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Telling the stories of London’s women

Cathy Winston travels round the East End with Rachel Kolsky, award-winning tour guide and author of Jewish London to discuss her new book, Women's London

February 15, 2018 15:10
Rachel Kolsky, author of Women's London
3 min read

Steps away from the bustle and colour of Brick Lane, it’s easy to miss Princelet Street. But this peaceful road with its unassuming brick buildings is home to two blue plaques — and even more unusually, both plaques commemorate two of London’s notable women.

It’s these women and dozens of others that Rachel Kolsky, award-winning tour guide and author of Jewish London, is celebrating in her new book, Women’s London. From the East End to royalty, from fashion, art and culture to medicine, archaeology and politics, the guide whisks readers around the capital to discover the less well-known female figures who’ve contributed to the capital’s history.

For Kolsky, Whitechapel is where the first seeds of the book were sown, after she was asked to run walking tours by the Women’s Library back in 2005.

“Walking from Whitechapel to Spitalfields, it’s not the prettiest of areas, it’s residential from beginning to end, but the variety of women I can profile on that tour and the variety of what they did is remarkable,” she says. “At the Royal London hospital, Edith Cavell, Queen Alexandra, then you’ve got the founder of the People’s Dispensary for Sick Animals (PDSA), Maria Dickin. Mary Hughes, who was a phenomenal social worker of her day, Alice Model, Miriam Moses, Annie Besant, Anna Maria Garthwaite. And you’ve got contemporary women like Tracey Emin and Monica Ali.”