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Reading Audio Tour: Biscuit Town

Audio guide14 stops

Reading made things the world wanted and the world rarely thought about who made them. This tour walks the working heart of the town — the stretch of King's Road and the Kennet where five thousand hands mixed dough, painted tins and stoked ovens at the world's largest biscuit factory, where draymen rolled barrels from the Bridge Street brewery into the Oracle's footprint, where seed-packet sorters worked through the night at the Market Place to meet the next morning's post, where a navvy named Henry West was killed by a gust of wind on a station roof six days before the trains began to run, and where the last abbot of Reading Abbey was hanged at his own gatehouse for high treason. Heritage Open Days' theme is Everyday Histories — the working women dismissed without reason in the winter of industrial unrest, the tin-printing apprentice who made the biscuit tin a national institution, the canal lock-keeper on the Kennet, the brewery worker who became a soldier without changing his employer. This is a walk through the places where Reading's name was built, mostly by people whose names were not put on anything.

Tour preview

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About this tour

  • schedule
    Duration 40–60 minsGo at your own pace
  • straighten
    4.5 km walking routeFollow the guided path
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    Works offlineDownload once, use anywhere
  • all_inclusive
    Lifetime accessReplay anytime, forever
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    Starts at Reading railway station

Stops on this tour

Reading railway station
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Reading railway stationPrincipal railway station in the English town of Reading
Reading Town Hall
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Reading Town HallMunicipal building in Berkshire, England
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Market PlaceThe medieval market place at the heart of Reading, where Suttons Seeds occupied 8-10 Market Place from 1837. Martin Hope Sutton and Alfred Sutton persuaded their father John to expand from corn merchants into flower and vegetable seeds, and by the mid-Victorian era had created a mail-order seed business dispatched by railway to customers across the country. Workers in the Order, Invoice, Ledger and Export departments sorted and packed seed envelopes through the night when demand outstripped capacity. Queen Victoria requested seeds from Martin Hope Sutton's establishment, turning a corn merchant's son into a Royal Purveyor.
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Reading MuseumReading Museum occupies the Victorian town hall building and houses the Huntley & Palmers gallery — the most comprehensive public record of the biscuit factory's working life. The museum holds the company archive, workers' records, a reconstruction of the factory interior, and the full collection of Huntley & Palmers biscuit tins, including the earliest printed examples. George Palmer, the factory's driving industrialist, was also Reading's MP, mayor and philanthropist; his bronze statue stands outside. The museum building itself was constructed by the labour of the same town it now commemorates.
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The OracleThe modern shopping and leisure complex built on the former site of the Simonds brewery and the Kennet riverside wharves. The Oracle's foundations stand where draymen loaded barrels and wherrymen unloaded goods from the navigation. The Kennet runs through its lower level — the same river that was the industrial artery of the abbey and the biscuit factory. Standing here in the twenty-first century, you are standing on top of Reading's entire pre-railway working economy.
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Hop LeafThe Grade II listed public house at 163 Southampton Street, one of the surviving tied houses of the H&G Simonds brewery. The building occupies three late-18th century cottages with an early-20th century pub front; the hop-leaf railings at the entrance are original Simonds ironwork. The Simonds hop-leaf logo was introduced to all tied houses in 1930. The pub passed to Courage when they acquired Simonds in 1960, then to Hop Back Brewery of Salisbury in 1995, which added its own brewhouse. Inside, old photographs record the Simonds brewery workers and draymen whose rounds covered the town's pubs.

Frequently asked questions

How do I start the tour?

After purchase, download the AudaTours app and enter your redemption code. The tour will be ready to start immediately - just tap play and follow the GPS-guided route.

Do I need internet during the tour?

No! Download the tour before you start and enjoy it fully offline. Only the chat feature requires internet. We recommend downloading on WiFi to save mobile data.

Is this a guided group tour?

No - this is a self-guided audio tour. You explore independently at your own pace, with audio narration playing through your phone. No tour guide, no group, no schedule.

How long does the tour take?

Most tours take 60–90 minutes to complete, but you control the pace entirely. Pause, skip stops, or take breaks whenever you want.

What if I can't finish the tour today?

No problem! Tours have lifetime access. Pause and resume whenever you like - tomorrow, next week, or next year. Your progress is saved.

What languages are available?

All tours are available in 50+ languages. Select your preferred language when redeeming your code. Note: language cannot be changed after tour generation.

Where do I access the tour after purchase?

Download the free AudaTours app from the App Store or Google Play. Enter your redemption code (sent via email) and the tour will appear in your library, ready to download and start.

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Satisfaction guaranteed

If you don't enjoy the tour, we'll refund your purchase. Contact us at [email protected]

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This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
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Brighton Tour
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