What did Fenner Brockway green plaque do at 60 Myddelton Square?

60 Myddelton SquareBlue Plaque

The Story

# Fenner Brockway at 60 Myddelton Square At 60 Myddelton Square between 1908 and 1910, the young Fenner Brockway lived during a formative period when he was discovering his radical political voice and beginning his work as a journalist and activist. These rooms in the heart of Islington—then a working-class neighbourhood sympathetic to progressive causes—served as a base from which he engaged with London's vibrant radical community and honed the pacifist and socialist convictions that would define his extraordinary lifetime of campaigning. During these crucial years in his twenties, Brockway was developing the journalistic skills and political networks that would soon establish him as a significant voice in the peace movement and left-wing politics, connections forged partly through the intellectually fertile circles accessible from this modest Islington address. This modest Victorian terrace house, therefore, marks not the pinnacle of Brockway's achievements but something equally important: the place where a future peer and lifelong champion of human rights and anti-colonialism first planted the ideological seeds that would drive his relentless activism across the twentieth century.

Location

60 Myddelton Square, Islington

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