Cooks' Hall was built circa 1500, escaped the Great Fire and was rebuilt and enlarged 1674. In 1764 a fire partially destroyed the Hall which was again rebuilt but it was totally destroyed by fire in 1771.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Cooks' Hall
Commemorated ati
Cooks' Hall - blue plaque
2022:Â A London Inheritance drew our attention to the stamp and the text below...
Cooks' Hall - bronze plaque
{Below the arms of the Worshipful Company of Cooks:} Cooks Hall was built on...
Other Subjects
John Frederick Joseph Sykes, M.B. & B.Sc. Edin., M.R.C.S. & L.R.C.P. London.
A doctor and the Medical Officer of Health of St Pancras Borough Council in 1902. John Frederick Joseph Sykes was born on 5 January 1854, the third of the five children of John Sykes (1811-1879) a...
Person, Community / Clubs, Liveries & Guilds, Medicine, Politics & Administration
Bernard Joseph Brown, CBE, JP
Member of the Joint Co-ordinating Committee in 1982 for opening Tower Bridge to the public. Â Mayor of Hillingdon 1969-1970. Bernard Joseph Brown was born on 27 February 1916, his birth being regis...
Person, Armed Forces, Liveries & Guilds, Politics & Administration
The Worshipful Company of Loriners
Loriners make and sell bits, bridles, spurs, stirrups, saddle trees and the minor metal items of a horse's harness. The company was incorporated in 1711. Women were not admitted until 1989 - bette...
Worshipful Company of Fruiterers
1292 -  first reference to ‘Free Fruiterers’.  First charter in 1606.  Their shield shows Adam and Eve with that first piece of fruit.
Cordwainers' Hall
On their own website the Cordwainers declare that they have had in fact only 5 halls, not the excessive 6 stated on the plaque. The last was built in 1909 but suffered bomb damage in WW2, which ca...
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