Most of the information below is taken from Mark Paytress's book "20th Century Boy", 
with some of the pictures coming from the Mojo magazine, September 1997.
 
25 Stoke Newington
Common,
Hackney
The house where Marc lived with his parents and brother Harry from 1947 to 1962. The Felds occupied four rooms on two levels - "a kitchen and bathroom were situated at the top of the long flight of stairs, with a back bedroom and a large front living room which looked across the common a few steps higher". As Mark grew up, the front living room was transformed into the boy's bedroom where the brothers spent their time listening to Saturday Night Theatre radio show. A few years later rock'n'roll records replaced BBC radio. "Noisy? When you came in that front door and he had that radiogram on,  you could hear him down three flights of stars,"- remembers Mrs. Perrone, the Felds' landlady. 

Nearest Tube: Whitechapel or Hackney Central

Northwold Primary 
School, 
Northwold Road,
Hackney
First school Marc went to in September 1952, quite near his home. Here he met Stephen Gould, a kindred spirit who shared his interest in new pop music. So when Stephen decided to form a group with his class mates Helen Shapiro, Susan Singer and Melvyn Fields, Marc was invited too. The quintet - later referred to by Marc himself as Susie and the Hoola Hoops - spent most of their 1957 summer holiday rehearsing, but in the autumn all the band who were one year senior than Marc, moved on to secondary school, leaving him behind. 

Nearest Tube: Whitechapel or Hackney Central

Berwick Street 
Market,
Soho
Marc's mother Phyllis worked at a friend's fruit stall here, and young Marc often spent his Sunday mornings helping her. 

Nearest Tube: Tottenham Court Road, Oxford Circus

 
The 2I's Club,
59 Old Compton 
Street,
Soho
The legendary coffee bar which gave the world such stars as Tommy Steele, Adam Faith and Marc's early idol Cliff Richard, who Marc often claimed to have met there. He actually  helped his mother on the market stall nearby and sometimes came to the Home of the Stars to have a cup of coffee or listen to the jukebox. 

Nearest Tube: Tottenham Court Road, Oxford Circus

William Wordsworth
Secondary Modern 
School,
Wordsworth Road,
Shacklewell
Marc's second school in Hackney which Marc started in September 1958. He found school boring and uninspiring, unlike his new obsession with Modernist lifestyle. It consumed most of his time, and school was often neglected. "I always had trouble in school... I was an okay pupil in Arts and History, but I wanted to find out about things that you couldn't just look up in books."
Summerstown,
Wimbledon
The Felds moved from Stoke Newington to one of the new Sun Cottages in Summerstown in 1962. Marc hated the move which deprived him of his status of "the star of three streets in Hackney" and the company of his old mates. To compensate, he spent most of his time in Soho enojying its flourishing club scene. 

Nearest Tube: Wimbledon Park

81 Lexham Gardens
Allan Warren, young Marc's friend and manager rented a flat here, and Marc moved in this apartment in early 1964 to stay for six or eight months. Allan recalls: "He took over one of the bedrooms, a huge room, and he'd always sit in the same spot by the fireplace with his books and guitar... In the daytime, Marc would sit in the drawing room with the curtains closed and the light on. For him, the night never ended and the day never started..." 

Nearest Tube: Gloucester Road, Earl's Court

22 Manchester St.
A basement flat shared by Marc and his next manager, Mike Pruskin. "They live in a basement flat near Baker Street. They wear black jerseys and pale corduroy trousers, and they are much more agreeable than you might think from the way they talk. There is a cat asleep on an old fur hat on the windowsill; a green telephone and a self-portrait by Mr. Pruskin," - this is how Maureen Cleeve, a journalist from the Evening Standard, described the dwelling. 

Nearest Tube: Gloucester Road, Earl's Court

 
Alexandra Palace,
Muswell Hill
An all-night 14 Hour Technicolor Dream concert took place there, and John's Children played there alongside Pink Floyd, The Crazy World of Arthur Brown, the Deviants and the Soft Machine. John's Children initially decided to perform with no clothes on, but changed their mind and tried to make a happening instead. Andy Ellison screamed and threw feathers everywhere, Chris Townson demolished his drum kit and Marc walked around with guitar on his head, producing endless feedback. 

Nearest Tube: East Finchley

 
Middle Earth Club,
43 King Street,
Covent Garden
Former Electric Garden where Marc hold his disastrous electric gig after leaving John's Children. Re-named as the Middle Earth, however, it became the residence venue for Tyrannosaurus Rex, the tolkienesque duo.  Marc said: "And then the Middle Earth opened and they asked John [Peel] to do something there for nothing, and we went along and just played. (They never had any mikes down there or anything). And it became sort of fashionable I suppose, and after a while we were packing it solid 2,000 people and we'd got about 10 quid." 

Nearest Tube: Covent Garden

108 
Lexham Gardens
Tony Visconti's flat where Tyrannosaurus Rex recorded demoes for their first album, "My People Were Fair". 

Nearest Tube: Gloucester Road, Earl's Court

Trident Studios 
30 Strutton Ground
The historic recording studios where Tyrannosaurus Rex and T.Rex recorded their albums in 1968-1971. 

Nearest Tube: St. James Park

16 Bruton Place
The office of Lupus Publishing Company, Marc's publishers. The Tyrannosaurus Rex Fan Club formed in February 1969, was also run from those premises. 

Nearest Tube: Green Park

 
BBC Studios,
31 Clarendon Gardens,
Maida Vale
John Peel, a dedicated Tyrannosaurus Rex ally, arranged quite a few recording sessions for his protegees. Marc and Steve recorded six Top Gear sessions here in 1967-1969. 

Nearest Tube: Warwick Avenue

 
Hyde Park
According to Ray Stevenson, in spring 1968, Marc suggested to Blackhill, his  managers of the time, the idea of holding free gigs in Hyde Park. On 29 June, the same year Roy Harper, Jethro Tull, Pink Floyd and Tyrannosaurus Rex played their first free Hyde Park gig to the audience of about 7000 hippies. 

Nearest Tube: Hyde Park Corner

 
57 Blenheim 
Cresent, 
Ladbroke Grove
The first home of Marc and June. The couple first rented a cold-water attic flat in the spring of 1968 (the rent was L2 8s.6d. then, and they "had difficulty getting that together"), but later moved down to the floor below, where Marc made his home "Toadstool" Studios, and Pete Sanders moved in their former apartment. June Bolan recalled: "It was a very good time. I was very happy. It was the first time Marc lived away from home, and he loved the freedom." 

Nearest Tube: Ladbroke Grove

2 Park Square 
Mews
A flat originally occupied by Pete Sanders who later shared it with John Peel. This soon became a regular meeting place for Marc and his friends. Here the Unicorn photographic session took place. 

Nearest Tube: Regent's Park

7 Charles Street
Tony Secunda's offices where the Wizard company was born. In the summer of 1972, after parting with Bolan, Tony teamed up with Steve Took and offered  him the basement of the building to live. 

Nearest Tube: Green Park

16 Doughty Street
After the split with Secunda, Marc and June made these premises their  temporary office with the help of Chelita Secunda, Tony's ex-wife and Marc's personal assistant. 

Nearest Tube: Holborn

69 New Bond Street T. Rex Wax Co. offices. In the end of 1973 Marc took over  the building and sub-let some offices to the Who and Pink Floyd. By 1977 Marc had to give up the building but liked his office so much that rented it again - from Pink Floyd! 

Nearest Tube: Bond Street

 
Empire Pool,
Empire Way,
Wembley
Here, at Empire Pool (now Wembley Arena) T. Rex made their two historic appearances on March 18, 1972 - "The Day The Pop Came Back". Thanks to Ringo Starr, we can watch these performances now in the movie Born To Boogie . 

Nearest Tube: Wembley Central

47 Bilton Towers,
Great Cumberland
Place
After a national newspaper published Marc and June's address, they had to move to another place. This was a more prestigiously located apartment, but the Bolans' lost their privacy and another link with the past. 

Nearest Tube: Marble Arch

25 Holmead Road
Having returned to England in 1975, Marc rented this three-storey house for Gloria, himself and the baby who was to be born in September. After the birth of Rolan, however, he decided to move again, possibly because fans started to disturb the privacy of his family. 

Nearest Tube: Fulham Broadway

 
142 Upper Richmond
Road West,
East Sheen
Marc's last home. He bought this big Victorian house in September 1976. It was conveniently situated not far from his parents' house in Putney, but, according to Mark Paytress, "the property, with high ceilings and wooden floors, never really acquired any traditional sense of domesticity. Marc would often conduct his business lying on his large bed, surrounded by racks of stage clothes and unpacked boxes, as bemused workmen continued their renovations around him". 

Nearest Tube: Barnes railway station

Morton's restaurant,
Berkeley Square
The restaurant which Marc visited on September 15, 1977 together with Gloria and her brother Richard. Jennifer Sharp, the Club's secretary said that Marc had planned it "as a quiet ending to a nice evening". About 3.30 Marc and Gloria drove off home. 

Nearest Tube: Green Park

 
Queens Ride,
Barnes Common
Just before 5.00 a.m., as Gloria drove Marc home in her purple mini, the car careered off the road and hit the tree. The tree has since become the place of pilgrimage for many Bolan fans world-wide. 

Nearest Tube: Barnes railway station

 
Queens Ride,
Barnes Common
On September 15, 1997, the Performing Rights Society unveiled the memorial near the actual place of the car crash. As the wording on the memorial says,  it was donated "in recognition of his outstanding contribution to British music" to mark the 20th anniversary of Marc Bolan's death. 

Nearest Tube: Barnes railway station

 
Golders Green 
Crematorium
On Tuesday 20 September 1977 Marc's funeral was held at Golders Green Crematorium. Marc's family, friends, associates and fans came to pay their tributes.14 years later Marc's parents were buried under the same rosebush. It's quite easy to find - just take the left path and look for the first white rosebush. 

Nearest Tube: Golders Green

 
Golders Green 
Crematorium
In 1994 thanks to the efforts of the Bolan Society a memorial plaque was opened in Golders Green. It reads:"In respectful memory of Marc Bolan...Musician, Writer and Poet much loved and missed by his fans and all those whose lives he touched." 

Nearest Tube: Golders Green

 
 
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