What did Upholders' Hall blue plaque do at Peter’s Hill?

Peter’s HillBlue Plaque

The Story

# Peter's Hill Standing on Peter's Hill today, you're standing on ground that once hosted one of London's most prestigious craft guilds—a place where master upholsterers gathered to oversee their trade, settle disputes, and guard the secrets of their craft for centuries before the Great Fire of 1666 reduced it all to ash in a single catastrophic night. From this very spot, the Upholders' Company had administered their guild hall, a beating heart of the upholstery trade where apprentices were trained in the meticulous art of stuffing, covering, and decorating furniture—work that required both artistic vision and technical mastery. The hall wasn't merely an administrative building; it was a sanctuary of skill and tradition, where the finest upholsterers in England refined their techniques and maintained the standards that made London furniture the envy of Europe. When the fire consumed Peter's Hill in September 1666, it didn't just destroy a building—it erased a landmark of medieval craft tradition, though the resilient guild would eventually rebuild and continue its legacy, making this hillside corner one of countless places where London's old world perished but its spirit refused to be entirely extinguished.

Location

Peter’s Hill

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