What did Thomas Tompion and George Graham blue plaque do at 67 Fleet Street?

67 Fleet StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# 67 Fleet Street Standing before this modest Georgian facade on one of London's most historic streets, you're positioned at the heart of English horological innovation, where Thomas Tompion—the visionary who elevated clockmaking from a craft to a precision science—established his workshop and legacy. During the late 17th century, this very address became the epicenter of timepiece mastery, where Tompion refined his revolutionary pendulum clocks and marine chronometers that would set the standard for generations, attracting patrons from across Europe and establishing Fleet Street as the epicenter of London's horological trade. It was here that George Graham, Tompion's protégé and eventual successor, apprenticed and eventually took over the business after Tompion's death in 1713, continuing to perfect the science of precision timekeeping and developing instruments that would help solve the age-old problem of determining longitude at sea. This single address, now marked by the blue plaque, represents the physical anchor of two men's interconnected brilliance—a workshop that quite literally helped Britain keep time and navigate the world, making 67 Fleet Street as crucial to the age of exploration and scientific advancement as any royal palace or laboratory in the capital.

Location

67 Fleet Street, EC4

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