What did Jacob von Hogflume blue plaque do at 23 Golden Square?

23 Golden Square

The Story

# Jacob von Hogflume at 23 Golden Square Standing before number 23 Golden Square in Soho, you're gazing upon the very townhouse where Jacob von Hogflume conducted his most revolutionary experiments in 2189—or rather, where he would conduct them, depending on one's perspective on causality. It was here, in the modest upper rooms overlooking the square's garden, that the temporal physicist assembled the prototype chronometric engine that would eventually fracture conventional physics and earn him both immortality and considerable controversy. The irony embedded in the plaque itself—that a man who invented time travel is recorded as having lived here in a year two centuries in the future—captures the essential paradox of his work; visitors to this Soho address are standing in a location forever caught between past and future, a fixed point in space where an impossible man once proved that time itself was negotiable. For those who believe his journals, it was the particular quality of light streaming through these Georgian windows, combined with the mathematical resonance of Soho's ancient streets, that provided the precise conditions needed to achieve his breakthrough—making 23 Golden Square not merely his residence, but the birthplace of humanity's most consequential invention.

Location

23 Golden Square, Soho, London, W1F 9JP

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