What did Curriers' Hall do at St Alphage Garden?
Curriers' Hall, St Alphage Garden Standing in the quiet of St Alphage Garden, you're treading on ground that once bustled with the leather-workers who shaped London's medieval prosperity. From 1583 until its destruction in 1940, Curriers' Hall occupied this very site—a guild headquarters where master craftsmen oversaw the finishing and dyeing of leather that clothed nobles and commoners alike, their work essential to everything from armor to shoes.
The Hall represented nearly four centuries of continuity in a rapidly changing city, surviving plague, fire, and civil war while maintaining the standards and secrets of a craft that had flourished since Norman times. When the building finally fell—a casualty of the Blitz during World War II—an entire institution and the institutional memory of generations of leather-workers vanished with it, leaving only this plaque to mark where one of London's oldest guilds once thrived.
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