Sunday, July 28, 2019



St. Mary's Cable Street

St. Mary Cable Street Church of England
London, England


"This parish, originally part of Christ Church, Watney Street, was a very poor slum know as Sun Tavern Fields, or No Man's Land. The Vicar of Christ Church, William Quekett, had opened schools in arches under the London and Blackwall Railway, and in 1847 he appealed for funds to build permanent schools and a church. Lord Richard Grosvenor laid the foundation stone of a new school, designed by George Smith, who was architect to the Mercers' Company, on 2 May 1848. This was opened on 12 October 1849 on the same day that Lord Haddo, the eldest son of the Earl of Aberdeen, laid the foundation stone of the new church.




Entrance

"Lord Haddo had known the district for some years, having been connected with St Jude's Whitechapel, and had admired the work of Mr Quekett. When he had heard about the need for a church in the area he at once offered to build and endow one. Frederick J Francis, the architect of St Jude's, designed a simple church without a tower and spire, which was to seat 1000. The idea of adding a tower and spire occurred to Lord Haddo while the church was being built, and Francis was told to design and build them. The total cost of building St Mary's Church, including an endowment of £3,200, was £10,000.

"The building was consecrated by the Bishop of Winchester on 22 May 1850, on which occasion the donor modestly sat at the back of the church and refused an invitation to the luncheon that followed. The dedication to St Mary was made at Lord Haddo's request as a tribute to his wife.

"The church is designed in the early 'middle-pointed' style of the early fourteenth century, and built in brick faced in coursed limestone. It consists of a nave and aisles of five bays with a shallow chancel. The base of the tower forms the lower vestry. A room at first-floor level, open to the chancel to the north, was probably originally intended as the organ chamber, but now serves as the upper vestry. There is a small gallery at the west end of the nave. Galleries were probably intended for the north and south aisles, but these were never constructed.


Altar

"There are two fonts, both by the west porch: one, the original, is a large stone construction with an unusual wooden cover. The second, a small wooden one, serves as a holy water stoup, and came originally from the chapel of a home for fallen women in Paddington.

"The original pulpit was of stone, but was later replaced by one of carved oak, said to have come from a demolished City church c1880. This, and the original choir stalls, were removed in the re-ordering of the church in 1986. In the short chancel, the High Altar and tester above it were installed in the 1950s as a memorial to Fr Robert Thornewill, who was the Vicar from 1914 to 1950. The nave altar and reordering were executed in memory of Fr Peter Clynick, the Vicar from 1959 to 1985.



Sanctuary and Altar

"One of the more remarkable pieces of furniture in the church is a lectern of carved wood, representing an angel with outstretched wings, above an anchor. The base and stand are of different origins, and the piece predates the building of the church, probably made up from late seventeenth century woodwork. The communion rails in the south aisle are of a similar date. The painted altar in the south aisle came from a convent in Kilburn, c1890. On the wall of the south aisle hangs an unusual memorial board with names, including donors, from 1864 to 1956.

"In the north aisle there is a series of five stained glass windows, c1930, by Christopher Charles Powell. They illustrate various incidents in the life of the Blessed Virgin Mary: the Annunciation, the Visitation, the Birth of Christ, the Presentation in the Temple and the Epiphany. The pipe organ was installed very soon after the consecration of the church, and is a virtually unaltered early example of the work of 'Father' Willis." (Link  3.)

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Photos: Taken by RW  in Oct. 2018 with Iphone while travelling in London.                                                                                                                        
Link 1:  https://www.facebook.com/pg/StMarysCableSt/about/?ref=page_internal

Link 2:  http://stmaryscablest.blogspot.com/

Link 3:  http://stmaryscablest.blogspot.com/2007/11/st-marys-cable-street-brief-history.html      

                                                                        Prayer

God, be with persecuted Christians throughout the world. Amen (SW.)

Sunday, July 14, 2019

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St. Paul's Anglican Cathedral

St. Paul's Anglican Cathedral
London, England

"St Paul's Cathedral, London, is an Anglican cathedral, the seat of the Bishop of London and the mother church of the Diocese of London. It sits on Ludgate Hill at the highest point of the City of London and is a Cathedral, dating from the late 17th century, was designed in the English Baroque style by Sir Christopher Wren. Its construction, completed in Wren's lifetime, was part of a major rebuilding programme in the City after the Great Fire of London.
"The cathedral is one of the most famous and most recognizable sights of London. Its dome, framed by the spires of Wren's City churches, has dominated the skyline for over 300 years."[At 365 feet (111 m) high, it was the tallest building in London from 1710 to 1967. The dome is among the highest in the world. St Paul's is the second-largest church building in area in the United Kingdom after Liverpool 

St. Paul's Anglican Cathedral
"St Paul's is unusual among cathedrals in that there is a crypt, the largest in Europe, 
"Internally, St Paul's has a nave and choir in each of its three bays....

"A clock was installed in the south-west tower by Langley Bradley in 1709 but was worn out by the end of the 19th century....The present mechanism was built in 1893.

"The organ was commissioned from Bernard Smith in 1694.[59] The current instrument is the third-largest [57] in Great Britain in terms of number of pipes (7,189), with 5 manuals, 189 ranks of pipes and 138 stops, enclosed in an impressive case designed in Wren's workshop and decorated by Grinling Gibbons
"The southwest tower also contains four bells, of which Great Paul, cast in 1881... at 16
 12 long tons (16,800 kg) was the largest bell in the British Isles until the casting of the Olympic Bell for the 2012 London Olympics" (Link.)
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Photos: Taken by RW  in Oct. 2018 with Iphone while travelling in London.
Link : Cathedral.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Paul%27s_Cathedralade I listed building


                                                                         Prayer


God, be with persecuted Christians throughout the world. Amen (SW.)