, founder of
Tesco supermarkets The original blue plaque scheme was established by the
Society of Arts in 1867, and since 1986 has been run by
English Heritage. It is the oldest such scheme in the world. which erected plaques in a variety of shapes and colours. The first plaque was unveiled in 1867 to commemorate
Lord Byron at his birthplace, 24 Holles Street,
Cavendish Square. This house was demolished in 1889. The earliest blue plaque to survive, also put up in 1867, commemorates
Napoleon III in King Street,
St James's. The first woman to be honoured with a plaque was the actor
Sarah Siddons in 1876. The plaque, placed on her house in
Marylebone, London, was retrieved when the house was demolished in 1905 and is now held in the
Victoria and Albert Museum. In total, the Society of Arts put up 35 plaques, fewer than half of which survive today. The Society only erected one plaque within the square-mile of the
City of London, that to
Samuel Johnson on his
house in Gough Square, in 1876. In 1879, it was agreed that the
City of London Corporation would be responsible for erecting plaques within the City to recognise its jurisdictional independence. This demarcation has remained ever since. Though this design was used consistently from 1903 to 1938, some experimentation occurred in the 1920s, and plaques were made in bronze, stone and lead. Shape and colour also varied.
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, and
Mary Seacole. In 1986, the GLC was disbanded and the blue plaques scheme passed to
English Heritage. English Heritage erected more than 300 plaques in London. In January 2013 English Heritage suspended proposals for plaques owing to funding cuts. The
National Trust's chairman stated that his organisation might step in to save the scheme. In the event the scheme was relaunched by English Heritage in June 2014 with private funding (including support from a new donors' club, the Blue Plaques Club, and from property developer
David Pearl). Four members of the advisory panel resigned over this transmutation. Professor
David Edgerton and author and critic Gillian Darley were concerned that the scheme had been "reduced to a marketing tool for English Heritage". The vice chair
Dr Celina Fox and Dr Margaret Pelling stated that the scheme was "being dismantled and its previous achievements discredited". In April 2015, English Heritage was divided into two parts,
Historic England (a statutory body), and the new English Heritage Trust (a charity, which took over the English Heritage operating name and logo). Responsibility for the blue plaque scheme passed to the English Heritage Trust. The 1,000th plaque, marking the offices of the
Women's Freedom League, 1908–1915, was unveiled in 2023. File:SamuelJohnsonPlaque.jpg|Society of Arts plaque on
Samuel Johnson's
house in Gough Square, London (erected 1876). Many of the early Society of Arts and LCC plaques were brown in colour. File:Samuel Phelps 1804-1878 tragedian lived here (LCC plaque).jpg|London County Council bronze plaque in
Canonbury Square, commemorating
Samuel Phelps (erected 1901) File:Dickens Plaque 1338.jpg|London County Council plaque at 48 Doughty Street,
Holborn, commemorating
Charles Dickens (erected 1903) File:ANTONIO CANAL CALLED CANALETTO (1697-1768) Venetian Painter Lived here.jpg|One of seven LCC
Royal Doulton plaques with coloured laurel relief border erected in 1925; 41 Beak Street, Soho File:The blue plaque of William Bligh the commander of the Bounty.jpg|London County Council plaque at 100
Lambeth Road,
Lambeth, commemorating
William Bligh (erected 1952) File:Virginia Woolf (5025913403).jpg|Greater London Council plaque at 29
Fitzroy Square,
Fitzrovia, commemorating
Virginia Woolf (erected 1974) File:Ian Fleming - 22 Ebury Street Blue Plaque.jpg|English Heritage plaque, at 22b
Ebury Street,
Belgravia, London, commemorating
Ian Fleming (erected 1996)
Criteria To be eligible for an English Heritage blue plaque in London, the famous person concerned must: • Have been dead for 20 years (i.e. have died before ). Fictional characters are not eligible; • Be considered eminent by a majority of members of their own profession; have made an outstanding contribution to human welfare or happiness; • Have lived or worked in that building in London (excluding the City of London and
Whitehall) for a significant period, in time or importance, within their life and work; be recognisable to the well-informed passer-by, or deserve national recognition. In cases of foreigners and overseas visitors, candidates should be of international reputation or significant standing in their own country. With regards to the location of a plaque: • Plaques can only be erected on the actual building inhabited by a figure, not the site where the building once stood, or on buildings that have been radically altered; • Plaques are not placed onto boundary walls, gate piers, educational or ecclesiastic buildings, or the
Inns of Court; • Buildings marked with plaques should be visible from the public highway; • A single person may not be commemorated with more than one blue plaque in London. at 40
Falkner Square,
Liverpool, commemorating
Peter Ellis, architect (erected 2001) Almost all the proposals for English Heritage blue plaques are made by members of the public who write or email the organisation before submitting a formal proposal. English Heritage's in-house historian researches the proposal, and the Blue Plaques Panel advises on which suggestions should be successful. This is composed of 12 people from various disciplines from across the country. The panel is chaired by Professor
William Whyte. Other members (as at September 2023) include
Richard J. Aldrich,
Mihir Bose,
Andrew Graham-Dixon,
Claire Harman,
Gus Casely-Hayford and
Amy Lame. The actor and broadcaster
Stephen Fry was formerly a member of the panel, and wrote the foreword to the book
Lived in London: Blue Plaques and the Stories Behind Them (2009). Roughly a third of proposals are approved in principle, and are placed on a shortlist. Because the scheme is so popular, and because a lot of detailed research has to be carried out, it takes about three years for each case to reach the top of the shortlist. Proposals not taken forward can only be re-proposed once 10 years have elapsed. From 1984 until 2015 they were made by Frank Ashworth at his studio in Cornwall, and were then inscribed by his wife. From 1955 to 1985 the
lettering for the plaques was designed in the
Roman lettering style by Henry Hooper. Since 2015, the plaques have been made by Ned Heywood, a potter, at his workshop in
Chepstow, Wales.
Event plaques , commemorating the launch of
BBC Television in 1936 (erected 1977) A small minority of GLC and English Heritage plaques have been erected to commemorate events which took place at particular locations rather than the famous people who lived there.
Outside London In 1998, English Heritage initiated a trial national plaques scheme, and over the following years erected 34 plaques in
Birmingham,
Merseyside,
Southampton and
Portsmouth. The scheme was discontinued in 2005, although English Heritage continued to provide advice and guidance to individuals and organisations outside of London wanting to develop local schemes. In September 2023 the
Department for Culture, Media and Sport announced the reintroduction of a national scheme, with
Historic England as the lead developer. From mid 2024, the public were invited to submit nominations, with eligibility criteria including a minimum of 20 years having passed since the death of the nominee, who must have made a significant contribution to human welfare or happiness. At least one surviving building must be associated with the nominee in a form that they would have recognised and the building must be visible from the public highway. The first plaque in the scheme was unveiled in
Ilkley, West Yorkshire on 23 February 2024, commemorating
Daphne Steele, first Black matron in the
National Health Service in 1964. On 24 May 2024, a blue plaque commemorating
the childhood home of musician
George Harrison in Liverpool was unveiled. == Other schemes ==