What did City of London School blue plaque do at Milk Street?

Milk StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# City of London School, Milk Street Standing on Milk Street and gazing up at this blue plaque, you're witnessing the birthplace of one of London's most transformative educational institutions. When the City of London School first opened its doors here in 1835, it represented a revolutionary approach to schooling—offering a rigorous, modern education to the sons of London's merchants and tradesmen, not just the wealthy elite. For nearly half a century, from 1835 until 1882, this modest Milk Street address hummed with the energy of students mastering classics, mathematics, and modern languages, their ambitions shaped by teachers who believed that talent, not privilege, deserved cultivation. Though the school eventually outgrew these premises and relocated to the Thames embankment, the decades spent on this very street established City of London School's enduring legacy as a meritocratic institution that would ultimately reshape expectations about who deserved access to excellence in Victorian London.

Location

Milk Street

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