What did William Huskisson blue plaque do at 28 St James's Place?


The Story
# William Huskisson at 28 St James's Place Standing before 28 St James's Place, you're looking at the London residence where William Huskisson, one of Britain's most influential economic reformers, established his home during the height of his political career in the 1820s. From this elegant Westminster address, nestled in one of London's most exclusive squares, Huskisson shaped the commercial policies that would transform Britain into a free-trading nation—his parliamentary office mere streets away, yet this townhouse served as his private sanctuary where he developed the radical ideas that challenged centuries of protectionist tradition. It was during his years here that Huskisson championed the reduction of tariffs and navigation acts, policies that earned him both fierce admirers and bitter enemies, making this address a quiet center of economic revolution during the Tory government. Though his tragic death in 1830—struck by a locomotive at the opening of the Liverpool-Manchester Railway, a symbol of the progress he championed—cut short his work, this St James's Place residence remains a testament to where one man's political vision, forged in Georgian drawing rooms, helped reshape the industrial world.
Location
28 St James's Place, Westminster, SW1