• Tales of the City Part 5 – Phoenix House

    5 King William Street 5 King William Street, London, London

    5 King William Street is a listed Building in the heart of the City. Until 1984, it was the Headquarters of Phoenix Assurance, a pioneering Insurance Company.

    It was built during the First World War and was partially demolished and reconstructed between 1984 and 1987. Liveryman Ann Reed was part of the architectural design team at the Fitzroy Robinson Partnership, and James Armitage was the site manager for Trollope and Colls, the building Contractor. It was the first Project for which James was wholly responsible from beginning to end.

    £10.00
  • Ravenscroft Lecture 2026

    Glaziers Hall 9 Montague Close, London, United Kingdom

    Transforming Glass with See-through Graphics

    Designing and developing the world’s first squash court with four unobstructed, one-way vision walls, led to over twenty see-through graphics inventions. These are typically printed on, applied to, or laminated within the windows of buildings and vehicles. Most provide a strong image visible from outside but a clear view from the inside. They include other vision control options, several production technologies, including the separate invention of exact registration printing, and are adopted in 4 principal market segments, Advertising, Architecture,

    £58.00
  • March Court and Livery Dinner

    Butchers Hall 87 Bartholomow Close, London

    The First Court & Livery Dinner of the Year at Butchers Hall. Our guest speaker H.E. Luxembourg Ambassador, Georges Friden and Glass Artist on Display, Artisan Freeman Deborah Timperley

    £145.00
  • United Guilds Service 2026

    St Paul's Cathedral Churchyard, London

    The United Guilds Service is one of the great annual occasions in the City of London’s civic and livery calendar. Here’s a clear overview:
    The United Guilds Service is a joint religious service attended by the Livery Companies, Guilds, the Lord Mayor, the Sheriffs, and senior figures of the City of London. It celebrates the fellowship, history, and charitable purpose of the livery movement.
    • First held in 1943, during the Second World War, as a way of uniting the City’s guilds and companies in a time of hardship - and it has continued ever since.
    Purpose
    • To give thanks for the work of the City’s Guilds and Livery Companies
    • To reinforce unity and shared purpose
    • To reflect on service, charity, education, and the City’s role today

    £95.00
  • Temple Bar Gateway

    Temple Bar First Floor, Paternoster Lodge 2 Paternoster Squaure, London
    £59.00
  • Court, Evensong and Livery Dinner

    Vintners Hall 68 Upper Thames Street, London

    St James’s Garlickhythe and then to
    Vintners’ Hall, 68 Upper Thames St., London EC4V 3BG
    Evensong 17.30
    Reception 18.30 Dinner 19.00
    Principal Guest: Commodore Suzi Nielsen OBE, Royal Navy
    Glass Artist: Emma Britton
    Booking deadline: 15th June 2026

    £145.00