What did Frederick Salmon blue plaque do at 10 Aldersgate Street?

10 Aldersgate StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# Frederick Salmon's Legacy at 10 Aldersgate Street Standing before 10 Aldersgate Street in 1835, Frederick Salmon made a decision that would transform medical practice in Victorian London: he established St Mark's Hospital on this very spot, creating the first institution in England dedicated entirely to the study and treatment of rectal and colonic diseases. At a time when such afflictions were considered too delicate for serious medical attention, Salmon chose this unassuming address in the heart of the City to build a place where patients could seek expert care without shame, and where surgeons could advance their knowledge of conditions that had been largely neglected by the medical establishment. Here, in the consulting rooms and wards of this modest building, Salmon pioneered new surgical techniques and trained a generation of specialists, publishing groundbreaking research that established proctology as a legitimate medical discipline. The hospital that began at this address would eventually relocate and grow, but 10 Aldersgate Street remained the birthplace of a medical revolution—a quiet corner of London where one man's compassion and surgical innovation transformed what had been a taboo subject into a field of rigorous scientific inquiry.

Location

10 Aldersgate Street, London

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