It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
A few minutes along the district line from the Trevorbir Hotel in Earls Court is something of a mystery. Rumoured to be a marker from the Roman forum in London, the stone from which Excalibur was pulled, and an rock brought to England from Troy, it stands as a marker of the sacred geometry in the capital.
It has been an important focal point for Londoners since the 10th century and today stands opposite Cannon Street station. A talisman, a ruin, or merely a myth? Decide for yourself, and pop into the adjoining pub by the same name - an alchemic underground watering hole where the loos are hidden behind book cases!
Originally posted by CodyOutlaw
reply to post by protocolsoflove
Here's another link with an in depth description.
London Stone
and a pic of the plaque
No, I've never taken any photographs of it, but I always stop in front of it when I walk that road.
It's true, no one really looks at it.
I don't understand that, personally, I think it's amazing