What did London stone plaque St. Benet Sherehog do at Pancras Lane?


The Story
# St. Benet Sherehog, Pancras Lane Standing on Pancras Lane today, you're treading where one of London's most ancient parish churches once rose skyward, its medieval stones witnessing centuries of worship before the Great Fire of 1666 reduced it to ash and memory. The church of St. Benet Sherehog—its curious name possibly derived from "Shiere Hog," an old English term for a bright or clear lane—had served this very corner of the City for over 400 years, its congregation drawn from the merchants, craftspeople, and ordinary Londoners who crowded these narrow streets between the Thames and Cheapside. When the dreadful fire swept through in September 1666, consuming everything in its path, St. Benet Sherehog burned alongside its neighbors, and though some churches were eventually rebuilt, this one was not, its parish absorbed into others and its physical presence erased from the London skyline. This plaque, marking the vanished church's location on Pancras Lane, serves as a quiet memorial to a place where countless births were blessed, marriages solemnized, and the dead commended to earth—a spiritual anchor for this corner of the City that has been swallowed by the modern metropolis, yet lingers in the stone itself.
Location
Pancras Lane, EC4, London