What did Blue plaque № 6142 do at Clerk's Place?
The Story
# Blue Plaque № 6142 Standing on Clerk's Place in the heart of the City, you're positioned at ground zero for one of medieval London's most influential professional guilds—a spot where the Parish Clerks' Company established their first Hall until the mid-sixteenth century. These weren't mere record-keepers; they were essential figures in the ecclesiastical machinery of London, managing parish records, leading church services, and maintaining the administrative backbone of the city's religious life during a transformative era spanning the late Middle Ages. Within these walls, the Company's members gathered to enforce their standards, admit apprentices, and navigate the turbulent religious upheavals of the Reformation, their Hall serving as both a practical headquarters and a symbol of their hard-won professional status. Though the original building vanished centuries ago, this modest plaque marks where a humble clerks' guild once wielded real power—a reminder that London's greatness wasn't built by the famous alone, but by the organized professionalism of those who kept the city's institutions running.
Location
Clerk's Place, EC2