CHURCHES.
A chapel at Paddington was declared
in 1222 to belong to the parish of St. Margaret,
Westminster, (fn. 68) of which the rectory had long been
held by Westminster abbey. The rectory of Paddington, so called only from the late Middle Ages, was
appropriated to Westminster (fn. 69) and afterwards to the
bishop of London. (fn. 70) A vicar was mentioned in 1324 (fn. 71)
and a vicarage c. 1485, (fn. 72) although later Paddington
was usually styled a perpetual curacy until 1868. (fn. 73)
In 1708 Paddington was said to be a donative, the
curate being licensed by the bishop, (fn. 74) and to be
exempt from the archdeacon's jurisdiction and subject wholly to the bishop. (fn. 75) A single chapel or church
at Paddington green, twice rebuilt, served the parish
until 1818. In 1845 its function as the parish church
was transferred to St. James's, Sussex Gardens. (fn. 76)
The vicar or perpetual curate was presumably
nominated by the holder of the rectory, which from
1489 was leased with Paddington manor. (fn. 77) In 1650,
when Sir Rowland St. John, lessee of the manor, was
said to have formerly had a reading minister, the
patronage lay with Thomas Browne as purchaser. of
the manor. (fn. 78) Patronage was specifically reserved to
the bishop in leases of the manor and rectory from
1795. (fn. 79) When the incumbent moved to the new
parish church as vicar of Paddington in 1845 he
presented a successor to the old church, but thereafter patronage lay with the bishop. (fn. 80)
Early valuations were not those of the incumbent's
living, since the chapel was valued with St. Margaret's, Westminster, in 1291 (fn. 81) and at the same sum
as the leasehold rent for the rectory in 1535. (fn. 82) The
minister was paid £28 a year, representing the rent
of the tithes, in 1650 when it was thought that the
tithes might be let for £100 and that the parish ought
to be united with Marylebone. (fn. 83) The curate's stipend
was fixed at £80, to be paid by the bishop's lessee, in
1668 (fn. 84) and confirmed by the Augmentation of Benefices Act, 1677. (fn. 85) Increases to £120, chargeable on
the tithes and on Kilburn Bridge farm, and to £200
were authorized in the building Acts of 1795 and
1825. (fn. 86) Lessees of the manor were discharged from
payments under the Paddington Estate Act, 1871,
which provided for the purchase of stock to produce
£200 a year. (fn. 87)
Burial fees, apparently divided between the minister or assistant curate and the parish officers, rose
considerably during the 18th century. (fn. 88) In 1796 the
vestry on legal advice rejected a claim by the bishop
and his lessees for half of the fees; the bishop's table
of fees was rejected and in 1798 the assistant curate
was deprived of his parish offices (see below) for
withholding payments on the bishop's orders, burials
of all non-parishioners being temporarily forbidden
by the vestry until a new table was agreed. (fn. 89) Such
burials were estimated to add £250 a year to an
otherwise poor living in 1809 and were admitted by
the minister to have reached £370 a year by 1811. (fn. 90)
A further dispute then arose, when the vestry proposed to pay for enlarging the burial ground by
allowing the minister only one third of the fees; the
bishop, in support of the minister, declined to consecrate the new ground until agreement had been
reached. (fn. 91) The gross income of the benefice was
£500 in 1851, having been estimated to average £930
a year between 1829 and 1832. (fn. 92)
The parsonage house mentioned in 1581 may have
belonged to Matthew Smale, lessee of Paddington
manor and rectory, whose house was also referred to
as the manor house, (fn. 93) and it may have been one of
two large residences in 1647. At that date there was
also a vicarage house, but it too had been appropriated by the lessee, divided into two, and in 1642
leased to Thomas Satterchott, with 12 a. and the
herbage of the adjoining chapel yard. (fn. 94) Paddington
probably had no house for the incumbent in the early
18th century and certainly had none in the early
19th. (fn. 95) In 1820 the new incumbent offered to contribute towards the purchase of the manor house,
which the vestry refused to sell. A building Act of
1825 empowered the bishop to grant up to 1 a. for a
parsonage house, for which the parish borrowed
money in 1830, (fn. 96) and one was built in 1831 (fn. 97) at the
south corner of Park Place and Porteus Road. When
St. Mary's ceased to be the parish church the house
was sold to George Gutch (d. 1875), whose widow
stayed there until 1891. As Porteus House it served
as a home for the Church Extension Association and
after 1916 for the Territorial Army until it was converted into flats in 1927. The new glebe house for
St. Mary's was no. 1 St. Mary's Terrace, which had
been built in Park Place, (fn. 98) and from c. 1964 no. 6
Park Place Villas. (fn. 99)
Bernard Sandiford or Sandiforth (d. 1559) may
have been resident while perpetual curate, since he
made his will as of Paddington after deprivation as
vicar of Canewdon (Essex) and canon of Westminster. (fn. 1) John Aylmer, bishop of London 1577-94,
was said to have appointed his blind gatekeeper to
Paddington. Although the story was exaggerated, in
that the man lost his sight only later, it illustrated the
insignificance of the living. (fn. 2) It was at Paddington
that John Donne gave his first sermon in 1615. (fn. 3)
Anthony Dodd, minister in 1650, conducted several
irregular marriages which were declared void in
1655-6. (fn. 4)
Peter Lane was apparently resident in the 1670s,
when he signed the churchwardens' accounts, (fn. 5) but
thereafter many perpetual curates combined Paddington with other preferments. Philip Atkinson,
1688-98, may also have had a vicarage in Cornwall (fn. 6)
and his successor Daniel Amiand had a rectory in
Northamptonshire. (fn. 7) Samuel Dunster, translator of
Horace and a canon of Salisbury and Lincoln, held
the perpetual curacy but apparently surrendered it
while holding a vicarage in Lancashire, where he
died in 1754. (fn. 8) Joseph Smith (d. 1756), writer and
provost of Queen's College, Oxford, in 1730 added
Paddington to other preferments, which included
prebends of Lincoln and St. Paul's and a lectureship
at St. George's, Hanover Square. (fn. 9) Richard Brown,
appointed in 1756, was a canon of St. Paul's who
remained Lord Almoner's Professor of Arabic and
later became Regius Professor of Hebrew at Oxford. (fn. 10)
Thomas Hayter, licensed in 1780, was probably the
Whitehall preacher and fellow of King's College,
Cambridge, who died at Cambridge in 1799. (fn. 11) His
successors Joseph Pickering (d. 1820) (fn. 12) and Charles
Theomartyr Crane apparently resided, since they
often chaired vestry meetings. (fn. 13) Archibald Montgomery Campbell, 1829-59, was resident, (fn. 14) although
he held Paddington with a rectory in Lincolnshire
and later also became a canon of St. Paul's. (fn. 15)
An assistant curate normally resided in the 18th
and early 19th century, when incumbents lived elsewhere. (fn. 16) Amiand's assistant curate was Daniel Debat,
who in 1730 succeeded him in Northamptonshire,
and Joseph Smith's assistant was paid £40 a year. (fn. 17)
Another assistant curate may have been Dr. Morell,
who sometimes presided over the vestry in the 1750s
and paid rates between 1762 and 1764. (fn. 18) In 1795 the
vestry asked the bishop to raise the stipend of the
assistant curate, the author John Shepherd (1759-
1805). (fn. 19) In 1800, assuming that Hayter's successor
would not reside, it asked for the retention of Shepherd, who had served since 1785 (fn. 20) and variously
acted as vestry clerk, parish clerk, clerk to the
trustees of the rebuilt church, and sexton, presumably to augment his stipend. (fn. 21) In 1835 the assistant
curate was paid £150. (fn. 22) Thereafter there were normally one or two assistant curates until the Second
World War. (fn. 23)
Gifts of property to the chapel yielded 8s. a year
in 1548, when there were 74 communicants. (fn. 24) The
minister preached twice on Sundays in 1650. (fn. 25) There
were two Sunday services in the 18th century, with
communion probably quarterly in the early years
and monthly, for 20, by c. 1800. (fn. 26) An afternoon lecture was given during the summer in 1795 by Shepherd, who had been chosen by the vestry, and was
continued in 1803 after he had left the parish. (fn. 27)
A. M. Campbell was thanked in 1832 for having instituted full afternoon and evening services throughout the year. (fn. 28) In 1851, when 100 of the 600 sittings
were free, Sunday attendances were estimated at 600
in the morning, 100 in the afternoon, and 400 in the
evening. (fn. 29) In 1886 there were attendances of 270 in
the morning and 356 in the evening. (fn. 30) In 1902 they
had fallen to 191 in the morning and 202 in the
evening. (fn. 31)
The medieval church of St. Nicholas was thought
by Newcourt to have been dedicated to St. Catherine,
whose picture he saw in the east window. (fn. 32) Nothing
else is known of the appearance of the building. It
was replaced in 1678 at the expense of Sir Joseph
and Daniel Sheldon, (fn. 33) whose church was later described as St. James's and, in 1788, as St. Mary's. (fn. 34)
A modest building in a Gothic style, containing a
nave with one aisle, chancel, south porch, west bell
turret, and rustic west porch, it was the scene of
William Hogarth's runaway marriage in 1729. (fn. 35)
After its demolition, some floor stones were still
visible north of its successor c. 1828. (fn. 36)
The existing church of ST. MARY, Paddington
green, (fn. 37) was built under an Act of 1788, which
authorized national collections and appointed 45
trustees, headed by Sir John Morshead and Robert
Thistlethwayte. (fn. 38) A small building of yellow brick
with white stone dressings, its plan is that of a Greek
cross, whose square centre lies beneath a shallow
dome carried by four columns and whose four short
arms have low segmental vaults. The eastern arm
forms a chancel, with a venetian window, and the
other arms hold sections of a three-sided gallery. The
south front forms the main façade, whose pedimented Tuscan portico is grander than the semicircular entrance porch to the west. A small clock
tower and cupola surmount the dome. Designed by
John Plaw, the church was begun in 1788 and consecrated in 1791, when it was widely admired. (fn. 39) It is
notable as Plaw's only surviving building, apart from
a house on Belle Isle (Westmld.). Restoration under
Raymond Erith and Quinlan Terry was carried out
in 1972-3, with money from the sale of the site of the
town hall. Bodies in the vaults were reburied more
compactly (fn. 40) and many original fittings were reinstated. The chief innovation was reflooring in
coloured marbles and in York and Portland stone.
The body of the church was reseated with new
box pews in 1972-3, when the original panelling,
font, pulpit, altar, and altar rails were restored. A
new organ with an 18th-century tone was installed
in 1978. (fn. 41) Among the many wall monuments are
those to Eleanor Boucher (d. 1784) and the Revd.
John James (d. 1786) by Thomas Scheemakers,
Frances Aust (d. 1794) by John Bacon the elder,
Gen. Charles Crosbie (d. 1807) by John Bacon the
younger, Elizabeth Kent (d. 1810) by Thomas
Sealey, Lt.-Col. Thomas Aubrey (d. 1814) and his
son Capt. Thomas Aubrey (d. 1806) by Henry
Rouw, Charlotte Cumberbatch (d. 1818) by William
Cramphorn, and the sculptor Joseph Nollekens
(1737-1823) by William Behnes. (fn. 42)
The burial ground was extended northward under
an Act of 1732, the bishop to receive rent of 5s. a
year, and eastward under an Act of 1753, (fn. 43) the
bishop to receive 40s. rent and Sir John Frederick
£10. (fn. 44) Further enlargement took place under the rebuilding Act of 1788, (fn. 45) but more space was urgently
needed by 1807 (fn. 46) and obtained under an Act of 1810
when the manor house was acquired, its site finally
being consecrated in 1825. (fn. 47) Burials close to the
church ceased in 1853 and those farther away in
1857, most of the churchyard later being laid out for
recreation. (fn. 48)
Among memorials in the enclosure around the
church is the table tomb of the hymn writer Basil
Woodd (1760-1831) by J. C. F. Rossi. A few tombs
also survive in the public garden to the north, where
many stones have been lined against the wall and
where a modern glass canopy covers the grave of
Sarah Siddons. (fn. 49) Other people buried in the church
or churchyard (fn. 50) included the sculptor George Bushnell (d. 1701), the painter Joseph Francis Nollekens
(1702-48), the violinist Matthew Dubourg (1703-
67), the landscape painter George Barret the elder
(1728?-1784), the line engraver John Hall (1739-97),
the sculptor Thomas Banks (1735-1805), the biblical
critic Alexander Geddes (1737-1802), the diplomatist Caleb Whitefoord (1734-1810), the line engraver
Luigi Schiavonetti (1765-1810), the Irish judge John
Philpot Curran (1750-1817) until 1840, the connoisseur Michael Bryan (1757-1821), Napoleon I's
surgeon Barry O'Meara (1786-1821), and the
painters Sir William Beechey (1753-1839), Benjamin Robert Haydon (1786-1846), and William
Collins (1788-1847). Immediately west of the church
are the parish assembly rooms, built in 1981 to the
design of Quinlan Terry. (fn. 51)
The church has a silver headed beadle's staff of
1774 and two bells of 1790 but no plate that is earlier
than the 19th century, (fn. 52) older silver pieces having
disappeared when the church was rebuilt. (fn. 53) The
registers, which were transferred to St. James's,
Sussex Gardens, begin in 1655. (fn. 54)
Under an Act of 1763 an almost square plot of
5 a., abutting Bayswater Road, was rented for burials
by the churchwardens of St. George's, Hanover
Square. (fn. 55) The chapel which they built there, although treated below, was not considered to lie
within Paddington. In consequence St. Mary's remained the parish's only Anglican place of worship
until the opening of Bayswater chapel in 1818. (fn. 56)
Charles Theomartyr Crane, incumbent of St. Mary's
1820-9, and his successor A. M. Campbell actively
promoted the building of new churches. (fn. 57) One district chapelry, that of St. John, Hyde Park Crescent,
was created in 1834, (fn. 58) before St. James's replaced
St. Mary's as the parish church in 1845. (fn. 59) The select
vestry, believing that churches would attract the
well-to-do, contributed heavily to building funds.
More than £20,000 were voted over eleven years towards All Saints and six other churches, the sums
being borrowed on the security of the rates. (fn. 60)
Criticism mounted, largely through the revitalized
Paddington association, (fn. 61) and in 1853-4 there was
strong opposition to continuing such expenditure.
The vestry petitioned against the re-establishment of
the Roman Catholic hierarchy in 1851. (fn. 62)
Although Paddington consisted of six ecclesiastical districts by 1852, its churches provided no more
than 9,400 sittings for a population four times that
number; the most neglected district was St. Mary's,
the oldest and poorest, with sittings for less than one
person in ten. (fn. 63) In 1902, when Paddington had 26
Anglican churches or missions, attendance was relatively low for west London: 16.7 per cent of the
inhabitants attended a place of worship, 9.6 being
Church of England. (fn. 64) No more parishes were created
in the 20th century, and two Victorian churches
closed in the period between the World Wars. As a
result of bomb damage and, in the 1960s and 1970s,
of decaying stonework, ten more churches closed
between the Second World War and 1982, although
three were rebuilt. (fn. 65)
The London Diocesan Deaconess Institution,
established near King's Cross in 1861 as the North
London Deaconess Institution, moved in 1873 to St.
Andrew's House, no. 12 Tavistock Crescent, where
members ran a nursing home until 1881. No. 12A
Tavistock Crescent was then acquired and, as St.
Gabriel's home, used for training destitute girls for
domestic work until 1897, when it was converted to
extra accommodation for the sisters. Officially renamed the Deaconess Community of St. Andrew in
1943, the sisters opened a new building for 30, including a chaplain and 14 students, in 1974. (fn. 66)
The Church Extension Association was founded
in 1863 by Miss Emily Ayckbourn, who in 1870 also
founded the Sisters of the Church, commonly called
the Kilburn Sisters, (fn. 67) of whom she became mother
superior for life. (fn. 68) Property was held and charities
were administered in the name of the association,
which was under the sisterhood's management and
at first was concerned chiefly with religious instruction. (fn. 69) It was high church, being connected with St.
Augustine's, and in the 1870s it occupied two houses
in Kilburn Park Road. (fn. 70) Financed largely by the income of individual sisters, each of whom controlled
her own capital, (fn. 71) and with many aristocratic
patrons, (fn. 72) it had undertaken a wide range of work in
the immediate neighbourhood, London's east end,
and the provinces by 1886. Teaching was carried out
in local schools, and visiting clergy were accommodated and retreats were held at St. Augustine's
home of rest. (fn. 73) The archbishop of Canterbury was
made visitor in 1892 but removed in 1894, when
external supervision was resisted, despite charges
ranging from financial mismanagement to cruelty. (fn. 74)
The community secured public defenders (fn. 75) and remained prosperous in 1911 with c. 160 sisters, many
of them overseas. (fn. 76) After war damage the Randolph
Gardens premises were taken over by the government in 1941. A few sisters remained in Kilburn
Park Road until, its other institutions nearby having
closed, the association moved its offices to Richmond
(Surr.) in 1955. (fn. 77)
Other C. of E. churches were: (fn. 78)
All Saints, Norfolk Sq. Dist. formed 1848 from
St. Jas. and St. John, Hyde Pk. Cres. (fn. 79) Patron bp. of
Lond. Attendance 1851: c. 1,000 a.m.; 150 aft.; 500
evg.; (fn. 80) 1886: 150 a.m.; 148 evg. Bldg., on site of part
of Grand Junction Waterworks Co. reservoir, of
Kentish rag and Bath stone in Early Pointed style,
seating c. 1,200 (500 free), (fn. 81) by Hen. Clutton 1847: (fn. 82)
aisled nave, chancel, SE. turret and spirelet; alterations, inc. W. porch and choir in E. bay of nave by
Jas. Brooks 1872. Replaced after fire by bldg. of red
brick with terracotta detail, seating 1,400, (fn. 83) by R.
Nevill 1895; plan as before but with S. chancel aisle
and N. transeptal organ chamber. Attendance 1902:
263 a.m.; 106 p.m. Closed 1919 on union with St.
Mic. and All Angels. (fn. 84) Bldg. sold to Royal Assoc. for
Deaf and Dumb 1923; used as offices and for worship by soc. and again for worship by par. after
bombing of St. Mic. Demol. and replaced by Edna
Ho. 1961. (fn. 85)
Ascension chapel, Bayswater Rd. Chapel for
meditation built at expense of Mrs. Emilia Russell
Gurney, replacing chapel of St. Geo.'s burial ground
(q.v.); to be equipped for services by St. Geo.'s
1911. (fn. 86) Bldg. of red brick with stone dressings in
'chastest Italian Quattrocento' style by H. P. Horne
and probably A. H. Mackmurdo 1890-3; (fn. 87) internal
frescoes by Frederic Shields. (fn. 88) Gutted during
Second World War and demol. after 1952. (fn. 89)
Bayswater chapel, see St. Matthew.
Christ Church, Harrow Rd. Originally chapel of
Lock hosp. and founded to provide income for hosp.,
chaplains being noted preachers. Institution moved
with hosp. to Westbourne green 1842. (fn. 90) Patron
trustees. Known as Christ Ch. by 1902. (fn. 91) Called
vicarage 1905, 1915, but perpetual curacy served by
hosp. chaplain 1925, 1935. Attendance 1886: 480
a.m.; 378 evg.; 1902: 248 a.m.; 271 p.m. Bldg.,
abutting N. side of hosp., of yellow brick in Perp.
style by Lewis Vulliamy 1845-7. (fn. 92) Closed by 1940
and demol. 1953. (fn. 93) Robt. Wm. Forrest, chaplain
1865, became canon of St. Paul's and dean of
Worcester. (fn. 94) Mission ho. in Amberley Rd. 1878,
1886. (fn. 95)
Christ Church, Lancaster Gate. Dist. formed
1856 from St. Jas. (fn. 96) Patron bp. of Lond. Attendance
largest in Paddington 1886: 1,593 a.m.; 1,295 evg.;
largest 1902: 1,383 a.m.; 442 p.m. Bldg. of Kentish
ragstone with Bath stone dressings in Dec. style,
seating 1,800, by F. & H. Francis 1854-5: chancel
flanked by chapels with vestry to N., transepts, aisled
and clerestoried nave, S. porch 1854-5; NW. tower
with tall thin spire, originally crocketted, completed
later. Not oriented. Fittings inc. glass by Wailes and
Powell (fn. 97) and fine organ by Norman & Beard. (fn. 98)
Demol. after closure 1977, tower surviving 1985.
Par. united with St. Jas., Sussex Gdns., 1978. (fn. 99) Wm.
Boyd Carpenter, V. 1879-84, became bp. of Ripon
1884; (fn. 1) C. J. Ridgeway, V. 1884-1905, became dean
of Carlisle; F. Gurdon, V. 1906-13, became bp. of
Hull; H. N. Bate, V. 1913-21, became dean of York;
R. W. de la Poer Beresford-Peirse, V. 1921-48, and
O. Hardman, V. 1948-57, both became canons of
St. Paul's; A. C. Bridge, V. 1958-68, became dean
of Guildford. (fn. 2)
Emmanuel, Harrow Rd. Dist. formed 1886
from St. Jude and St. Peter. (fn. 3) Patron trustees.
Attendance 1886: 280 a.m.; 362 evg.; 1902: 193
a.m.; 137 p.m. Bldg. of yellow brick with freestone
and red-brick dressings in Early Eng. style, seating
626, by J. T. Lee 1885-6; chancel with N. vestries
and S. organ chamber, aisled and clerestoried nave,
W. narthex, low SW. tower with broach spire. Not
oriented. Adjoining Burrage institute built 1886 and
used for mission svces. by 1888, seating 500. (fn. 4)
Attendance 1902: 27 a.m.; 50 p.m.
Holy Trinity, Bishop's Bridge Rd. Ch. and
Vicarage built partly at expense of John Miles, first
V. (fn. 5) Dist. formed 1846 from St. Jas. (fn. 6) Patron bp. of
Lond. Attendance 1851: 1,380 a.m.; 500 aft.; (fn. 7) 1886:
1,205 a.m.; 1,081 evg.; 1902: 449 a.m.; 265 p.m.
Bldg. of Kentish rag with Bath stone dressings in
Perp. style, seating c. 1,600, (fn. 8) by Thos. Cundy 1844-
6: short chancel, formed late 19th cent. from E. bays
of nave, N. organ chamber and vestry, clerestoried
nave with plaster vaults and flat ceilinged aisles. Tall
W. tower, on site of reservoir, with pinnacles and
octangular crocketted spire, completed after rest of
ch.; pinnacled buttresses. Criticized when new for
'misapplied ornament'. (fn. 9) Crypt converted for youth
club by 1967. Closed 1971, when svces. moved to
community hall recently built by ch. with old
people's flats on site of original Vicarage at no. 170
Gloucester Terr. Spire demol. 1972 and rest of
bldg. 1984. (fn. 10)
St. Ambrose, see St. Mary Magdalene.
St. Augustine, Kilburn Pk. Rd. Dist. formed
1870 from St. Mary, Kilburn, (fn. 11) St. Mark, Marylebone, and St. Saviour. Patron trustees, inc. V. of
St. Mary Magdalene, 1870, (fn. 12) Soc. for Maintenance
of Faith by 1973-4. Four asst. curates 1881, eight in
1892, six in 1905. High Ch. svces. held first in iron
chapel by seceders from St. Mary, Kilburn, under
Ric. Carr Kirkpatrick 1871. Attendance 1886: 866
a.m.; 785 evg.; 1902: 613 a.m.; 583 p.m. Bldg. of
dark red brick with Bath stone dressings, (fn. 13) internally
of yellow brick and vaulted throughout, in Norman
French style, seating 1,800, by J. L. Pearson, consecrated 1880: square 3-bay chancel 1871-2; apsidal
SE. chapel; transepts; nave with internal buttresses,
perhaps copied from cathedral at Albi (France),
creating lofty triforium and low double aisle 1877;
turrets at 4 angles; flèche at crossing; NW. tower
with pinnacles and 254-ft. high spire, tallest in
Lond., 1897-8. Fittings in stone in Early Eng. style,
inc. reredos by Nicholls; murals and glass by Clayton & Bell; Lady chapel reredos and Stations of the
Cross by Sir Giles Gilb. Scott. Plate inc. 13th-cent.
censer and 17th-cent. Spanish processional cross.
Italian paintings, given by Vct. Rothermere 1935,
sold 1973. (fn. 14) Pearson's masterpiece: architecture,
especially spatial composition, and acoustics widely
admired. (fn. 15)
St. David's Welsh ch., St. Mary's Terr. Originated in West End Welsh Ch. mission, which met in
Shaftesbury schs., Salisbury Street, Marylebone
1885 and moved to St. Mary's sch., Harrow Rd.,
1887. Iron ch. in St. Mary's Terr., with full-time
priest-in-charge, 1890. (fn. 16) Patron bp. of London.
Attendance 1902: 35 a.m.; 122 p.m. Bldg., approached through Gothic arch from St. Mary's
Terr., of stock brick with stone dressings in Perp.
style by C. Evans Vaughan 1896: open ch., with hall
beneath. (fn. 17) Priest-in-charge also V. of Metropolitan
Welsh ch. of St. Benet, Paul's Wharf (Lond.) from
1964, each benefice retaining separate officials. (fn. 18)
St. George's chapel, Bayswater Rd. Consecrated
with new burial ground for St. Geo., Hanover Sq.,
1765. (fn. 19) Disused after closure of burial ground 1854 (fn. 20)
until renovated with private gifts 1880, for svces. for
domestic servants begun in St. Geo.'s sch. 1879. (fn. 21)
Wednesday evg. svces. and monthly communion
1888. (fn. 22) Bldg. with cupola (fn. 23) and round-headed windows; many monuments. (fn. 24) Replaced by Ascension
chapel (q.v.). Burials beneath chapel, where vaults
held 1,120 coffins 1851, and in ground said to have
reached 1,000 a year. (fn. 25) Graves included those of
Laur. Sterne (1713-68), whose body was stolen for
dissection, Sir John Parnell, Bt., Chancellor of the
Irish Exchequer (1744-1801), Paul Sandby, R.A.
(1725-1809), Lt.-Gen. Sir Thos. Picton (1758-
1815), later reburied in St. Paul's cathedral, novelist
Ann Radcliffe (1764-1823), antiquary John Thos.
Smith (1766-1833), and Hen. Brooke Parnell,
created Ld. Congleton (1776-1842). (fn. 26)
St. James, Sussex Gdns. Consecrated as additional ch. 1843 and replaced St. Mary as par. ch.
1845. (fn. 27) Patron bp. of Lond. Two asst. curates in
1979, after union with Christ Ch., Lancaster Gate.
Attendance 1851: 1,300 and 200 Nat. sch. a.m.;
400 aft.; 500 evg.; (fn. 28) 1886: 697 a.m.; 518 evg.; 1902:
415 a.m.; 240 p.m. Bldg. of yellow brick in Gothic
style by John Goldicutt and Geo. Gutch (fn. 29) 1841-3:
nave, chancel at base of E. tower with tall Early
Eng. spire, flanked by porches. Rebuilt, except tower
and porches, in grey brick with stone dressings in
mixed Gothic style, seating 1,300, by G. E. Street
1881-2: orientation reversed, with W. chancel,
NW. chapel, SW. organ chamber, aisled and clerestoried nave, and mem. chapel beneath tower. Much
internal facing in marble; glass by Clayton & Bell. (fn. 30)
Archibald Boyd, V. 1859-68, became dean of Exeter
1866. (fn. 31) Jas. Moorhouse, V. 1868-76, became bp. of
Melbourne 1876 and bp. of Manchester 1886. (fn. 32)
St. John The Evangelist, Hyde Pk. (formerly
Southwick) Cres. Dist. formed 1832 from St.
Mary. (fn. 33) Patron V. of Paddington until c. 1965-6,
diocesan bd. of patronage by 1973-4. 'Tolerably full'
1851. (fn. 34) Attendance 1886: 727 a.m.; 593 evg.; 1902:
531 a.m.; 283 p.m. Bldg., intended to be called
Connaught chapel, of yellow brick with stone dressings in Perp. style, seating c. 1,500 (500 free), by
Chas. Fowler 1829-32: (fn. 35) square chancel; aisled and
clerestoried nave with plaster vault; angle pinnacles.
External W. porch and new E. and W. windows by
A. Blomfield 1881. (fn. 36) Edw. Meyrick Goulburn, min.
1859-67, had been headmaster of Rugby sch. 1850-7
and became dean of Norwich 1866. (fn. 37)
St. John The Evangelist, Kensal Green. Dist.
formed 1845 from Chelsea detached and contiguous
parts of Kensington, Paddington, Hammersmith,
and Willesden pars. (fn. 38) Patron bp. of Lond. Attendance 1851: 201 and 181 Sunday sch. a.m.; 243 and
74 Sunday sch. p.m.; (fn. 39) 1902: 151 a.m.; 272 p.m.
Bldg. of white and yellow brick with black flint
dressings in Romanesque style, seating 600 (300
free), (fn. 40) by H. E. Kendall the yr. 1843-4: shallow
apse, nave, twin W. towers with pinnacles and short
spires flanking 3-order portal. Chancel in Gothic
style, replacing apse, by A. Billing 1903. Architecture often criticized. (fn. 41)
St. Jude, Lancefield Street, Kensal Green. Dist.
formed 1879 from St. John, Kensal Green. (fn. 42) Patron
trustees. Attendance 1902: 243 a.m.; 361 p.m. Bldg.
of brown and red brick with stone dressings in Early
Eng. style, seating 800, by J. T. Lee 1878: apsidal
chancel, transepts, wide aisled and clerestoried nave,
NW. tower with spire. (fn. 43) Par. united with St. Luke,
Fernhead Rd., and St. Sim., Saltram Cres., 1952. (fn. 44)
Ch. closed 1959, demol. c. 1960-1. (fn. 45) Mission at St.
Jude's hall, Lancefield Street. Attendance 1902: 59
a.m.; 94 p.m. Mission at St. Jude's institute, Ilbert
Street. Attendance 1902: 111 a.m.; 66 p.m. (fn. 46)
St. Luke The Evangelist, Fernhead Rd. Dist.
formed 1877 from St. John, Kensal Green, and Holy
Trinity, Kilburn. (fn. 47) Patron trustees until 1921, Ch.
Pastoral Aid Soc. thereafter. (fn. 48) Attendance 1886: 256
a.m.; 280 evg.; 1902: 155 a.m.; 204 p.m. Bldg. of
stone in Early Eng. style, seating 800, by J. T. Lee
1876-7; (fn. 49) aisled and clerestoried nave, bellcot.
Bombed 1940, svces. moving to temp. chapel and
later to St. Sim., Saltram Cres. (q.v.). United par. of
St. Luke with St. Sim. and St. Jude formed 1952.
New yellow-brick St. Luke's ch. centre by Mic.
Farey opened c. 1959: low octagonal bldg. with
square central chapel, flanked by hall and classrooms, beneath aluminium spire. (fn. 50)
St. Luke, Tavistock Rd. Served from St. Steph.,
Westbourne Pk., 1866. Dist. formed 1868 from St.
Steph. (fn. 51) Patron Revd. H. W. Brooks, V. of St.
Steph., then his trustees for 2 turns, then bp. of
Lond. Attendance 1886: 354 a.m.; 395 evg.; 1902:
199 a.m.; 174 p.m. Bldg. of white brick, internally of
white striped with red and black, in Middle Gothic
style, seating 900, by F. & H. Francis 1867-8:
apsidal chancel, NE. vestry, N. transept, nave, wide
N. aisle. Chancel alone used for worship 1959. (fn. 52)
Demol. by 1963. (fn. 53) Par. united with St. Steph. 1952. (fn. 54)
St. Martha, Cirencester Street. Mission ch.,
served from St. Mary Magdalene and used by servants. Attendance 1902: 154 p.m. Bldg., adjoining
St. Mary Magdalene schs. and seating 200, consecrated 1880. Disused by c. 1957. (fn. 55)
St. Mary Magdalene, Woodchester Street. Dist.
formed 1864 from Holy Trinity and St. Saviour. (fn. 56)
Patron trustees until c. 1892, Keble Coll., Oxf., by
1905. Seven asst. curates 1881, eight in 1892, five in
1905. High Ch. services held first in temp. ch. of St.
Ambrose by Ric. Temple West, former asst. curate
of All Saints', Margaret Street (Westm.), 1865. (fn. 57)
Attendance 1886: 1,005 a.m.; 1,100 evg.; 1902: 448
a.m.; 415 p.m. Bldg. of red brick and white stone in
N. German Gothic style, seating 900, by G. E.
Street consecrated 1878: tall apsidal chancel and
aisled nave with temp. roof, over vestries, 1868;
clerestory and nave roof under construction 1872;
thin tower with octagonal upper stage and spire, in
angle between S. transept and chancel, 1873. Fittings
inc. Stations of Cross, glass by Hen. Holiday and,
in crypt, Sir Ninian Comper, reredos by T. Earp.
Not oriented. Remarkable for use of cramped and
uneven site. (fn. 58)
St. Matthew, St. Petersburgh Pl. Proprietary
chapel built at expense of Edw. Orme, as first
Anglican place of worship apart from par. ch. Min.
licensed by bp. and supported by proprietor and
from pew rents. Average attendance 1850-1: 800
a.m.; 500 p.m. Bldg. on W. side of rd., seating 1,200,
by T. Cooper 1818: plain and square, with roundheaded windows, pillared porch, and cupola. (fn. 59) Renamed St. Matthew's 1858. (fn. 60) Patron Revd. Cornwall
Smalley, incumbent and father of succeeding incumbent, 1859, (fn. 61) J. D. Allcroft 1881, Lady MagnusAllcroft by 1973-4. Chapel altered, with Italianate
front by F. & H. Francis c. 1858 and Italianate NW.
tower 1871. (fn. 62) Attendance 1886: 1,342 a.m.; 1,182
evg.; 1902: 945 a.m.; 656 p.m. New bldg. of rag with
freestone dressings in Middle Gothic style, seating
1,550, by J. Johnson 1881-2: chancel with triple
chancel arch, transepts, spacious clerestoried nave
with passage aisles, apsidal S. baptistery, richly
decorated main W. doorway, tall SW. tower with
spire. Not oriented. Glass by Clayton & Bell. (fn. 63)
St. Michael And All Angels, Star Street. Dist.
formed 1864 from St. John, Hyde Pk. Cres. (fn. 64) Patron
Wm. Gibbs, who left endowment for clergy, (fn. 65) 1866,
G. A. Gibbs 1926, bp. by 1935. Attendance 1886:
975 a.m.; 663 evg.; 1902: 416 a.m.; 237 p.m. Bldg.
of brick with Portland stone dressings and Bath stone
interior in 14th-cent. French style, seating 900, by
Rohde Hawkins 1860-1: (fn. 66) short chancel, transepts,
aisled and clerestoried nave, conspicuous W. tower
with slate spire terminating in ridge. Flanked by
terraced hos. and therefore lit mainly from E. and
W. Not oriented. Damaged 1941, closed 1964,
demol. 1967, (fn. 67) when site taken for playground.
Anglo-Cath. and musical tradition. (fn. 68) Par. united
with All Saints and St. John 1965. (fn. 69)
St. Paul, Harrow Rd. Dist. formed 1874 from
Holy Trinity. (fn. 70) Patron V. of Holy Trinity. Attendance 1886: 590 a.m.; 680 evg.; 1902: 237 a.m.; 221
p.m. Cramped site by railway, approached from
Marlborough (later Torquay) Street. (fn. 71) Bldg. of
yellow brick in Early Eng. style, seating 761, by
E. L. Blackburne 1873: chancel with apsidal chapel,
aisled and clerestoried nave, narthex, base of NW.
tower. (fn. 72) Closed after bomb damage 1944 but vestry
used for svces. until 1947; replaced by Copydex
factory by 1959. Par. united with Holy Trinity
1952. (fn. 73)
St. Peter, Elgin Ave. Dist. formed 1871 from
Holy Trinity. (fn. 74) Patron trustees until c. 1905, Ch.
Patronage Soc. (later Trust) by 1926. Attendance
1886: 604 a.m.; 578 p.m.; 1902: 456 a.m.; 472 p.m.
Bldg. of Kentish rag with Bath stone dressings in
mixed Gothic style, seating 940, by Newman &
Billing 1867-70: apsidal chancel with N. vestry and
S. organ chamber, transepts, aisled and clerestoried
nave, tall SW. tower with pinnacles and short spire.
Svces. only in crypt from 1971. Demol. 1975. New
brick bldg. in contemporary style on part of site,
adjoining flats and community centre, 1975-7. (fn. 75) Not
oriented.
St. Philip, Manor Pl. (later St. Philip's Pl.).
Served from St. Mary's. (fn. 76) Attendance 1886: 165
a.m.; 89 evg. Iron bldg., seating 400, erected at N.
end of recently closed burial ground under faculty of
1861. Demol. under faculty of 1893, site being added
to recreation ground. (fn. 77)
St. Saviour, Warwick Ave. Dist. formed 1856
from St. Jas. and Holy Trinity. (fn. 78) Patron bp. of
Lond. Attendance 1886: 1,350 a.m.; 700 evg.; 1902:
702 a.m.; 352 p.m. Bldg. of Kentish rag and Bath
stone in Dec. style, seating 1,670, by Thos. Little
1855-6: tall aisleless flat-roofed nave lit by double
range of windows, chancel rebuilt on larger scale by
F. Wade-Farmer 1884, tall W. entrance tower with
pinnacles, buttresses. Not oriented. (fn. 79) Reredos and
other fittings by W. Farmer, glass by Messrs. Gibbs
and by Clayton & Bell. Demol. 1972, when svces.
moved to Sutherland Ave. Meth. ch. New pale
brown brick bldg. in contemporary style, seating c.
250, by Biscoe & Stanton, 1974-6: ch., with hexagonal roof and fibre-glass spire, built over hall or
theatre and adjoined flats of Manor Ho. Ct. (fn. 80)
St. Simon, Saltram Cres. Dist. formed 1899 from
St. Jude and St. John, Kilburn. (fn. 81) Patron trustees.
Attendance 1902: 201 a.m.; 245 p.m. Mission ch. at
SE. corner of Croxley Rd. by 1896. (fn. 82) Bldg. of red
brick with stone dressings in Middle Gothic style by
J. S. Alder 1898-9: apsidal sanctuary, aisled and
clerestoried nave, N. and S. vestries, small NW. bell
turret. Not oriented. Closed 1978 but bldg. survived
1985. (fn. 83) Par. united with St. Luke, Fernhead Rd.,
and St. Jude 1952. Vicarage by J. S. Alder 1904
served united par. 1982. (fn. 84)
St. Stephen, Westbourne Pk. Rd. Dist. formed
1856 from St. Jas. and Holy Trinity, (fn. 85) after benefaction from Revd. Harvey Wm. Brooks. Patron Revd.
H. W. Brooks (incumbent until 1872), then son
Revd. T. B. H. Brooks (V. 1883-94) (fn. 86) and trustees,
bp. of Lond. by 1935. Attendance 1886: 1,490 a.m.;
1,115 evg.; 1902: 956 a.m.; 620 p.m. Bldg. of Kentish rag with Bath stone dressings in 13th-cent. style,
seating 1,600 with galleries, by F. & H. Francis
1855-6: apsidal chancel with N. organ chamber and
S. chapel, transepts, lofty aisled and clerestoried
nave, W. tower with pinnacles and spire; alterations
inc. apsidal end to chancel and choir vestry off S.
transept 1900; baptistery 1911. Not oriented. Glass
by Messrs. Gibbs and by Clayton & Bell. Spire
demol. early 1950s. Bldg. decayed 1971 but still in
use 1982. (fn. 87)
St. Thomas, Newton Rd. (fn. 88) Proprietary chapel
served, with St. Luke, Tavistock Rd., from St.
Steph. 1866, with own min. 1881. Attendance 1886:
288 a.m.; 199 evg. Iron bldg. E. side of Newton Rd.,
leased to grammar sch. c. 1904. (fn. 89)