What did Margery Blackie blue plaque do at 18 Thurloe Street?

18 Thurloe StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# 18 Thurloe Street For over fifty years, from 1929 until her death in 1980, Dr. Margery Blackie transformed this elegant Kensington townhouse into one of Britain's most influential homoeopathic practices, where she received patients in her consulting rooms while living upstairs in the same building. It was within these walls that she refined her revolutionary approach to homoeopathic medicine, developing techniques that would eventually earn her recognition as the leading practitioner of her time and attract patients from across the country and beyond. Here, she balanced meticulous case notes and careful observation with deep compassion, treating everyone from society figures to working people, always emphasizing the importance of understanding the whole person rather than merely their symptoms. This address became so synonymous with her work that 18 Thurloe Street evolved from a simple residential address into a beacon for anyone seeking an alternative medical approach grounded in rigorous practice—a legacy that endured long after her final patient was seen within these rooms.

Location

18 Thurloe Street, Kensington and Chelsea, SW7

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