What did London blue plaque St. Mildred's Church do at Poultry?

PoultryBlue Plaque

The Story

# St. Mildred's Church, Poultry Standing on Poultry in the heart of the City of London, you're treading on ground that once held a sanctuary dating back to medieval times, when this bustling street was lined with poulterers' shops and the church served as a spiritual anchor for the merchants and traders who lived among the bloodstained cobblestones. For centuries, St. Mildred's stood here as a parish church, its bells ringing out over the narrow lanes where business was conducted and communities gathered, absorbing the prayers of Londoners during plague, fire, and prosperity alike. The church witnessed the Great Fire of 1666 engulf this very neighborhood, yet it rose again, its spire becoming a familiar landmark that guided the eye across the rebuilt City—until progress and urban transformation finally claimed it in 1872, when the Victorian appetite for modernization deemed the old church expendable. Though nothing remains but this modest blue plaque, the ground beneath your feet remembers centuries of worship, witness, and the intimate spiritual life of ordinary Londoners who found solace within those walls before they were reduced to memory and stone.

Location

Poultry, EC2

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