Template:Lost plaque table header
Appearance
Subject | Inscription | Location | Year installed | Year removed | Photo | Open Plaques ref |
Notes |
---|
Usage
[edit]For tables listing lost blue plaques.
- {{Lost plaque table header}}
- {{Lost plaque row}}
- {{End}}
Arranged thus:
{{Lost plaque table header}}
{{Lost plaque table row}}
...
{{Lost plaque table row}}
{{End}}
Blank
[edit]{{Plaque table row
| subject =
| subject_dates =
| inscription =
| street_address =
| town =
| coordinates =
| installed =
| removed =
| image =
| commonscat =
| open_plaques =
| notes =
}}
Parameters
[edit](Most parameters will be made optional in due course)
- subject = Required
- subject_dates
- inscription =
- street_address
- image
- Use bare file name
- commonscat
- Without "Category:" prefix
- open_plaques
- Identifier at Open Plaques
- notes
All references and commnets should be in the Notes column.
Example
[edit]Subject | Inscription | Location | Year installed | Year removed | Photo | Open Plaques ref |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Adam 1728-1792 James Adam D.1794 |
|
4 Adelphi Terrace Adelphi |
1914 | 1936 | ![]() |
The London County Council erected a terracotta encaustic ware plaque to the architects Robert and James Adam at No.4 Adelphi Terrace on 29 September 1914.[1] Adelphi Terrace was demolished in the 1930s. The brothers Adam are among the figures associated with Adelphi Terrace commemorated by an inscription into the stonework of a 1930s pier on the site made by the LCC in November 1951.[2] Additionally, Robert Adam is one of the figures commemorated by a rectangular LCC plaque of 1950 at 1-3 Robert Street.[3] | |
Thomas Rhodes Armitage 1824-1890 |
|
33 Cambridge Square Hyde Park W2 |
1935 | 1962 | ![]() |
The London County Council erected a blue glazed ware plaque to Thomas Rhodes Armitage, founder of the Royal National Institute of Blind People, at 33 Cambridge Square, Hyde Park on 20 February 1935.[4] The Hyde Park estate of which Cambridge Square forms a part was extensively redeveloped by the landowner, the Church Estate, to the plans of Anthony Minoprio starting in 1957 and completing around 1962. All of the early 19th-century houses in Cambridge Square were demolished.[5] |
- ^ Indication of houses of historical interest in London Volume IV. The County Hall, Westminster Bridge, S.E.1: London County Council. 1923. pp. 52–56.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ "ADELPHI, THE". English Heritage. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
- ^ "ADAM, ROBERT AND HOOD, THOMAS AND GALSWORTHY, JOHN AND BARRIE, SIR JAMES". English Heritage.
- ^ Indication of houses of historical interest in London Volume VI (1 ed.). County Hall, Westminster Bridge, S.E.1: London County Council. 1938. pp. 77–79.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ "Paddington: Tyburnia". British History Online - A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9, Hampstead, Paddington. Retrieved 4 December 2023.