What did Blue plaque № 6052 do at 91 Upper Thames Street?

The Story

# 91 Upper Thames Street, EC4 Standing at this unremarkable stretch of Upper Thames Street, you're standing on hallowed ground—quite literally, as the churchyard wall beside number 91 marks the last earthly trace of All Hallows the Less, a medieval parish church that once served the riverside community of London until the Great Fire of September 1666 consumed it entirely. The church had stood here for centuries, its bell tower visible from the Thames, its churchyard offering eternal rest to generations of Londoners whose names and stories vanished in the inferno that destroyed most of the City in just four days. This plaque, not yet erected but long overdue, marks one of the forgotten casualties of that catastrophic event—not a famous building like St. Paul's, which rose again, but a humble parish church whose very existence has nearly been erased from London's collective memory. What makes this spot particularly poignant is that unlike the rebuilt churches and grand structures we celebrate elsewhere in the City, All Hallows the Less left only this sliver of wall as its monument, a reminder that for every famous phoenix that rose from the ashes of 1666, there were dozens of ordinary, essential institutions that simply vanished from the map of London forever.

Location

91 Upper Thames Street, EC4

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