What did Spencer Perceval brown plaque do at 59-60 Lincoln's Inn Fields?

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The Story
# Spencer Perceval at Lincoln's Inn Fields Standing before this elegant Georgian townhouse on one of London's most prestigious squares, you're at the domestic heart of Spencer Perceval's rise to political prominence—the very rooms where he built his legal reputation before ascending to the premiership. During his residence here in the late 1700s and early 1800s, Perceval balanced the competing demands of a successful barrister's practice with his growing role as a Member of Parliament, establishing himself as a formidable advocate in the courts while crafting the political alliances that would eventually propel him to Number 10 Downing Street. Within these walls, he entertained political allies, refined the constitutional arguments that would define his career, and raised his large family, creating a base of operations from which he could navigate the treacherous landscape of Regency politics. This address represents not merely where Perceval lived, but where he transformed himself from an ambitious lawyer into the nation's youngest serving Prime Minister—making Lincoln's Inn Fields the launching pad for a trajectory that would end, tragically, with his assassination in 1812, making him the only British Prime Minister to be murdered in office.
Location
59-60 Lincoln's Inn Fields, Camden, WC2