Guide to... Clowning Museums in Covent Garden




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FAQs about Covent Garden and Clowning Museums in London


Covent Garden has some great pubs which is no surprise as it is such a great area of London to meet in. Particularly if you like traditional pubs you are spoiled for choice as Covent Garden has some of the oldest and most traditional pubs to be found anywhere in London.

There are lots of pubs that serve Sunday lunch and traditional British pub grub too so if you are looking for a reasonably priced place to eat and drink one of the best gastro pubs in Covent Garden is well worth considering as a destination.

For a list of Covent Garden pubs you can view our Covent Garden pub guide (https://forbidden.london/london-guide/covent-garden/pubs) we have also recently created a blog post about our top picks for the best pubs in Covent Garden (https://forbidden.london/london-blog/best-pubs-covent-garden).



Covent Garden Piazza is always open, but the shops usually operate between 10am and 8pm Monday to Saturday and on Sunday from around 11am to 6pm. The Apple Market is open from 10am until 6pm and the East Colonnade Market is open from 10:30am until 7pm.



There is Pay & Display parking on the streets off the Piazza - Henrietta Street, Southampton Street and Tavistock Street. There is also an NCP car park on Drury Lane.



You can view a list of shops in Covent Garden, including information about offers, by viewing our Covent Garden shopping guide (https://forbidden.london/london-guide/covent-garden/shopping-in-style#businesses)


Covent Garden Photos

Blue Plaques in London

John Wesley Black Plaque - The probable site, where, on May 24, 1738 John Wesley "felt his heart strangely warmed". This experience of grace was the beginning of Methodism.
Henry Sylvester Williams Green Plaque - Henry Sylvester Williams  1867-1911  Anti-slavery and  civil rights campaigner  first  black councillor  in Westminster  elected 1906 for Church Street Ward
John Bray And Charles Wesley Blue Plaque - Adjoining this site stood the house of John Bray, scene of Charles Wesley's evangelical conversion May 21st 1738
Josef Dallos Green Plaque - Josef Dallos 1905-1979 Hungarian born British ophthalmologist invented living eye impression technique 1930. First contact lens only practice here 1937-1964
Elisabeth Welch Blue Plaque - Elisabeth Welch 1904-2003 singer lived here in Flat 1
Maiden Lane Bridge Bronze Plaque - Maiden Lane Bridge  First built in 1819 to carry Maiden Lane across the Regent's Canal, it was widened and rebuilt in 1852 and 1923.  In 1998 it was rebuilt to confirm to European Community legislation on minimum loading.  Parts of the original fabric have been reused in deference to the site's history.

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Covent Garden in the News

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