking throughout the tour. Then again, perhaps that’s the reason why you’re joining me? This is not a tour for prudes… but if you’re feeling like a cultural adventurer, then I can’t wait to reveal the kinks and quirks of two of the West End’s otherwise most subtle neighbourhoods. Perhaps there’s a sequel to be written – would you join me for a wander down the King’s Road next year?
Happy walkers in a most unusual (but theme-specific) bar with guide Adam after the tour!
And here’s another reason [David speaking here] you should go on it:
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Kate –
Enthusiastic, charismatic and informative. Adam not only provided pictures to go along with the walk, he provided a soundtrack too. Absolutely brilliant. Top Marks.
Wish i could do another of his walks.
Janet Adam –
Highly recommended. Adam is a fantastic guide and I thought the email sent before the walk with photos of all the characters from the 60’s that we were going to find out so much about was a great idea. Thankyou Adam for taking us to the places we would never have found in London without this great guided walk.
Mandy Robotham –
Fabulous tour with Adam, who is hugely knowledgeable and a superb raconteur. I’m a Londoner born and bred but I learned so much about my own home city. Highly recommended.
Viv Hunsworth –
We thoroughly enjoyed the swinging sixties walking tour with Adam last week. Adam is great, he is very knowledgeable,informative, friendly & helpful & his little anecdotes made the walk very interesting.He gave us plenty of opportunity to ask questions & was very considerate on a hot day ensuring we walked in the shade whenever possible. Thanks Adam
Danny Taylor –
Adam never fails! We’ve done a few walks with him and other London Walks guides and they’ve all been informative and entertaining. The swinging 60s walk could easily have gone for another hour, as we didn’t go through Carnaby Street or Soho. (Essentially THE swinging 60s) The walk, through the mewses of the West End were fascinating and Adam, as always told the stories beautifully.
Dale Hayden –
Did our second walk this week with Adam. We are spoiled. Adam sets the bar high for London Walks and doesn’t disappoint. We have done dozens of London Walks and often build our trips around them. Adam was the highlight of this trip. Already planning on returning in two months to find another tour lead by Adam. The walk cover more than expected about the Swinging Sixties. Do this walk and you will not be disappointed.
Linda P –
Informative and fun, especially as we had worked in the area and had known some of the characters that were mentioned. Adam’s knowledge and descriptions, plus the addition of music, brought the whole walk to life. Definitely to be recommended
Øystein Bråthen –
A very interesting and funny walk about music, people and culture in the 60’s. Adam is a really good guide and storyteller.
Sylvia Wier –
Swinging ‘60s was the third tour I have taken over the years that was led by Adam. His tours are an absolute delight. He is informative and funny and he is good about interacting with his group. You can’t go wrong on one of his tours.
Darren Ruston –
A really insightful look into some of the murkier waters of the Swinging 60’s and full of fascinating facts about some of the lesser known movers and shakers, including “Groovy Bob” who sounds like he could have a walk to himself! Adam’s knowledge of his subject combined with his colourful, flamboyant and vivid descriptions of the period make this walk a must, particularly if you have an interest in the culture, people and architecture of the 60’s. Thanks, Adam.