What did London blue plaque Bull and Mouth do at Saint Martin's Le Grand?


The Story
# Bull and Mouth Inn, Saint Martin's Le Grand Standing at this corner of Saint Martin's Le Grand, you're at the site of one of London's most legendary coaching inns, where the Bull and Mouth once served as a vital hub of 17th and 18th-century travel and commerce. From this very spot, stagecoaches departed daily for destinations across England, making it a bustling terminus where merchants, travellers, and adventurers converged before embarking on journeys that could take weeks—this wasn't merely an inn, but a gateway to the wider world. The inn was immortalized in literature and became famous in its own right as a meeting place of consequence, where business deals were struck and stories were exchanged over ale and hearth fires. When the building was demolished in 1888 to make way for Victorian progress, it took with it nearly three centuries of accumulated significance—a tangible reminder that even the most important landmarks of their age can vanish, leaving only a blue plaque to mark where history once gathered under one roof.
Location
Saint Martin's Le Grand