Geoff Browell
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Eileen Chanin
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Edwardian Strand
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The celebrities associated with the latest palaces continually stoked Edwardian impressions of the Strand once again being a ‘golden mile’. Of great international fame in this era of duelling divas, Italian coloratura soprano Luisa Tetrazzini dazzled London in 1907. Eviscerating buildings from the Strand’s philanthropic and benevolent past might bring to it shiny ‘palace hotels’. These might be thought to better suit the gay living of Edwardian days, freed from the imperial wars of the Victorian era. Yet shiny Edwardian ‘palaces’ could not quell the Strand’s ongoing affinity with the everyman. With the outbreak of war in 1914, the Strand became more cosmopolitan than ever. Headlines from French and Belgian newspapers were cried on it, and one evening journal was issued in Flemish. Offices were set up on east Strand to support Belgian refugees, and a Prisoners of War Information Bureau opened on Wellington Street.

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The Strand

A Biography

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