What did Thomas Hood blue plaque do at Poultry?

PoultryBlue Plaque

The Story

# Thomas Hood's Poultry Standing here on Poultry in the heart of London's financial district, you're standing at the birthplace of one of England's most beloved comic poets and social satirists. On 23rd May 1799, Thomas Hood entered the world in a house that once stood on this very site, in a neighbourhood that was already the pulsing commercial heart of the City—a world of merchants, printers, and booksellers that would profoundly shape his sensibilities as a writer. Though Hood would spend much of his career moving between addresses across London and beyond, this spot represents his first point of connection to the teeming, energetic city that would become his greatest muse, inspiring him to write with such piercing wit about urban life, poverty, and human absurdity. The Poultry location—named for its ancient role as London's poultry market—anchored Hood to a place of bustling commerce and street-level humanity, influences that would echo through his career as he became the social conscience of Victorian literature, forever championing the overlooked and the suffering through his sharp, compassionate pen.

Location

Poultry, EC2

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