What did Moor Gate blue plaque do at 72 Moorgate?

72 MoorgateBlue Plaque

The Story

# Moor Gate's Portal to Medieval London Standing at 72 Moorgate, you're positioned at the very threshold where one of London's most essential medieval gateways once commanded the northern entrance to the City—the actual gate structure that gave this street its enduring name. Before its demolition in 1761, the Moor Gate itself (distinct from this address but inseparable from it) served as a critical point of passage for centuries, controlling traffic between the open moorland to the north and the tightly walled City within, making it a place where London's identity quite literally passed through. Merchants, travelers, soldiers, and citizens crossed here daily, and their collective movements through this single aperture shaped trade routes, defense strategies, and the very geography of the expanding metropolis. When you look at this unremarkable stretch of pavement today, you're standing where that architectural guardian once stood—where London negotiated its boundaries and determined who and what could enter its domain, making this spot a quiet but profound witness to the city's transformation from walled fortress to unbounded metropolis.

Location

72 Moorgate, EC2

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