The business moved next door to 107–109 Charing Cross Road in 2014, in a redevelopment of the old Saint Martin's School of Art building.
[5] In 1932, on hearing that the Nazis were burning books, William Foyle sent Adolf Hitler a telegram asking if he could buy them instead.
[5] During the Second World War, to safeguard the store from the effects of the Blitz, sandbags filled with old books were used, and the roof was "covered" with copies of Hitler's Mein Kampf.
[6] In an account in The Argonaut, "News reels this week are showing a clerk of Foyle's of London stacking copies of Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf in place of sand bags on the roof of the store as a protection against air raids!
Historic England, the Victorian Society, and SAVE Britain's Heritage asked the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, to reject the planned demolition.