THE PARISH CHURCH
St. Dunstan's church, Stepney, served Bethnal
Green until 1743. A domestic chapel existed
from 1243 at Bishop's Hall, where a marriage
was licensed in 1593. (fn. 68) There may have been a
hermitage associated with the Austin Friars,
who were granted land and a spring at Cambridge
Heath in 1394, (fn. 69) and a chaplain dated his will
from Bethnal Green in 1432. (fn. 70) He may have
served St. George's chapel, which existed by
1512 (fn. 71) and which, with its attached house, may
have been the hermitage that stood near Bishop's
Hall in the 1520s, (fn. 72) though bequests suggest that
the chapel was used by villagers in the early 16th
century. (fn. 73) In 1547 the bishop of London leased
the 'chapel and messuage under one roof' on
Bethnal green to Sir Ralph Warren for 99
years. (fn. 74) When the term expired the inhabitants
used the chapel: sermons were preached there
twice on Sunday and once on Tuesday. In 1652 the
copyholders, with the steward's permission, had
lately inclosed it and they asked for it to be settled
'to the same pious use'. (fn. 75) At the Restoration the
owners of the manor appear to have reasserted
their claim to it. In 1670 the lady of the manor
leased to John Bumpstead the house with the
adjoining chapel, 'anciently used for a preaching
place'. (fn. 76) In the 1680s it was used as a school. (fn. 77)
When the Poor's Land was set up in the 1690s
the trustees were to meet at the chapel or
chapel-house. (fn. 78) It was depicted in 1703 (fn. 79) and
Edward Barsham, a London goldsmith, in 1713
mortgaged what was still called St. George's
chapel and house, (fn. 80) but it was decayed in 1716
and 'turned into houses' by 1720. (fn. 81)
A plaque dated 1553 on the house and extant
Tudor brickwork in the cellar suggest that it was
rebuilt by Sir Ralph Warren, his widow, or
tenants. (fn. 82) Probably after 1647 the inhabitants
repaired the chapel, to which a cottage was attached at the western end. The house was
repaired either shortly before 1670, or by John
Bumpstead before 1693. (fn. 83) That reconstruction
is probably responsible for most of the existing
building, which is either of the mid (fn. 84) or the
later 17th century. (fn. 85) Edward Barsham may have
carried out alterations dated by plaque to 1705
and possibly including new windows, stairs, and
attic doors. (fn. 86) In the 1990s the building was
known as Netteswell House.
Plate dating from 1635 and 1681 and given to
the new church in 1746 may have come from St.
George's chapel. (fn. 87)
In 1650 it was proposed to divide Stepney into
four parishes, one of them to include Bethnal
Green and another Cock Lane and Stepney
Rents. (fn. 88) In 1711, after a petition by 36 leading
inhabitants, the Commissioners for Building
Fifty New Churches agreed that Bethnal Green
should be a parish with its own church. A site
was found in the most populated part, in
Harefield east of Brick lane, and plans were
drawn up for a church in the style of the 4th
century, 'the purest times of Christianity', with
room for the charity school and a parsonage, but
negotiations with Thomas Sclater, the putative
owner, lapsed in 1716. (fn. 89) Another petition in
1724 complained that inhabitants had to
attend Shoreditch parish church or Sir George
Wheler's tabernacle in Spitalfields, 'an annual
charge' and an incitement to dissent. (fn. 90) The
commissioners purchased 2+ a. east of the
Harefields site from Charles White in 1725 but
again nothing was done, in spite of five petitions
between 1725 and 1738, (fn. 91) possibly because
Stepney resisted the loss of offerings and garden
pennies, estimated in 1727 at £169 a year from
4,219 communicants in Bethnal Green and Mile
End New Town. (fn. 92) Presumably convinced that
the lack of a church had led to dissoluteness
among the young and poor and to an exodus of
'the better sort', the commissioners finally
agreed to a Bill; yet more convincing was the
inhabitants' readiness to pay for the building. In
1743 an Act made Bethnal Green a separate
rectory, the advowson and great tithes to remain
with Brasenose College, Oxford, the surplice
fees to go to the new rector, and small tithes,
garden pennies, Easter offerings, and burial fees
to the churchwardens, who were to pay the
rector £130 a year. (fn. 93)
In 1843 the advowson was exchanged by
Brasenose for that of Weeley (Essex), the
property of the bishop of London, by that time
patron of most of the district churches in Bethnal
Green. He first exercised it on the death of the
incumbent rector in 1861 and remained the
patron in 1995. (fn. 94)
In 1812 the rector sought an increase in salary,
commensurate with the dues raised in his
name. (fn. 95) King's remuneration became an issue in
his struggle with Joseph Merceron, some of
whose supporters for long refused on principle
to pay the rector's salary, (fn. 96) despite the passing
in 1813 of an Act which secured £400 a year for
the rector from dues such as those for tolling
bells or for burials but not from the poor rates. (fn. 97)
In 1845 a further Act (fn. 98) replaced small tithes,
garden pennies, and Easter offerings by a fixed
composition rate, of which £400 a year was for
the rector and the rest for maintaining worship
and repairing the churches of St. Matthew and
St. John. The composition was abolished in 1898
when the vestry agreed to pay £20,000 to the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners, who would pay
£2,000 to the Incorporated Church Building
Society for the fabric of the two churches and,
from the rest, pay £350 a year to the rector and
£190 for the salaries of church officials. (fn. 99)
A 'house for the minister' was planned in 1746 (fn. 1)
and, although not marked on maps until the
1790s, (fn. 2) existed by 1767; (fn. 3) its repair was discussed
in 1789. (fn. 4) The Rectory was east of the churchyard
and in 1823 the rector Joshua King purchased a
strip to the east to prevent those 'wanting to
incommode the incumbent' from building
cottages and privies up to the garden wall. (fn. 5) A
new Rectory was built in 1905, a plain but
substantial building of red brick. (fn. 6)
All the rectors appointed by Brasenose were
fellows of the college, mostly absentees and
pluralists who retained the benefice for life. (fn. 7)
The second rector was present for part of the
1750s. (fn. 8) Almost a century was covered by the
incumbencies of William Loxham, 1766-1809 and
Joshua King, 1809-61. Loxham, thought never
to have set foot in the parish, was, according
to King, driven out after less than six months
by the aggressive system which dominated
Bethnal Green. (fn. 9) King, a 'fine portly man',
'strong Tory', and sportsman, (fn. 10) started as a
young campaigner against Merceron's faction (fn. 11)
but in 1821 he became rector of Woodchurch
(Ches.), a wealthier and less populous parish, (fn. 12)
where he decided to reside from 1823. (fn. 13) For a
few years he returned in May or June, possibly
to chair vestry meetings, (fn. 14) but his interest in
Bethnal Green narrowed to the rights, mostly
financial, of the rectory and his letters became
increasingly intemperate, both with regard to the
bishop and to the young curates of the new
district churches, whose insubordination he
attributed to the philanthropist William Cotton
(d.1866). (fn. 15)
Timothy Gibson (d. 1864), assistant curate
from 1842, (fn. 16) was presented as rector in 1861 in
response to popular demand. A non-graduate
who was awarded a Lambeth D.D., Gibson had
presided over the creation of the ten district
churches and shown sympathy for the poor. (fn. 17) He
was followed by Septimus Cox Holmes Hansard, 1864-95, an Oxford M.A. and High
Church Socialist, a friend of F. D. Maurice and
active in attending the cholera victims in 1866,
when he was assisted by Edward Pusey. Hansard
introduced a daily Eucharist and the reservation
of the sacrament, campaigned for Bethnal Green
Museum and a free library, and was sympathetic
to trade unions. He was, however, autocratic,
lived in some style and, like King, aroused
hostility in local church and education officials. (fn. 18)
Such hostility probably explains why in 1898
St. Matthew's was said to have been neglected
for a long time before the incumbency of
Arthur Foley Winnington-Ingram, 1895-7. (fn. 19)
Winnington-Ingram (d. 1946), later bishop of
Stepney and then of London, had been head
of Oxford House since 1888 and stimulated
mission and social activities. (fn. 20) Attendances
increased dramatically and the High Church
tradition was intensified under Christopher Bedford (from 1981), to such an extent that
wholesale conversion to Roman Catholicism
was initiated after the passing of the Priests
(Ordination of Women) Measure in 1993. The
church was used for both Anglican and Roman
Catholic services in 1996. (fn. 21)
Curates assumed importance from the rector's
absenteeism. There was probably a lecturer and
assistant curate from the foundation of the
parish. An unendowed lecturer, Joseph Cookson
from 1749 to 1791, gave the afternoon sermon on
Sundays. (fn. 22) Appointment by the parish rather
than by the rector was one of King's grievances. (fn. 23)
An assistant curate, recorded in 1766, (fn. 24) was paid
£45 a year in 1773 (fn. 25) and £60 a year in 1810, and
lived in the parsonage, (fn. 26) although in 1785 the
vestry protested that it had no resident clergy. (fn. 27)
In 1789 there was a conflict between churchgoers
and allegedly more casual attenders over the
appointment of a curate, the rector having
promised to consult the parish. (fn. 28) King paid
£40 a year for an occasional assistant in 1812 (fn. 29)
and in his later absence the curates John Mayne
and Timothy Gibson occupied the parsonage. (fn. 30)
Bishop Blomfield, who objected to non-residence, wished for a second assistant curate in
1832 but King maintained that Mayne was not
overworked. The curate had accepted additional
posts as afternoon lecturer, chaplain at the asylum,
and private schoolmaster, (fn. 31) probably needing to
supplement his pittance from the rector. Gibson,
senior curate and lecturer from 1842, made
appeals for the destitute, earning their affection
and the wrath of other local ministers. (fn. 32) The most
notable curate was Stewart Headlam, 1873-8,
who shared S.C.H. Hansard's Christian Socialism, lived in working men's flats, joined radical
clubs, and in 1877 started the parish guild of St.
Matthew. He also organized debates, one with
Charles Bradlaugh, and later became a member
of the School Board for London and afterwards
of the L.C.C. An associate of Bernard Shaw and
the Fabians, his views proved too strong even
for Hansard, who in 1877 dismissed him after
the bishop's wrath was aroused by the publication of Headlam's lecture supporting the
theatre. (fn. 33) From 1873 there were usually two
assistant curates and from the 1890s to 1939
often three or four, especially during the period
of close association with Oxford House. (fn. 34) Their
duties, running clubs and dealing with applications for material help, were largely those of
social workers. (fn. 35) In 1962 the curate, a declared
anti-capitalist, was actively involved in a campaign
against increased rent. (fn. 36)
By 1767 services were held twice on Sundays,
twice on weekdays, and on all holidays; the
sacrament was given once a month, (fn. 37) to c. 50
communicants between 1778 and 1810. (fn. 38) The
organ was provided with a blower by the workhouse at 2s. 6d. a quarter. (fn. 39) In 1827 there were
prayers and two sermons on Sunday and prayers
on Wednesday and Friday. The sacrament was
administered on the first Sunday in the month
and at the great festivals. (fn. 40) Morning and evening
Sunday services were fully choral by 1866,
with the litany and a sermon on Sunday afternoons and Wednesday evenings and at the great
festivals. Holy Communion twice on Sunday
mornings and on saints' days had been added by
1881. (fn. 41)
The church accommodated 1,200 in 1816,
when it and was 'overflowing', (fn. 42) and 2,000
by 1838. (fn. 43) All sittings were free in 1851, when
560 adults and 400 children attended in the
morning and 650 adults and 380 children in the
afternoon. There was no evening service and
Gibson explained that, while attendance had
suffered from the building of the district
churches, it had improved since 1842. (fn. 44) In
1886 worshippers numbered 378 in the morning
and 896 in the evening, (fn. 45) making St. Matthew's
the best attended church in Bethnal Green. It
was no longer so in 1903, with 421 in the
morning and 261 in the evening. (fn. 46)
The parish guild of St. Matthew, founded
by Stewart Headlam in 1877, promoted the
Eucharist and by 1890 had 200 members, 70 of
them clergy. Its other aims being political and
social, its battles with secularists made it a
pioneer of Christian Socialism. Membership
reached 364 in the 1890s but by 1909 Headlam
thought that the guild had become only another
socialist debating society and dissolved it. (fn. 47)
St. Matthew's mission at no. 203 Bethnal
Green Road, formerly the nonconformist Hope
Town mission, existed by c. 1898 and was taken
over by Oxford House in 1924. (fn. 48) A parish
hall, built south of the Rectory in 1904, housed
St. Matthew's club, formed c. 1901, by the
1920s. (fn. 49)
The church of ST. MATTHEW, in St. Matthew's
(formerly Church) Row, was begun in 1743 and
consecrated in 1746. (fn. 50) George Dance the elder
designed a 'neat, commodious edifice' of brick
with stone dressings, (fn. 51) with two tiers of roundheaded windows and a short, square, western
tower. (fn. 52) Substantial repairs, largely to the roof,
were undertaken in 1787 (fn. 53) and in 1795 the
communion table was within a recess at the east
end, with galleries on the other three sides. (fn. 54)
The Society for Promoting the Building of
Churches granted £350, which was unspent in
1824 when a faculty was granted for an iron
gallery on three sides. (fn. 55) Fire destroyed the
interior in 1859, although the books and plate
were saved. (fn. 56) A rate was levied to rebuild but,
after strikes and arguments between the architect
T. E. Knightley and the local committee, it was
not until 1861 that the church was reopened with
a cupola added to the tower. (fn. 57) An elaborate
choir-screen was among High Church furnishings
added from the later 19th century. (fn. 58) The interior
was severely damaged by bombing in 1940 and
a temporary church, built within the old one and
designed by A. Wontner Smith and Harold
Jones, was dedicated in 1954, when the Tuscan
portal of the west end was restored and the
cupola removed. In 1957 Antony Lewis of Tapper & Lewis reconstructed the church according
to Dance's designs except for the east window
and the arrangement of the interior. The altar
was placed in the body of the church with
vestries and a Lady chapel in a gallery at the east
end. A striking boat-shaped font by Lewis was
placed at the west end and stained glass from St.
Philip's was installed in the south-west crèche.
The church was reconsecrated in 1961 and
renovated in 1984. (fn. 59) Its fittings in 1996 included
some introduced for Roman Catholic worship. (fn. 60)
Most plate was given in 1746 and included a
silver flagon and cup of 1635, a cover paten
datemarked 1681, and a beadle's staff dated
1690. A large silver paten on a foot dated from
1717 and mid 18th-century plate included a
paten, a cup and cover, and six pewter plates. (fn. 61)
CHURCH EXTENSION.
Apart perhaps from
the French Protestant church, classified as
Anglican in 1778 and 1810, (fn. 62) St. Matthew's
remained the only Church of England place of
worship until 1814, when the Episcopal Jews'
chapel opened. Although the Church Building
Commissioners had £1,000,000 to spend in
populous parishes, (fn. 63) the vestry in 1819 expressed
alarm at the possible cost of two intended
churches, in north-west and east Bethnal
Green. (fn. 64) By 1822 the commissioners had decided
on a single church but it was not until 1828 that
St. John's was consecrated and 1837 that a
district was assigned to it after opposition from
Joshua King. (fn. 65)
In 1836 Bishop Blomfield launched his scheme
for 50 new churches but by 1839 he had raised
much less than he had hoped. Persuaded either
by William Cotton or Bryan King, incumbent
of St. John's, he decided to concentrate on
Bethnal Green. (fn. 66) A committee, with Bryan
King as secretary and Cotton as treasurer,
issued appeals pleading the parish's spiritual
destitution and planned ten churches, dedicated
to the apostles, each with its parsonage and
school. Landowners including Capt. Sotheby
gave sites and money was solicited from such
local figures as the Mercerons, Sir Thomas
Fowell Buxton, and Robert Hanbury and from
City businessmen and institutions, largely through
sermons given by the bishop. Meanwhile two or
three houses in the centre of the parish were
hired for curates and the old French Protestant
church in St. John Street and Friar's Mount
school in the Nichol were fitted up as temporary
churches in 1840. (fn. 67)
The foundation stone of the first church, St.
Peter's, was laid in 1840, when jeering crowds
loosed an ox at the ceremony. (fn. 68) By 1843
four churches (St. Peter's, St. Andrew's, St.
Philip's, and St. James the Less's) had been
consecrated and assigned chapelry districts under curates nominated by the rector and paid by
the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. (fn. 69) Districts
were assigned to the remaining six churches in
1844, (fn. 70) although the last, St. Thomas's, was not
consecrated until 1850. By 1853 Bethnal Green
had 12 churches with 11 parsonages, 10 schools,
22 clergymen, 129 district visitors, and 244
Sunday school teachers. (fn. 71) Accommodation for
Anglicans increased from 4,900 seats in 1838 (fn. 72)
to 14,851 by 1851, when 11,751 attendances
were recorded, compared with 11,799 at nonconformist chapels. (fn. 73)
Local anti-clericalism, compounded of radicalism, dissent, and 'infidelity', softened. In 1841
it had been difficult to find a single communicant
to act as churchwarden of Blomfield's first church
but by 1846 there were 100 communicants in
each district. When the last foundation stone
was laid in 1849, the procession was received
by a sympathetic crowd and within a decade
congregations were numbered in hundreds, if
not thousands. Dissenting tradition, however,
probably lay behind a continuing distrust of such
Puseyite practices as preaching in surplices. (fn. 74)
By 1851 clothing clubs, maternity charities,
provident institutions, and a dispensary had
been established (fn. 75) and by 1858 moral conditions
in St. Peter's were said to be better than 10 years
earlier. (fn. 76) The new churches brought educated
leadership, schools, and some social relief,
although Blomfield's vision of civilizing the slums
failed. (fn. 77) It was later admitted that larger, better
endowed parishes with chapels of ease would
have been more effective than the numerous
districts, (fn. 78) for which it proved hard to find
suitable incumbents, partly because local
hoped-for funds failed to materialize and the
clergy spent too much time on appeals. (fn. 79) By
1858 it was clear that the schools would not
produce a generation of churchgoers. (fn. 80) Local clergy
despaired at the poverty and irreligion, even if
the 'mental torture' and fear of 'Christianity's
dissolution' expressed by the incumbent of St.
Andrew's, was extreme. (fn. 81)
The clergy became almost exclusively missioners and social workers, who were overwhelmed
by work despite the help of visitors, usually
middle-class women from outside the parish.
New districts were formed: St. Paul's (1865) and
Holy Trinity (1866) in the overcrowded west and
St. Barnabas's (1870) in the most recently settled
east. The principal benefactor, William Cotton,
died in 1866. (fn. 82) There was some absenteeism
among the clergy, debate about how to
combat pauperism, (fn. 83) and notoriety at the 'Red
church' (St. James the Great), where waival of
marriage fees led to farcical scenes. In 1883 the
curate-in-charge of St. Peter's attributed the
'deadness' in the church to incumbents being
'broken down'. (fn. 84)
In the later 19th century and up to 1914
energetic clergymen, beginning with Hansard
and Headlam at St. Matthew's, were aided by a
nationwide interest in the East End in bringing
about a revival. It was manifested in ritualism,
in more numerous curates, and in the opening
of institutes, missions, and university settlements.
Communicants so multiplied that in 1909 Winnington-Ingram, then bishop of London,
contrasted the emptiness of all but two churches
20 years ago with the present where 'the nets
were breaking' with the numbers. (fn. 85) Census
figures concealed the increase by omitting afternoon services, some of the most successful,
whereas 1886 figures were taken on Harvest
Sunday. (fn. 86) Anglican attendances for 1886 were
7,399 (fn. 87) and for 1903 7,992. (fn. 88) From 13 per cent
of the population in 1851 Anglican congregations
fell to 5.8 per cent in 1886 and rose to 6.0 per
cent in 1903.
Thereafter, with few exceptions, there was a
decline in activities and congregations, hastened
by rival social attractions, a falling population,
and non-Christian immigration. The Episcopal
Jews' chapel closed in 1895 and Holy Trinity in
1926. Most churches suffered bomb damage and
in 1951 the Church Commissioners drew up a
Scheme to reduce Bethnal Green's parishes from
14 to eight. St. Philip's, St. Paul's, and St. Matthias's,
small western parishes which had been cleared
of slums, were united with St. Matthew's; St.
Thomas's was united with St. Peter's, St. James
the Great's with St. Jude's, and St. Simon Zelotes's
(already united with St. Anthony's, Globe Rd.)
with St. John's; adjustmestments were made to
other parish boundaries. (fn. 89) Supplementary
Schemes confirmed the plans for the first group,
delayed by the restoration of St. Matthew's church
in 1954, (fn. 90) and added St. Andrew's to St. Matthew's in 1958. (fn. 91) St. Bartholomew's was added to
St. John's in 1978 (fn. 92) and St. James the Great's with
St. Jude's to St. Matthew's in 1984. (fn. 93)