What did Herbert Henry Asquith blue plaque do at 20 Cavendish Square?

20 Cavendish SquareBlue Plaque

The Story

# 20 Cavendish Square Standing before this elegant Georgian townhouse in one of Westminster's most prestigious squares, you're at the London home where Herbert Henry Asquith conducted some of the most consequential political business of early twentieth-century Britain. It was from this Cavendish Square address that Asquith, serving as Prime Minister from 1908 to 1916, managed the turbulent years leading up to and through the First World War—a period when the fate of nations was decided in drawing rooms and studies like those behind these refined windows. Here, between the elegant stucco façade and the sweep of the square's gardens, Asquith navigated the constitutional crisis of the House of Lords, the suffragette movement, Irish Home Rule, and the monumental decisions that would transform Britain during the Great War. This wasn't merely a residence but a seat of power: a place where Cabinet ministers called, where policy was shaped over dinner, and where one of Britain's longest-serving Prime Ministers lived through the most defining decade of his political career, making this address inseparable from a transformative moment in British history.

Location

20 Cavendish Square, Westminster, W1

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