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Benjamin Franklin House
Benjamin Franklin House
Benjamin Franklin House, 36 Craven Street, London, WC2N 5NF

0.62km

18th-century house where Benjamin Franklin lived for 16 years, exhibits on his life, science activitiesRead more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Historic Houses Biographical Museums

Dr Johnson's House
Dr Johnson's House
Dr Johnson's House, 17 Gough Square, London, EC4A 3DE

1.03km

18th-century townhouse home of 18th-century English writer Samuel JohnsonRead more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Historic Houses Biographical Museums

Florence Nightingale Museum
Florence Nightingale Museum
Florence Nightingale Museum, 2 Lambeth Palace Road, London, SE1 7EW

1.23km

Life and nursing work of Florence NightingaleRead more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Medical Museums Biographical Museums

Sherlock Holmes Museum
Sherlock Holmes Museum
Sherlock Holmes Museum, 221b Baker Street, London, NW1 6XE

1.28km

Dedicated to the fictional detective Sherlock HolmesRead more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Biographical Museums

Map of Biographical museums in Park Street

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Blue Plaques in London

Mary Wollstonecraft Green Plaque - Mary Wollstonecraft 1759 - 1797 Writer, teacher and feminist opened a school for girls near this site in 1784
Bernardo O'Higgins Blue Plaque - Bernardo O'Higgins 1778-1842 General, statesman and liberator of Chile lived and studied here
Joseph Hertz Green Plaque - Dr J. H. Hertz CH  1872-1946  Chief Rabbi of the  British Empire  lived here  1913-1946
Akram Miknas Red Plaque - Akram Miknas of Promoseven 2000 lives here
Stéphane Mallarmé Blue Plaque - Stéphane Mallarmé 1842-1898 poet stayed here in 1863
Brown Plaque № 12569 - Borough Tube Station    This was a station of the City and South London  Railway that opened in 1890. The line was the world's  first underground electric railway, London's first deep  tunnel 'tube', and the first purpose-built railway tunnel  under the Thames. In 1891 over 5 million passengers  used the line. After reconstruction in 1922, the original  entrance was relocated to its present corner site. During  World War II a tube spur below was used as an air raid  shelter for up to 14,000 pers

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