By the Author of Random Recollections of the Lords and Commons, etc.
James Grant.
Volume 2 /
Cambridge :
Place of publication not identified :
Cambridge University Press.
publisher not identified,
1839.
1 online resource (336 pages) :
digital, PDF file(s)
Cambridge library collection. History of Printing, Publishing and Libraries.
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015)
Born in 1802 in Elgin, James Grant first established himself as a reporter and then as a leading newspaper editor in Victorian London, heading the Morning Chronicle for two decades before moving on to the Christian Standard. His 1839 Travels in Town was designed as a companion piece to his earlier reflections on London, The Great Metropolis (1838) and Sketches in London (1838). This two-volume work reflects Grant's enthusiasm for 'this modern Babylon' and his lively interest in the intricacies of everyday life there. Interweaving general descriptions with specific local information, Volume 2 describes the post office and bookselling in Paternoster Row before turning its attention to the city's various religious denominations. Grant, an ardent Calvinist, concludes with reflections on London's moral state.