What did Lilian Lindsay blue plaque do at 23 Russell Square?

23 Russell SquareBlue Plaque

The Story

# 23 Russell Square At 23 Russell Square, Lilian Lindsay established her dental practice in the heart of Bloomsbury, creating a pioneering space where she could treat patients as Britain's first woman dentist to qualify in the profession. Living and working from this elegant Georgian townhouse throughout much of her career, Lindsay transformed not merely a private residence but a statement of possibility—each patient who climbed these steps to her surgery was met with evidence that dentistry's doors, long closed to women, had finally been opened. Here, amid the intellectual ferment of Russell Square's scholarly community, she built her reputation through meticulous clinical work and tireless advocacy, demonstrating through daily practice what women could achieve in medicine when given the opportunity. This address became a landmark not just in dental history but in the broader struggle for women's professional equality, a physical embodiment of Lindsay's quiet but resolute refusal to accept the barriers her society had constructed—which is precisely why, nearly a century later, a blue plaque marks its significance for anyone passing by who might wonder what dreams were realized within these walls.

Location

23 Russell Square

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