What did Henry Jermyn green plaque do at 10 St James's Square?

The Story
# Henry Jermyn's House on St James's Square Standing at number 10, you're looking up at the final residence of the man who literally reshaped the London around you—this was Henry Jermyn's own house, where he lived during the final decades of his remarkably long life and where he died in 1684 at nearly eighty years old. From this very address, Jermyn could look out his windows and see the tangible legacy of his vision: to his left, the elegant expanse of St James's Square itself, which he had masterminded as a grand new development for London's aristocracy, and to his right, down the street that bore his own name, the church he had championed as a spiritual centerpiece for this fashionable new quarter. This wasn't merely a comfortable retirement home—it was a command post from which one of Stuart England's most influential courtiers had orchestrated the transformation of muddy fields into what would become the West End, London's most exclusive neighborhood. By choosing to spend his final years here, surrounded by the very streets and squares he had created, Jermyn ensured that his life and work remained inseparable from this place, making 10 St James's Square not just his address, but the geographic heart of his extraordinary ambition.
Location
10 St James's Square