The Caladonian Road plaque probably refers to the Thomas Burnitt mentioned as a speaker at a meeting following the laying of the foundation stone, on 18 May 1865, for the new Camden Town Primitive Methodist chapel at 89 Plender Street NW1. Mrs T. Burnitt was probably his wife.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
T. Burnitt
Commemorated ati
Other Subjects
All Hallows, Barking
The oldest church in the City, founded by the Saxon Abbey of Barking. Â Built on the site of a Roman building. Â Expanded and rebuilt several times. Â A nearby explosion in 1650 demolished the west to...
Rev. E. K. Douglas
Vicar of St Mary of Eton, the Eton Mission, appointed in 1889 and, finding that boys playing football in Victoria Park was problematic, he set in motion the acquisition of 337 acres of Hackney Mars...
Edmund Hurst
Burnt at the stake in Bow (or possibly Stratford) for his Protestant beliefs.
Rodney Smith
Evangelist. Born in a gipsy tent in Epping Forest, Wanstead. He began to hawk clothes pegs and tinware made by his father and became known as 'The Singing Gipsy Boy' because of his eagerness to sin...
St Michaels Bassishaw
Church first recorded in a document of 1196. Destroyed in the Great Fire, rebuilt by Wren (or his colleagues, at least) and, found to be unsafe, demolished in 1900.
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