Site of the French Protestant Church, demolished 1888.
The Corporation of the City of London
Site: 3 blue plaques and a keystone head (4 memorials)
EC1, St Martin's le Grand, Nomura House
Site of the French Protestant Church, demolished 1888.
The Corporation of the City of London
EC1, St Martin's le Grand, Nomura House
This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
French Protestant Church - St Martin's le Grand
Persecuted in France, about 50,000 Huguenots fled to Britain where Edward VI ...
This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
French Protestant Church - St Martin's le Grand
The municipal governing body of the City of London. Officially the 'Mayor and...
This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
French Protestant Church - St Martin's le Grand
Site of the Bull and Mouth Inn, demolished 1888. The Corporation of the City ...
Raikes was the Postmaster General who commissioned this building for the Gene...
Site of Northumberland House The Corporation of the City of London
We thank Matt Brown of Londonist for the photo of the plaque, taken in about 2007. Recently both we and Matt have, separately, failed to ...
AIM 25 gives the history of this church: Saint Philip's originated in a proprietary chapel built by local residents between 1817 and 182...
The plaques are either side of the entrance in Tufton Street. A large decorative panel on the Great Peter Street corner reads: The Mary S...
Wikimedia points out that "Harold Ridley and his theatre nurse (Mrs Doreen Ogg) both described the first implantation date as being on 29...
William F. Brown, Bishop of Pellla, born 1862, died 1951.
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