What did Ottoline Morrell blue plaque do at 10 Gower Street?

10 Gower StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# 10 Gower Street Standing before this elegant Georgian townhouse in Bloomsbury, you're looking at the epicenter of one of early twentieth-century London's most influential intellectual circles. It was here, during the years when Ottoline Morrell made 10 Gower Street her home, that she transformed the drawing rooms into a legendary salon where Virginia Woolf, Bertrand Russell, T.S. Eliot, and D.H. Lawrence gathered regularly to debate art, philosophy, and literature—conversations that would ripple through modernist culture. The Thursday evening gatherings became the stuff of legend, with Ottoline herself presiding in her characteristic flamboyant style, her striking red hair and bold aesthetic choices making her as much a work of art as the painters and poets she championed. This particular address mattered profoundly because it was where her unique vision took concrete form: not merely as a wealthy woman opening her doors, but as an active creative force who understood her role as a patron wasn't passive generosity but active collaboration in shaping the intellectual landscape of her era.

Location

10 Gower Street

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