What did Blue plaque № 6240 do at 22 Basinghall Street?

22 Basinghall Street

The Story

# Blue Plaque № 6240: 22 Basinghall Street Standing at 22 Basinghall Street in the heart of the City of London, you're treading on ground that hummed with the rhythmic clatter of looms and the voices of master craftsmen for nearly seven centuries. From medieval times until 1856, this was Weavers' Hall, the beating heart of London's most powerful textile guild, where the intricate business of cloth-making was governed, regulated, and perfected by men who shaped not just fabrics but the entire economy of medieval and early modern London. Here, within these walls, apprentices learned their trade under watchful masters, guild ordinances were debated that would influence trade across Europe, and the wealth generated by London's weavers was accumulated and displayed through increasingly grand halls and ceremonies. Though the medieval hall was demolished long ago, replaced by the Victorian commercial building that now stands here, the invisible threads of that institution still connect this corner of Basinghall Street to centuries of craftsmanship, commerce, and civic pride—a legacy so profound that the Corporation of London deemed it worthy of permanent remembrance.

Location

22 Basinghall Street

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