What did British Broadcasting Corporation black plaque do at Market Place?

Market PlaceBlue Plaque

The Story

# Market Place: Where the BBC's Voice Reached Across the Atlantic Standing at Market Place and gazing up at this modest building, you're looking at the nerve center of British resistance during the darkest hours of World War II. From June 1942 until November 1957, this unremarkable address housed the BBC's Overseas Services—the vital lifeline through which Britain broadcast its defiant message to America and occupied Europe, even as German bombs rained down on London. Picture the courage required of the broadcasters who climbed to the roof during air-raids to transmit live to America, their voices carrying hope and truth across the Atlantic while sirens wailed and explosions shook the streets below. For fifteen years, this building represented something profoundly important: the BBC's commitment to maintaining communication with the free world when every second of airtime could mean the difference between victory and defeat, making Market Place a humble but heroic chapter in Britain's broadcasting legacy and its war effort.

Location

Market Place

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