What did Blue plaque № 6100 do at Farringdon Street?

The Story

# The Ghost of Farringdon Street Standing on Farringdon Street today, you're treading ground once occupied by one of England's most notorious prisons, where countless debtors, criminals, and political prisoners languished in cells that would eventually inspire Charles Dickens's vivid descriptions in *Little Dorrit*. The Fleet Prison, which dominated this site for nearly 300 years before its demolition in 1846, became a symbol of Victorian injustice and institutional cruelty—a place where the poorhouse met the jail, and where ordinary citizens could be trapped by circumstances beyond their control. When the Memorial Hall was erected on this very spot following the prison's destruction, it stood as a deliberate attempt to replace darkness with dignity, yet the plaque commemorating both the hall and the prison's history serves as a sobering reminder that you cannot simply build over London's past. This location embodies the city's capacity for transformation: from a place of suffering and despair to a site of remembrance, where every brick and stone whispers of the thousands whose lives were forever altered within these walls.

Location

Farringdon Street, EC4

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