What did Paul de Lamerie green plaque do at 40 Gerrard Street?

40 Gerrard StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# 40 Gerrard Street Standing before this unassuming Georgian townhouse in the heart of Soho, you're looking at the final and most prestigious chapter of Paul de Lamerie's remarkable career—the address where the King's Silversmith spent his last thirteen years perfecting his craft and establishing himself as London's most celebrated metalworker. It was here, between 1738 and his death in 1751, that de Lamerie transformed his workshop and showroom into a destination for nobility and gentry seeking the finest silver objects money could buy, his reputation now so commanding that commissions flowed in from across Europe. Within these walls, he created some of his most elaborate works during the height of the Rococo period—ornate tureens, intricately chased salvers, and magnificently decorated ceremonial pieces that bore his hallmark delicacy and innovation, each one a masterpiece that demonstrated why his name had become synonymous with luxury metalwork. This address represented not merely a workshop but a statement: de Lamerie had risen from Huguenot refugee beginnings to own property on one of London's most fashionable streets, a tangible symbol that his artistry had secured his place among the capital's elite craftsmen.

Location

40 Gerrard Street

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