inFocus: Britain

HELLO DOLLIES
Windsor Castle celebrates centenary world famous doll house

Throughout 2024, Britian’s Royal Collection Trust will celebrate the 100th anniversary of Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House at Windsor Castle, the largest and most famous dolls’ house in the world. Queen Mary’s Dolls’ House was built between 1921 and 1924 as a gift from the nation to Queen Mary following the First World War. MORE

SCOTLAND TAPS GAELIC INTEREST FOR NEW TOURISM STRATEGY

A new tourism strategy aimed at delivering authentic and memorable visitor experiences by celebrating Gaelic culture, heritage and language has been launched in Scotland. The new plan highlights an increasing interest in the Gaelic language and culture from both domestic and international visitors. MORE

BEHIND THE WAX
Who’s hot at Madame Tussauds

It’s a long way from Queen Victoria to Doja Cat (a rapper), but Madame Tussauds is pulling back the curtain to provide a glimpse into the research process that may culminate in the iconic attractions’ next wax models. MORE

A RESPONSIBLE PARTNERSHIP

VisitScotland has launched an innovative new partnership The Travel Corporation (TTC) and the Travel Foundation designed to inspire and support climate action within Scotland’s tourism industry and drive change with businesses, visitors, and destinations. MORE

80TH ANNIVERSARY
‘Great Escape’ exhibit remembers war horror, heroics

On March 24, 80 years ago, in one of the most ingenious and audacious acts of defiance of World War II, 76 prisoners of war tunneled out of a German POW camp into a snowy forest. For most of the escapees, it ended tragically. Three made it to safety, but the others were recaptured and 50 of them were executed. MORE

ROOM WITH A VIEW
London landmark to become a hotel

The BT Tower, a futuristic landmark on the London skyline for 60 years, is to become a hotel, says owner BT Group PLC. The company, formerly known as British Telecom, said it has agreed to sell the tower to US company MCR Hotels for 275 million pounds ($470 million). MORE

TRADITIONAL UK EVENT CAUSES INTERNATIONAL FLAP

Women in matching checkered aprons, headscarves, and a rainbow of running shoes limbered up as they prepared for the centuries-old pancake race in the English country town Olney. They rolled their shoulders in unison, raised up on their toes and did squats before stepping to the starting line – frying pans in hand. MORE

LONDON ‘REIMAGINES’ ICONIC TUBE MAP

For anyone with even a passing acquaintance with London, the city’s Tube map is as iconic as the red buses or the black cabs. But for the past few years, there’s been something not quite right about the map originally designed by Harry Beck in 1933 – a collection of orange train lines, mostly orbiting the inner city, known as the London Overground. MORE

CUNARD OFFERS SPECIAL BRITAIN SAILING ON QUEEN ANNE

Cunard has announced the first event voyage on Queen Anne with a special British Isles Festival to coincide with her maiden voyage around the British Isles, departing May 24. The 14-night roundtrip voyage is designed to showcase the very best of Britain's shores, taking in Cunard's spiritual home of Liverpool and along with Belfast, the Highland cliffs, and the scenic Scottish coast. MORE

DOING THE RIGHT THING
UK museums return artifacts to Ghana

The British Museum and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London are returning gold and silver artifacts to Ghana under a long-term loan arrangement – 150 years after the items were looted from the Asante people during Britain’s colonial battles in West Africa. The arrangement sidesteps UK laws that prohibit the return of cultural treasures to their countries of origin (famously including the Elgin Marbles to Greece). MORE

PUBS, PATIOS & BARS
‘Illicit whisky’ and dream drams at London’s Síbín

“Hidden in plain sight behind a secret door,” and situated in one of London's most historic and cherished buildings, the Síbín whisky bar has launched a global “Whisky Passport” designed to take patrons on a flavour journey beyond the British capital with some of the world’s best vintages. MORE

WELCOME TO WREXHAM
Unlikely soccer story puts Welsh city on the map

Three years into the unlikely ownership of Wrexham AFC soccer/football club by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, the appeal of their accompanying (and explanatory) documentary series “Welcome to Wrexham” continues to skyrocket. The series, and overall exposure, generated by the celebrity owners and the fairytale story that has ensued, has gifted the city with an unexpected moment in the global spotlight and, subsequently, a not-surprising surge of visitors to sleepy North Wales. MORE

GUCCI’S WORLD AT LONDON’S SAVVY SAVOY

It’s not the oldest of London’s top-tier luxury hotels but The Savoy is arguably the most famous. Many would also argue it’s also the best, living up to every inch of it’s outsized reputation. Founded in 1889, the iconic property has hosted a bevy of rich and famous patrons (Monet painted from it’s windows) over its nearly 135 years, and even some who weren’t famous yet – like Guccio Gucci, who once worked there as a luggage and lift-boy early. MORE

CHRISTMAS AT THE CASTLE
The wonder of Windsor during the holidays

There’s nothing like Christmas in a castle, and this year, Windsor Castle outside London will see Christmas displays celebrating the 675th anniversary of the Order of the Garter, the oldest order of chivalry in Britain which was founded in Windsor in 1348. MORE

THE BEAT GOES ON
Liverpool museum celebrates birth of Beatlemania

The phenomenon of Beatlemania screamed itself into existence 60 years ago in October 1963. Sixty years later, Liverpool’s The Beatles Story has released a new video that explores the phenomenon with first-hand accounts of those frantic fanatical days. MORE

A NEW TRADITION?
Corgi parade honours late Queen

The changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace may draw tourists from far and wide, but on Sunday visitors to the landmark were treated to a different sort of spectacle: a parade of corgis dressed up in crowns, tiaras, and royal outfits. MORE

TROUBLES ANNIVERSARY CASTS LIGHT ON NORTHERN IRELAND

This week marks the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement (April 10, 1998), which ended the ‘Troubles’ in Northern Ireland. With this in mind, Tourism Ireland has produced a top 10 list designed to help visitors delve into the region’s fascinating if tumultuous history while at the same time discovering its regenerated present. MORE

FEET FOR A KING
Westminster Abbey to offer barefoot tours after Coronation

People who visit London’s Westminster Abbey after the coronation of King Charles III will be allowed to stand on the exact spot where he was crowned, but they will need to make sure they don’t have holes in their socks for the shoeless tour, designed to protect the abbey’s medieval mosaic floor. MORE

GOOD SPORTS
Uncovering the active side of the England’s West Midlands

It’s not just the legacy, symbolic and practical, of the 2022 Commonwealth Games – sport is at the beating heart of England’s West Midlands. From tennis to cricket, and football to golf, visitors to Birmingham and surrounds visitors will discover a rich sporting pedigree in the region. MORE

TO VISIT OR NOT TO VISIT
Stratford-upon-Avon – it’s not all about Shakespeare

Few will dispute that Stratford-upon-Avon is all about Shakespeare. But what if you’re not barmy about the bard? Is a visit to the English town dedicated to the birth, life, death – and legacy – of the world’s greatest playwright worth the time? To visit or not visit, that is the question. MORE