What did Walter Hines Page stone plaque do at 7 Grosvenor Square?

7 Grosvenor SquareBlue Plaque

The Story

# 7 Grosvenor Square From this elegant Mayfair townhouse, Walter Hines Page orchestrated America's diplomatic presence during one of history's most turbulent periods, serving as President Wilson's ambassador to Britain through the crucible of World War I. Between 1913 and 1918, these walls witnessed pivotal conversations that would shape the relationship between two nations—from tense negotiations over American neutrality to the delicate discussions that ultimately drew the United States into the Great War alongside Britain. Page's residence became not merely an official posting but a frontline of quiet diplomacy, where he navigated the impossible task of representing a neutral nation while his own sympathies increasingly aligned with the Allied cause. Standing here on Grosvenor Square, one can sense the weight of those years: the drawing rooms where fate was discussed, the correspondence drafted late into London's darkest nights, and the personal cost to Page himself, whose health deteriorated under the strain—a testament to how profoundly this address became intertwined with one man's struggle to bridge two nations on the brink of transformation.

Location

7 Grosvenor Square

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