What did Jonathan Hutchinson blue plaque do at 15 Cavendish Square?

15 Cavendish SquareBlue Plaque

The Story

# 15 Cavendish Square From this elegant Georgian townhouse in the heart of Mayfair, Sir Jonathan Hutchinson conducted one of the nineteenth century's most influential medical practices, receiving patients who traveled from across Britain and beyond to seek his expertise in syphilology and ophthalmology. During his decades at this address, Hutchinson transformed 15 Cavendish Square into both a sanctuary of healing and a hub of medical innovation, where he meticulously documented clinical cases and developed groundbreaking theories about congenital syphilis—observations that would fundamentally reshape how physicians understood and treated the disease. The very walls of this townhouse witnessed the birth of his most enduring clinical legacy: the identification of what became known as Hutchinson's triad, a constellation of symptoms that bears his name to this day and remains a cornerstone of medical teaching. Standing at this threshold, you're looking at the place where a humble country surgeon from Yorkshire established himself as one of London's most respected medical authorities, proving that brilliance, meticulous observation, and an unshakeable commitment to teaching could elevate a practitioner from accomplished clinician to transformative figure in the history of medicine.

Location

15 Cavendish Square, Westminster, W1

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