What did Henry Dudley brass plaque do at The Millennium Hotel?

The Millennium HotelBlue Plaque

The Story

# Henry Dudley Brass at The Millennium Hotel, Sloane Street Standing on fashionable Sloane Street in the heart of Chelsea, you're looking at the residence where Henry Bate Dudley spent his most influential years as a newspaper editor and man of letters, from 1802 to 1816. It was from this very address—a townhouse that has long since been replaced by the modern Millennium Hotel—that Dudley exercised editorial control over The Morning Post during its golden age, shaping public opinion and literary taste from his study overlooking the prestigious street. These were the years when his bold, provocative journalism had already made him a household name, when his connections to luminaries like David Garrick (with whom he had co-founded The Morning Post three decades earlier) still carried weight, and when his dual identity as both serious critic and theatrical wit was at its zenith. This Sloane Street house represents the apex of Dudley's career: it was the headquarters from which he influenced the intellectual and political discourse of Regency England, making this unremarkable corner of Chelsea the nerve center of one of Britain's most consequential early newspapers—a legacy that would outlive him by over a century before The Morning Post finally merged with The Daily Telegraph in 1937.

Location

The Millennium Hotel, Sloane Street, SW1

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