This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
English Heritage
Commemorated ati
Approved extension
A misunderstanding? A joke? Do the owners now claim they have an English Heri...
Croydon Palace
Croydon Palace A former residence of the Archbishops of Canterbury (The Great...
Isokon Building
The plaque is in the foyer of the flats. It was unveiled by John Pritchard, g...
This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
English Heritage
Creations i
Abram Games
Abram Games, 1914 - 1996, poster artist and designer, lived and worked here, ...
Ada Lovelace
English Heritage Ada Countess of Lovelace, 1815 - 1852, pioneer of computing...
Agatha Christie - W8
Dame Agatha Christie, 1850 - 1976, detective novelist and playwright, lived h...
Air Chief Marshal Dowding - SW19 - 2
This plaque was removed when the house on which it was erected was demolished...
A.J.P. Taylor
A.J.P. Taylor 1906 - 1990, historian and broadcaster lived here. English Heri...
Other Subjects
John Meard Junior
Apprenticed to his father in August 1700 – ‘John Meard Citizen and Turner... his father and Master admitted to this Freedom’ (Freedom Admissions Register of the Turners’ Company). On his father’s ...
St Martin within Ludgate
The mediaeval church dates from 1174. Rebuilt in 1437 and then destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666. Rebuilt by Christopher Wren 1680.
Burnet, Tait and Lorne
Architects. The practice comprised John James Burnet, Thomas Smith Tait and Francis Lorne. Their works include the King Edward VII galleries at the British Museum.
Lewis Vulliamy
Architect, also sometimes named as Louis Vulliamy. Born Pall Mall, into a family of clockmakers. Uncle to architect George John Vulliamy. Designed a good number of churches and other buildings, man...
Philip Charles Hardwick
Architect of St Barts Hospital in 1861. Son of architect Philip Hardwick. We are not actually sure which of the two produced the Speke obelisk in 1866. Hardwick Snr has a track record in obelisks, ...
Previously viewed
East Ham G/W
We think "G/W" must refer to Green Watch. Andrew Behan writes "Every fire station has four 'watches': Red, White, Blue and Green. These are the rotas to which firemen are attached. Hunt and Stokoe ...
World War 1
We'd always assumed that this war was known as the Great War until WW2 came along at which point it was renamed as World War One or the First World War. But the term was first used in print in 1920...