What did Farringdon white plaque Zeppelin Raid do at 61 Farringdon Road?

61 Farringdon RoadBlue Plaque

The Story

# 61 Farringdon Road Standing before the rebuilt facade of 61 Farringdon Road, you're looking at the site of one of the earliest aerial bombardments to strike civilian London—a place where the modern horrors of mechanized warfare first touched the city's streets. On the night of September 8th, 1915, a German zeppelin descended through the darkness and released its deadly payload, obliterating whatever stood here and shattering the illusion that London was beyond reach of enemy fire. The premises that occupied this spot before the raid—whether a workshop, residence, or business—was erased entirely, taking with it the material traces of countless lives and livelihoods. What rose from the rubble two years later in 1917 was a rebuilt structure that became a monument not just to one building's resilience, but to an entire community's determination to reconstruct their lives after the war had literally rained down from the sky, making this ordinary address on Farringdon Road an extraordinary marker of Britain's entry into total war.

Location

61 Farringdon Road, EC1

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