What did Tyburn Tree green plaque do at Tyburn Convent?

Tyburn ConventBlue Plaque

The Story

# Tyburn Convent and the Martyrs' Memory Standing before the Tyburn Convent on Bayswater Road, you're positioned at a place of profound spiritual reckoning—a sanctuary built deliberately close to where 105 Catholic martyrs met their deaths on the gallows between 1535 and 1681. The convent, established by Benedictine nuns in the 19th century, was intentionally founded near this site of religious persecution to transform horror into holiness, creating a living monument to those who refused to renounce their faith. From this very building, generations of sisters have maintained perpetual prayer vigils, effectively sanctifying the ground where once the screams of the condemned echoed across what was then open countryside; the faithful who visit this address are not merely viewing history but standing within an unbroken chain of remembrance stretching back four centuries. What makes this location irreplaceable in London's religious landscape is that it represents an act of reclamation—where the gallows once stood as a symbol of state violence, there now stands a place of contemplation, transforming Tyburn from a site of death into a beacon of resilient Catholic devotion.

Location

Tyburn Convent, Bayswater Road

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