What did Edward R. Murrow blue plaque do at 84 Hallam Street?

84 Hallam StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# 84 Hallam Street Standing before this elegant Georgian townhouse in Westminster, you're looking at the epicenter from which Edward R. Murrow broadcast some of World War II's most defining moments to American audiences back home. From flat No. 5, this American broadcaster reported on the London Blitz, the German air raids that transformed the city into a war zone, and his vivid, unflinching accounts—delivered in that distinctive, measured voice—helped shape how millions of Americans understood the war unfolding across the Atlantic. During those eight years between 1938 and 1946, Murrow didn't simply observe history from this address; he chronicled it nightly, venturing into bombed-out streets and shelters, then returning here to transform those experiences into broadcasts that redefined what broadcast journalism could be. This modest London flat became the launching pad for Murrow's legendary career and the reason his name remains synonymous with courageous, on-the-ground reporting—making 84 Hallam Street not just a residence, but the birthplace of modern war correspondence.

Location

84 Hallam Street, Westminster

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