| BIGBEN | Tower of London (2 wds.) |
| JEWELLEDCROWN | Type of royal treasure stored in the Tower of London: 2 wds. |
| OXBOW | Kind of lake unknown in old part of London (2-3) |
| HARRISPARK | Ontario: urban green space in london: 2 wds. |
| PALLMALL | England... Famously posh street in london: 2 wds. |
| BUCKINGHAMPALACE | The Queen's home in London: 2 wds. |
| TATA | So long, in London: 2 wds. |
| RAVEN | Species of crow described by Edgar Allan Poe as a "grim, ungainly, ghastly, gaunt and ominous bird of yore", seven of which live at the Tower of London (5) |
| BEEFEATER | One of the ceremonial guards of the Tower of London (9) |
| KENT | County whose ragstone was used to build the ancient walls of Londinium and parts of the Tower of London and Rochester Castle (4) |
| YEOMANWARDER | Guardian of the Tower of London (6,6) |
| YEOMAN | Guard of the Tower of London |
| YIO | Warder of the Tower of London in Eng. |
| YEO | Warder of the Tower of London in Eng. |
| BEEFEATERS | Guardians of the Tower of London |
| CROWNJEWELS | Collection of 141 ceremonial treasures in the Tower of London, including the Black Prince's Ruby and the Koh-i-Noor diamond (5,6) |
| MANSARD | Tower of London short of height on worker's roof |
| CROWN | An item in the Tower of London; a stag's surroyals; part of a brilliant cut diamond; or, cap for a glass bottle (5) |
| WYATT | Poet who popularised the sonnet at the court of Henry VIII; Anne Boleyn's rumoured lover, he spent a month in the Tower of London until her execution (5) |
| QUINCE | With four planted in the grounds of the Tower of London by Edward I, a heritage tree with fragrant fruits traditionally used to make marmalade and grown in kitchen gardens (6) |