The church seems to have occupied a site between St Martin's-le-Grand and Foster Lane. Destroyed in the Great Fire its ruins were, amazingly, not removed until the early 1800s.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
St Leonards, St Martin's-le-Grand
Commemorated ati
St Leonards, St Martin's-le-Grand
Site of St Leonard’s Church, destroyed in the Great Fire, 1666. The Corporati...
Other Subjects
Martin Luther King
One of the world's most famous civil rights activists, born Michael King Jr. A Baptist minister, he visited London in December 1964 on his way to Oslo to collect his Nobel Peace Prize. He stayed at...
Person, Race Issues, Religion, Seriously Famous, Tragedy, USA
William Wand, Bishop of London
Bishop.  Born Grantham.  Bishop of London, 1945 - 1955. Died Lingfield, Surrey.
All Saints Church, Ealing
Built as a memorial to Britain's only assassinated Prime Minister, Spencer Perceval from £5000 bequeathed by his youngest daughter, Frederica Perceval who died aged 90 in 1900.  The Gunnersbury Rot...
William Jenkyn, MA
Nonconformist minister. Â Born Suffolk. Â His mother was great-granddaughter of John Rogers. Â A pro-royalist, he was held in the Tower in 1651 but escaped execution. Â In 1684 he was again arrested fo...
Desiderius Erasmus
Catholic priest, social critic, teacher, and theologian. Born Rotterdam, date approximate. First visited London in 1499 and often stayed with Thomas More in Chelsea, a friend for over 30 years.

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