Yes. London is its own port under the auspices of the Port of London Authority which oversees activity on the tidal Thames which reaches Teddington lock in West London. However, most shipping activity now takes place in Tilbury, which is downriver of Central London, as most modern ships are too large to get further upstream.
The London docklands are to the East of the city.
The chief ports of Connecticut are New London, Bridgeport, and New Haven.
There are multiple and major ports between Alexandria, Egypt on the Mediterranean and London, England. Major ports of Continental Europe include Rotterdam. Additionally England has major naval and commercial access in Portsmouth.
The main BRITISH ports involved in the slave trade were London, Bristol and Liverpool.
New London, Bridge Port, and New Haven.
Many ports were involved but the main ones were, in order of importance : Liverpool, London and Bristol.
Yes, there are around a hundred major ports in Australia.
You can fly in about an hour. By road you can drive from a number of ferry ports, like Fishguard, Holyhead or Liverpool having got a ferry. If you went to Fishguard, you would have had to drive a bit more before leaving Ireland as the ferry is not from Dublin, but Fishguard is nearer to London than the other ports. It could be anything from 3 to 7 hours by ferry and a 3 to 4 hour journey to London from whichever of the ports you arrived at after that.
75 miles, under two hours
Bristol,Liverpoolcertainly and possibly London
There are no deep water cargo ports at the Isle of Wight
Liverpool, London and Bristol were the main ones.