CHAPTER XII - Christ Church
The foundations of Christ Church, Spital
fields, were begun in the summer or
autumn of 1714 and the foundation stone
was laid in 1715. (fn. a) Its construction was protracted,
and fourteen years passed before it was consecrated
in July 1729, having cost about £40,000 to build.
It was one of the six churches designed by
Nicholas Hawksmoor as surveyor to the Com
missioners for Building Fifty New Churches in
London and Westminster and their suburbs under
the Act of May 1711, (ref. 1)
and one of the three de
signed by him for new parishes to be created out
of the ancient and extensive parish of St. Dun
stan's, Stepney. A design for the Spitalfields
church was submitted by Hawksmoor to the
Commissioners and accepted by them in April
1714, three months before his designs for the
other two Stepney churches, St. Anne's, Lime
house, and St. George's-in-the-East. The incep
tion of the three Stepney churches was thus
virtually contemporaneous. Although the creation
of a single mind, the design for Christ Church,
Spitalfields, underwent important modifications,
even in the later years of building. It has sub
sequently suffered neither from extensive damage
by fire, as St. Anne's, nor from enemy action in
war, as St. George's-in-the-East, but changes have
been made, both within and without, which have
appreciably altered its original appearance.
The Commissioners for Building
Fifty New Churches
The Act of 1711 authorized the application of
a duty of 2s. and later 3.s. per chalder on all ’coals
and culm’ brought into the Port of London to
provide funds for building ’fifty new churches of
stone and other proper materials, with towers or
steeples to each of them’ in London and its
suburbs. Commissioners were to be appointed and
to report by 24 December 1711 on the steps to be
taken.
In March 1710/11 the Lower House of Con
vocation had delivered to the House of Commons
a statement of the population and the number of
churches and chapels in twenty-seven parishes in
and near London and Westminster. In the
following month a Parliamentary Committee
reported that Convocation's statement showed
that 342,000 inhabitants were unprovided with
churches. On the basis of one church for each
4,750 souls, seventy-two churches were required,
but the Committee estimated that 101,500 in
habitants were French Protestants or Noncon
formist and that the number of churches required
was thus reduced to fifty. (ref. 2)
In the first few years
of the Commission the building of this number of
churches continued to be contemplated.
During the first two years of the Commission's
existence the Commissioners usually met at
intervals of a week or ten days, to discuss pro
posals put before them by a committee composed
of three or more members of the Commission
which was appointed at the Commissioners’
second meeting. (fn. b) The average attendance at
meetings in 1711 was eighteen or nineteen: by
the mid-1730's it had fallen to five.
The Commissioners employed two surveyors
from the beginning until 1733. Nicholas Hawks
moor was one of these throughout the whole
period. His first colleague was William Dickin
son, surveyor to the Dean and Chapter of West
minster, who resigned in August 1713 and was
succeeded in November by James Gibbs, who was
succeeded in January 1715/16 by John James.
James remained Hawksmoor's colleague until
the offices were terminated. The surveyors were
paid £200 per annum each until March 1719/20
when, on account of the ’Intermission of Business’
arising out of the Commissioners’ financial
difficulties, their salaries were reduced to £150
per annum until May 1726. By then work on
several churches had reached its later stages and
’being now branch'd out and spread among all the
artificers carries with it much more additional
trouble in measuring the Works, drawing Plans
for the new Parishes, making up and Examining
the Books and paying numerous Artificers’. (ref. 3)
Their salaries were therefore again raised to £200
per annum retrospectively from January 1724/5.
Members of the Commission included Sir Christopher Wren and his son Christopher, Thomas
Archer and (Sir) John Vanbrugh, who were
among the twenty-four Commissioners present
at the first meeting on Wednesday, 3 October
1711. At this meeting, letters were sent to
twenty-one parishes and six chapelries, inquiring
about their population, the existence of sites for
new churches, and the practicability of converting
existing chapels. (ref. 4)
At the second meeting a week
later the first reply to these inquiries was received,
from the parish of Stepney, and Hawksmoor and
Dickinson were ordered to report on sites there.
A Committee of Commissioners was established,
and on the same day held its first meeting, at which
Wren, Vanbrugh and Archer were present. (ref. 5)
The
following week the surveyors were asked to report
on sites in four other parishes. They were also
required to provide ’A Large Mapp of the Citys of
London and Westminster and Suburbs thereof’
and to ’distinguish the several parishes wherein
New Churches are intended to be built, and add
to it the buildings that have been erected since
the makeing that Mapp’. The secretary was
ordered to visit the parishes which had not replied
to the Commissioners’ inquiries and to ’quicken
them to make their Returnes with all convenient
speed’. (ref. 6)
By 2 November the Committee was able to
give the surveyors a list of twenty-five parishes
to be surveyed, each with the number of churches
to be erected in them, amounting to forty-eight in
all. (ref. 7)
On 7 November the Commissioners agreed
to the erection of forty-one churches in twenty
three parishes. (ref. 8)
The Commissioners had begun their task with
energy and purposefulness. When they came to
make their report to Parliament in December
1711, and to ask for further time to complete the
collection of the necessary information, they were
able to say that they had devoted to the work ’their
utmost industry and application’. (ref. 8)
Their work
was far enough advanced for them to ask for
power to treat with owners for the acquisition of
sites. In the meantime the Committee instructed
the officers of the Commissioners to continue their
work in anticipation of the renewal of the
Commission. (ref. 10)
By the Act of 1712 the necessary renewal of
the Commission was granted: among other provisions the Commissioners were empowered to
purchase land and settle the boundaries and
patronage of the new parishes. The financial
provisions remained unaltered. (ref. 11)
Under the
new Commissioners the actual construction of
churches was begun. By April 1714 they were
addressing the Queen on the problem of the
adequate endowment of the livings attached to the
new churches, ’as they shall respectively be ready
for use’. (ref. 12)
The Act of September 1715 (ref. 13)
provided for the appointment of a new Commission
which was to report on this problem. Their
report in March 1715/16 included a list of
churches to be built, amounting in all to forty
nine in twenty-seven parishes. (ref. 14) It was to become
evident, however, that the financial provision for
the Commission's work was not adequate for the
completion, in the imposing and expensive form
adopted by the Commissioners, of more than a
small proportion of this number of churches.
In February 1717/18 the Commissioners
petitioned that they should not be required to
apply their funds to the rebuilding of existing
churches; (ref. 15)
they were nevertheless obliged in
1719 to rebuild the Church of St. Giles-in-the
Fields. (ref. 16)
In the same month they sought permission to build in ’Rubble, Brick, Brick Coind
with Stone’ instead of in stone only, (ref. 17)
and they
also decided to begin no more churches ’till we
find ourselves in a Condition to discharge the
Contracts that are made or shall be made for
finishing the churches now in Building’. (ref. 18)
In 1719 another Act (ref. 19)
was passed, whereby
the Commission's finances were put on a new
footing. The existing duties were continued for a
further thirty-two years but a fixed sum of
£21,000 per annum was allotted out of them to the
use of the Commissioners. The preamble to the
Act stated that although the duties had so far
raised £161,175 16s. 7d. ’a great debt is now
owing to workmen and others’. At this time
much of the Commissioners’ work, including
that in Spital fields, was at a standstill, (ref. 20)
and in
view of the reduced amount of work the surveyors'
salaries were cut for the succeeding four or five
years. (ref. 21) In January 1720/1 the surveyors were asked to estimate the cost of finishing some or all
of the churches that had been begun, or of
covering them against the weather. (ref. 22)
The Commissioners were then in debt for £66,685 5s. 7½ d.,
and payments for the maintenance of ministers
and towards the work at Westminster Abbey and
Greenwich Hospital seemed likely to absorb much
of the future revenue. (ref. 23)
By March 1725/6 the Commissioners were
obliged to admit ’that ye Expence of building with
stone, purchasing Scites for Churches, Church
yards and ministers Houses, is so very great, and
does so far exceed the Calculations formerly made,
that ye Committee Conceive it will be utterly
impracticable to build one Half of the Churches
at first proposed’. (ref. 24)
In May_June of the following year the surveyors were asked to prepare a
model of a church to be built as cheaply as possible,
costing, with its parsonage, not more than
£10,000. (ref. 25)
By this time the period of the Commissioners’ most notable contribution to London's
architecture was nearly at an end, although they
built other churches in the suburbs.
In July 1712 the Committee of Commissioners,
at which none of the architects on the Commission
was present, had come to twelve resolutions regarding some general principles affecting the
design of their churches. (ref. 26)
The chief resolution
was that ’one General Modell be made and
Agreed upon for all the fifty New intended
Churches’. At the meeting of Commissioners a
few days later to approve the Committee's
resolutions, at which Wren and Vanbrugh were
present, this resolution was amended to read, ’That
one general [Modell struck through] design or
Forme be agreed upon … where the Scites will
admit thereof: the Steeples or Towers excepted’. (ref. 27)
Later in the same month Hawksmoor was
ordered to submit
’the plan of a Church to be
built conformable to the Resolutions’ made by the
Commissioners. (ref. 28)
Designs were invited from
architects other than the surveyors, (ref. 29)
and among
those submitting designs was (Colin) Campbell
who delivered to the Committee ’several De
signes’ on 25 July. (ref. 30)
On 30 July, the Commissioners decided ’that it may be adviseable to proceed upon the building of Greenwich Church,
altho’ a General Design be not yet agreed upon
for the Fifty New Churches' and resolved that
’a General Designe or Form for the rest of the
New intended Churches’ should be fixed on
before next Christmas. (ref. 29)
In March of the following year, 1713, the Commissioners were still
thinking in terms of a single basic design as yet
unchosen, and one of the Commissioners, Thomas
Archer, expressed to the Earl of Oxford his hope
that his fellow Commissioners ’will soon … by
the model they pitch on show their good opinion
of him’. (fn. c) In the event, of course, the idea of a
single plan or design had been abandoned by
the time Hawksmoor came to design Christ
Church, Spitalfields, and his other Stepney
churches early in 1714. The first meetings of the
Commissioners in the last months of 1711 had
already decided that the sites of churches, which
were to be correctly orientated wherever possible,
were to be chosen before the boundaries of the new
parishes were determined. (ref. 35)
Ministers’ houses
were to be situated ’amongst or near the better
Sort of the Inhabitants’. (ref. 36)
At their meeting in July 1712 the Commissioners resolved, among other things, that the sites
of churches should be
’Insular’ wherever possible,
with ’handsome Porticoes’ at the west end of each
church. (ref. 37)
(The Committee had previously de
cided that the provision of porticoes should be
conditional on the sites being suitable, but this
qualification was omitted by the Commissioners:
porticoes were not, however, a particularly
prominent feature of most of the Commissioners’
churches.) All pews were to be low and ’single’
and of equal height, with movable forms under
them which could be drawn out if necessary.
There was also a general resolution that in building
the churches ’no Person shall be admitted as a
General Undertaker’ but each artificer was to be
’seperatly agreed with to perform the Work
belonging to his particular Trade or business’. (ref. 37)
The Commissioners were concerned to obtain the
best work from their craftsmen. In May 1713
tenders for work on Archer's churches at
Westminster and Deptford were invited in The
London Gazette, being expressly ’published as
an Encouragement to the Workmen in the
Country as well as Towne to give in their proposals’. (ref. 38)
The New Churches in Stepney
The large medieval parish of St. Dunstan's,
Stepney, which at the beginning of the eighteenth
century included the greater part of the present
Boroughs of Stepney, Poplar and Bethnal Green,
presented the Commissioners with one of the
areas most in need of new parish churches, and
in the end the Commissioners’ activities here
approached their original intentions more nearly
than elsewhere.
In March 1710/11 Convocation's report on
parishes needing new churches (ref. 39) estimated that
Stepney contained about 86,500 inhabitants.
Apart from its ancient parish church it possessed
two Anglican chapels of ease or ’tabernacles’ in
Spitalfields, Sir George Wheler's tabernacle and
another in Petticoat Lane. The parish was
estimated to contain nineteen Nonconformist or
French Protestant meeting-houses; this was
probably an underestimate.
Stepney was the first parish to submit a ’representation’
to the Commissioners with suggestions
for new churches to be built, on 10 October 1711.
This proposed four new churches, at Spitalfields,
Limehouse, Wapping and Bethnal Green, and
suggested that the chapels at Bow and Poplar were
suitable for conversion into parish churches. In
the end all except the constitution of Poplar as a
parish was carried out by the Commissioners,
although the building of St. Matthew's Bethnal
Green was delayed until the mid-century and that
parish did not, as was at this time intended, include
the hamlet of Mile End New Town, which remained
a hamlet of the mother parish. The
surveyors were ordered to report on the proposed
sites. (ref. 40)
On 16 October Dickinson reported on
four sites, that in Spitalfields being the one
eventually chosen, and included an unfavourable
report on a fifth site in ’Lower Wapping’. (ref. 41)
On 19 October the Commissioners communicated
their intentions to Brasenose College, Oxford,
which had recently acquired the presentation
to the rectory of St. Dunstan's, Stepney, and had
united it to the vicarage, obtaining the division of
the living into two parts, held concurrently by two
rectors, one of whom was known as the ’Por
tionist of Spitalfields' and the other as the ’Por
tionist of Ratcliffe’. (ref. 42) At this time the Commissioners
had added the second church in (Lower)
Wapping to those they intended to build in Stepney. (ref. 43)
The college urged the Commissioners to
build no more than four new churches, lest the
value of each living should be too much reduced. (ref. 44)
The Commissioners had, however, formed the
intention to build five churches in Stepney (ref. 45) and
wrote to the college that ’the Commissioners intend
to proportion the Number of Churches to
the Number of Inhabitants of each Parish’ and
hoped that Parliament would take steps to ensure
an adequate maintenance for ministers. (ref. 46) In
November the number of churches proposed to
be built in Stepney rose to six, with the suggestion
that a second church be built in Spitalfields. (ref. 47)
This was still the intention in March 1715/16, (ref. 14)
but in the end the hamlets of Spitalfields and
Wapping, Stepney, had only one parish church
each.
The Site of Christ Church
Two days after the Lower House of Convocation
had presented its report to the Commons, the
hamlet of Spitalfields at a ’town meeting’ on
12 March 1710/11 agreed that the hamlet should
become a parish, and managers were appointed to
petition for the building of a church. (ref. 48) On
18 September 1711, before the first meeting of the
Commissioners, the hamlet ordered ’That A plan
of the ground for Two Churches with the number
of the houses to belong to each Church be made’
for presentation to the Commissioners. (ref. 49) In the
following month the Commissioners received the
representation from the parish of Stepney and a
report from Dickinson, both of which proposed
only one site in Spitalfields, that of the present
church. (ref. 50) In November the hamlet renewed its
suggestion for the establishment of a second
church and proposed the conversion of a ’French
Church’. (ref. 51) The suggestion for a second church
was adopted. (ref. 52) The possibility of uniting the
hamlet to Norton Folgate, and making a new
church built there the second Spitalfields church,
may have been entertained at that time. (ref. 53) But
before the suspension of the Commission in
December a second site in Brown's Lane (Han
bury Street west of Brick Lane) had been chosen
by the Committee as a site additional to that
actually used ’opposite to Paternoster Row’ (Brushfield Street). (ref. 54) ’Mr. Sleymaker’ had proposed the Brown's Lane site, as attorney for its
six proprietors. He was probably the builder who
later worked on the bricklaying for Christ
Church and possessed property in Booth Street
(Princelet Street east of Brick Lane) and Bell
Lane. The precise location of the site is not
known, but its possession by six people suggests
that it was in Joyce's Garden on the south side
of the Lane: whatever its position it was very near
the site of Christ Church. It measured 180 feet
east to west, and 274 feet north to south, with
other ground 44 feet by 80 feet for a minister's
house, and was valued at £900 compared with the
£1,260 finally paid for the larger site of Christ
Church. (ref. 55)
In the next two years little progress was made.
In July 1712 the two sites were again viewed by
Hawksmoor and the value of land there investigated. (ref. 56) The proposal to build a second church
was, however, abandoned. In September negotiations were entered into with the three proprietors
of the chosen site, and after they had refused to
abate their price or divide the site agreement was
reached in November, the proprietors affixing
their signature to a plan (Plate 7a). On 12 November the Commissioners agreed to the purchase. (ref. 57)
The interests of minors were involved, however,
and the sale had to be authorized by three Chancery decrees made on 24 July 1713. (ref. 58) It was
thus a year before the deed of purchase was signed
and sealed, on 6 November 1713. (ref. 59)
The site of the church, its rectory and churchyard, was purchased by means of a single deed, but
the site consisted of three adjoining plots with
separate vendors. The whole site had been part
of the property partitioned between the daughters
of William Wheler of Datchet, and had formed
part of two of the seven ’schedules’ into which the
property was divided; the third or ’Red Lyon
Range’ schedule which fell to Mary who married
Martin Vandenancker, merchant of London, and
the seventh or ’Smock Alley’, ’Teynter Ground
Range’ and ’Teynter Ground’ schedule which
fell to Katherine who married John Balch (see
pages 180–1).
The northern part of the site, which was mainly
occupied by the church and rectory, formed the
south-western part of Katherine Balch's share and
had been acquired in 1708, together with the rest
of her share, by Charles Wood and Simon
Michell (ref. 60) (see page 180). They, together with
their trustee and representatives of a minor's
interest in the ground, sold it to the Commissioners.
The other two parts of the site consisted of a
small plot in front of the church, abutting west on
Red Lion Street; and a larger plot on the south,
stretching from the back of the houses in Red
Lion Street to Brick Lane, which became the
churchyard. These had together formed the
greater part of Mary Vandenancker's share. The
larger southern part had, together with part of the
same share fronting Red Lion Street which was
not subsequently conveyed to the Commissioners,
been sold in September 1687 by Martin and Mary
Vandenancker to John Heath, citizen and distiller
of London. (ref. 61) This plot was purchased by Francis
Heath of New Court, Chancery Lane, who by
his will of April 1711 left it to his wife Anne, who,
together with her son John, sold it to the Commissioners.
The other smaller plot forming part of this
share was sold (ref. 62) by the Vandenanckers in November 1704 to John Bowden, tallow chandler, and
William James of Stepney, weaver, to the use of
the Vandenanckers for their lives and afterwards
to the use of Thomas Wilkes, citizen and weaver
of London. (fn. d) The plot was leased to Wilkes by the
Vandenanckers in July 1708. (ref. 59) By Wilkes's will,
made and proved in June 1711, (ref. 63) his estate was
left to his executor, Philip Humphreys of Spital-fields, weaver, in trust, after the payment of his
debts, for Wilkes James and Peter James. It
appears, however, that Robert Hampton, schoolmaster, of St. Katherine-by-the-Tower, was also
Wilkes's heir. Humphreys, Hampton and Martin
Vandenancker, who still had his life interest in the
freehold, sold the plot to the Commissioners.
Wood and Michell's site cost the Commissioners
£400, Mrs. Heath's £600 and Humphreys's £260.
The site had been almost entirely open ground.
Wood and Michell's plot had consisted of the
western part of four ’tenters’ which in 1708 were,
or had lately been, in the tenure of William Loasby
and John Furnis or Furnesse, (fn. e) and a long narrow
’spinning ground’ which had been in the tenure
of John Bennett, a ’line-maker’. (ref. 64)
Mrs. Heath's ground had consisted of four and
a half ’tenters’ which in 1687 had contained
’three Lodges and one little Tenement’ at the east
end fronting Brick Lane. (ref. 61) . In 1668 it had been
leased by William Wheler's trustees, Nicholas and
Cooke, to Matthew Hill, elsewhere described as a
cloth worker, for thirty-one years at £15 per
annum. It had been leased in 1680, probably by
mortgagees of Martin Vandenancker, to John
Balch for forty years from 1700; by 1687 it had
already passed into the possession of Balch and
then of his executor, Edward Metcalfe. (ref. 61) In
1713 ’the said Teynter ground was a void piece of
ground and yeilded no profitt and … the tenements
erected on part of the said ground … were small
tenements, very old and ruinous and ill-tenanted’. (ref. 65)
Humphreys's plot was described in 1704 as consisting of five houses with a piece of ground behind them. In 1687 this had been in the possession
of Bennett and abutted on his spinning ground. (ref. 62)
At the time that the site was acquired the
western end of the street which was to be left on
the north side of the site (Church Street, later
Fournier Street) was partly obstructed by the
Three Tuns tavern which abutted south on
Humphreys's plot of ground. In order to provide
access to Red Lion Street from the new street, the
sale to the Commissioners was made conditional,
apparently at the instance of Wood and Michell
who had an interest in the residential attractions
of the street, on the provision of a public passageway sixteen feet wide on the north side of Humphreys's plot, immediately south of the tavern.
This was to communicate obliquely with the new
street. (ref. 66) On Rocque's map of 1746 this indirect
communication of Church Street with Red Lion
Street is shown, but Horwood's map of 1799
shows a more direct communication.
The Evolution of the Design of
the Church
In February 1713/14 the officers and inhabitants of the hamlet petitioned the Commissioners
for work to be begun on the church. (ref. 67) The
Commissioners resolved that it should be started
’forthwith’ and Hawksmoor was directed ’to make
a plan of such Church there intended to be built
with a Estimate of the Charge thereof’. (ref. 68) Seven
weeks later, on 9 April, ’Mr. Hawksmoor laid a
Design for the New Church intended to be built
upon the Scite in Spittlefields before the Commissioners’. (ref. 69) It is not known whether the
Commissioners approved of this design, or wished
for alterations, but a fortnight later Hawksmoor
again ’deliver’d a Designe for a New Church
intended to be built in Spittlefields’ which was
approved and was ordered to be left with the
secretary. At the same time, Hawksmoor gave in
an estimate for its construction, amounting to
£9, 129 16s., less than a quarter of the final cost. (ref. 70)
The King's Collection of Topographical
Drawings in the British Museum contains some
thirty drawings relating to the construction of the
church. Few are dated or in Hawksmoor's own
hand, and not all are well made: the light they
throw on the development of the design of the
church in the course of its fifteen years of building
is, therefore, not always clear, but they show the
radical changes in the conception of the church
before and during its erection.
The plan reproduced as Plate 7b is for a church
within a rectangular body, its external dimensions
scaling 80 feet in width and 132 feet in length,
exclusive of the projecting portion of the tower.
This rectangle contains the nave, 40 feet wide and
95 feet long, divided from the galleried aisles by
colonnades of five equal bays, spaced at 15–foot
centres, with a narrow bay at each end. At the
east end of each aisle is a lobby with a gallery
staircase, and beside this is a small sacristy. These
sacristies are contrived behind the concave quadrant walls that flank the shallow square-ended
altar recess. The altarpiece is set forward to form
a passage between the sacristies, and the communion-rail is advanced into the nave on the line
of the first columns. The colonnade returns
across the nave before the narrow bay at the west
end, where an apse opening centrally from the
west wall forms the concentric setting for a circular baptistery enclosure. At the west end of
each aisle is a large staircase lobby, entered from a
west door and linked with the oblong main
vestibule, the square central compartment of
which forms the base of a square tower. This
vestibule projects for about half of its depth from
the body of the church and is fronted with a
tetrastyle portico of engaged three-quarter
columns, between which the doors are placed.
This scheme is developed in the fully dimensioned plan reproduced as Plate 8a where the
width of the rectangular body is decreased to
76 feet 8 inches, and the length is increased to 141 feet, this by reason of the greater depth now
given to the staircase lobbies at each end of the
aisles. These lobbies are now provided with windows in the side elevations, which are shown
modelled into bays, that at each end being slightly
recessed from the middle sequence of five which
correspond to the bays of the internal colonnades.
The cross section reproduced as Plate 9b
probably relates to this plan, and shows a hall
church with nave and aisles of equal height. The
columns of the dividing colonnades stand on very
tall pedestals and carry architrave-blocks, from
which spring the round arches of the colonnades
and aisles, and the elliptical arches of the nave, the
ceiling compartments being, presumably, cross
vaulted. Engaged to the lower part of the back of
each column is a pilaster supporting the two
galleries, the front of the first being level with the
column-bases, and that of the second impinging
about halfway up the shafts. The east end is
shown with the concave quadrant walls flanking
an altar recess lit by a large Venetian window.
On the verso of a sheet of studies relating to
St. George's-in-the-East (King's T.C. XXIII
21–2a) there is a sketched half-section of a church
comparable with that reproduced as Plate 9b and
obviously related to the first scheme for Christ
Church. This half-section shows that Hawksmoor had considered a scheme for the interior with
paired columns, placed one behind the other, of
three orders superimposed to carry the two
galleries and the ceiling, a logical use of columns
but one tending to produce a fussy, small-scaled
interior.
Except that they relate to a hall church with a
single roof producing a pediment-end on the east
front, the side elevations and east front relating
to this scheme (Plates 8b, 9a) differ but little from
those built. The doorways in the east front are
more emphatic, with eared architraves, their
straight heads broken by triple keystones. There
is no round window in each end bay of the side
elevations, and the great cornice consists only of
bed-mouldings and a deep plain fascia, with a
blocking-course above.
There are important variations between the
plan last described and that reproduced as Plate 14,
which may have been drawn for engraving after
completion of the building. Additional entrances,
approached by double stairways, are introduced
centrally in the north and south side walls. This
change, introducing a cross-axis, may well have
inspired Hawksmoor to revise his conception of
the interior, for the smooth arcades of five equal
bays are now discarded for a more dramatic
sequence. The second column from each end is
now replaced by a substantial pier, reducing the
continuous arcade to three bays, with a wide and a
narrow bay beyond each pier. Another significant
change moves the transverse colonnade from the
westernmost to the easternmost bay of the nave,
where it forms a screen before the altar recess. In
execution, of course, there is a transverse colonnade at each end of the nave. It must be noted
that these internal changes are not reflected in the
side walls as constructed, where the original
window centres and bay spacings are retained,
giving an asymmetrical placing of windows under
the aisle vaults (Plate 37b). This suggests that the
outer walls were advanced some way before the
internal changes were made.
By far the most important new feature shown
on this plan is the great tetrastyle portico before
the west front. This is now proved to have been
added when the body of the church was nearly
completed; in fact, all the evidence tends to show
that the west front and steeple were designed,
quite literally, stage by stage. At first it was apparently intended to surmount the west front, a
skeletal pseudo-portico of three bays, with a short
tower of simple design, square in plan and of equal
width with the middle bay of the front. This
tower was to consist of a high pedestal-course,
flanked by concave-curving buttresses over the
side bays of the front, and a single stage containing
in each face a large niche set in an unmoulded rectangular recess, flanked by buttresses. Above the
narrow crowning cornice was to be a low lantern
of octagonal plan, with a plain rectangular opening
in each face and a pyramidal roof. But on the
front elevation showing this tower (Plate 10a) is
sketched the rough outline of an immense tower,
of similar profile to that actually built, with the
note ’Summa Altitudo 260f 0i.’ Unfortunately,
the drawing is cut short and does not show how it
was proposed to terminate this adumbrated tower.
The first stage of the tower, with its skeletal
pseudo-portico, and the second stage, with its
triumphal arch motif, were carried up before
any final decision was taken about the form of
the terminal feature. The drawings reproduced
as Plate 10b, c probably represent the alternative designs for the third stage submitted to the
Commissioners by Hawksmoor. The first is for a tower, square in plan, each face containing
a tall, round-headed opening set in a recessed
margin of the same form. The moulded archivolt of the framing arch rises from a pulvinated
impost and has a large scroll-keystone. Against
the north and south faces stand boldly projecting buttresses, curving out in concave ramps
near their bases. An arcaded attic, reminiscent of the Kingsweston chimneys, with four
arches in each face, is the crowning feature. Tentative ornaments are roughly sketched on this
design-tall-necked urns placed at the angles over
the triumphal-arch stage, and acanthus crockets
ascending the curving faces of the buttresses. The
alternative design, shown on a rider-flap, is for a
tower stage very similar to the one actually built,
surmounted by a spire of octangular plan with a
profile that is much less acute than that of the
executed design. The derivation from Wren's
spire at St. Margaret Pattens is very clear in this
sketch.
A problem is posed by two items in the King's
Topographical Collection at the British Museum.
One is an unplaced and anonymous design (ref. 71) for a
hall church with a lobed apse, somewhat in the
manner of John James (Plate 6b). This has a
spire very similar to but distinct from that of
Christ Church. It may be described as two interpenetrating pyramids, one very steep and the other
less steep, both rising from the same square base.
The angles of the very steep pyramid are cut away
so that its plan is cruciform throughout its rise,
thus revealing the angles of the less steep pyramid
as wedges that disappear into the re-entrant angles.
Alternatively, the whole might be described as a
conflation of obelisks. It is necessary to add that
the dormers and ornaments are very like those of
the design executed at Christ Church.
The difficulty is that this spire does not fit the
tower on which it seems to stand. The elevation
shows a tower that is either square and set
diagonally, or, alternatively, is hexagonal in plan.
If the tower is square, the corners of the spire must
be unsupported; if hexagonal there must be flat
roofs over the parts of the tower not covered by
the spire; but then the necessary parapets or
balustrades are missing. It seems unlikely, therefore, that this design, to which the spire is alien,
could have served as the inspiration for the Christ
Church spire. What is more probable is that both
spires came from a common source, and here it
may be observed that the spire on the composite
design, whilst it differs from that of Christ
Church as executed, is identical with that shown
in the second item-an engraving of the west
front which, though not published until 1795,
claims to be based on a drawing by Hawksmoor. (ref. 72)
The Building of the Church
In June 1714 the Commissioners invited tenders from bricklayers and masons, who were
appointed in the following month. (ref. 73) Hawksmoor
was required to report on the nature of the subsoil. (ref. 74)
The foundations, like those of St. Anne's,
Limehouse, and St. George's-in-the-East, were
begun in the summer or autumn of 1714. In
October the surveyors measured the brickwork
in the foundations of the three churches, and in
November the bricklayers reported that the work
on all three churches had been brought level with
the ground. (ref. 75) By the end of the year more than
£1,6oo worth of work had been done on the
church at Spitalfields, (ref. 76) about £997 being paid to
the bricklayers, £120 to the labourer who dug the
foundations, and £510 to the carpenter, whose
contract does not, however, seem to have been
signed until 1717. (ref. 77) The great work was begun,
but fifteen years were to pass before Spitalfields
saw the last of the Commissioners’ workmen.
The foundation stone was laid near the southeast corner of the nave in 1715 by Edward Peck,
a dyer, who lived in Red Lion Street (see page
190), and was one of the Commissioners. (ref. 78) He
was presumably particularly active in respect of
the Commissioners' work in Spitalfields, but little
is known of the details of his activities as a Commissioner. He attended eight of the fifteen meetings in the first four months of 1716. (ref. 79) Most of
the early ’representations’ from Stepney and
Spitalfields asking for the church to be sited and
built were signed by him, sometimes as a member
of the hamlet ’vestry’. He signed the Spitalfields
site plan on behalf of one of the vendors (see
Plate 7a), and may have been instrumental in
facilitating the purchase. He was one of the six
or eight Commissioners who signed the Books of
Works recording the work done and payments
made for the Spitalfields church. In March 1725,
when the church was being pewed, he was ’desired to choose any part of the New Church to
erect a Pew for himself, Family and his Posterity’ as ’a grateful Acknowledgment of [his] good services done for this Hamlett’, (ref. 80) and in April 1727
he was similarly granted a vault for his family. (ref. 81)
After his death in 1736 his son erected a monument to him made by Thomas Dunn, the mason
of the church.
The work on the church proceeded for some
four and a half years, not without checks and
changes, but without major interruption. By
July 1715 the mason and bricklayer had carried
the body of the church up to a height of fourteen
feet and by the end of the year to the level of the
imposts of the openings at the west end. (ref. 82) In
March 1715/16 the body of the church had
reached about half its full height, and it was
thought that the roof could be laid on in the summer if ’proper Methods’ were taken. (ref. 83) By the
end of 1716 the mason's and bricklayer's work
was carried about nineteen feet higher. (ref. 84) In that
year the mason provided the keystones of the
entrances at the west end, with their scallop-shell
carving, at 15s. each (ref. 84) (Plate 38a). Another year
passed before the work was brought to the level of
the ’great Cornice’. The church was still unroofed.
The following fifteen months, to the end of
March 1719, saw the carrying-up of the nave
walls to the level of the ’Attick cornice’ and the
building of the base of the tower to the same level.
The carpenter boarded-up ’the Cornice of the
Composite Order within the Church to prevent its
being broke’, (ref. 85) perhaps during the roofing of the
side aisles by the carpenter and plumber, which
was completed during this period.
At this point the financial difficulties of the
Commissioners caused an interruption in the construction of the building, with the body of the
church nearly complete, but with the central
crypt vaults not yet turned and the nave open to
the sky. The church was as yet without tower or
portico, the latter being at this stage neither projected nor, probably, contemplated. (ref. 86)
In this first period the bricklayers’ work had
been found to be unsatisfactory. In March
1714/15 Hawksmoor and Gibbs complained and
Sleymaker and Goodchild were ordered to be dismissed. (ref. 87) In April they were reinstated on
undertaking not to use bad bricks. (ref. 88) Sleymaker,
who had perhaps used bad bricks in buildings in
Mile End New Town in the 1670's and 1680's,
was not employed in the following year, probably
having died in 1715 (see page 161). Goodchild
continued to be employed until his death in 1722,
although there were further complaints against
him in April 1717 and June 1718. He was required to employ only workmen approved by the
surveyors. (ref. 89)
From 25 March 1719 to 25 March 1720 virtually no work was done on the church, and in the
succeeding four years or so no great progress was
made with the main structure. In April 1720
Hawksmoor and James reported on the progress of
the Commissioners’ churches, and noted that at
Spitalfields the carpenter had been unable to complete the nave roof ’for want of money, having a
great Debt at this Church and in other Parishes
due to him of above £2,000’. The surveyors
asked for the roof to be covered with timber and
lead and the vaults to be turned, ’and then this
Fabrick will be secur'd from Dammage of
Weather and other Accidents’. The unfinished
state of the Commissioners’ churches occasioned
’harm continually done by the Mob’, a circumstance illustrated by the inclusion in the plumber's
bill for 1721–2 of a charge for a labourer ’watching the Lead’ on sixty-three nights. To prevent
this damage the surveyors asked for the site to be
walled in. (ref. 90) The nave was roofed in this year, (ref. 91)
but not leaded.
At a meeting of the Commissioners in January
1720/1 Hawksmoor gave an estimate for ’covering Spittlefields Church’ and at the same meeting
estimates for completing the Commissioners’
churches and protecting them against the weather
were laid before them, together with a statement
of their ’Debt’. (ref. 92) By April the roof-timbers at
Spitalfields had, in the surveyors’ words, ’layn
open to ye Summer and Winter weather a Considerable time To ye great Damage of ye same, as
well as disgrace to ye undertaking’. A plumber
had contracted for the work ’some Years agoe’ (in
fact, in January 1718/19) at a low rate, but in the
interval lead had ’much advanced in price’ so that
the plumber could only proceed if given ’some
further encouragement’ which the surveyors
recommended as it ’will be better husbandry to
doe that then to Lett ye Roof and walls remain, in
absolute Ruin’. (ref. 93) In November 1721 the Commissioners offered the plumber ’fifteen shillings a
hundred’ on condition he put the work in hand at
once. The roof timbers having been ’a great
while expos'd to the Weather’ and being perhaps
’subject to the worm’, the surveyors were to cover
them with tar and pitch before the lead was laid
on. (ref. 94) In this and the following year the roof was leaded, although in 1723 work remained to be
done ’to make good the Roof home to the
Tower’. (ref. 95) Thus the body of the church was
closed against the weather some three years after
the walls were raised.
In the meantime the mason had worked on the
pediment at the east end and on the north and
south parapets in 1720–1, and had taken the
tower ten feet above the level of the ’Attick cornice’ in 1721–2. (ref. 96) But more attention since the
resumption of work in 1720 had been given to
the interior. The carpenter worked on the floor
and boarding of the galleries ’for the Charity
children’ at the west end of the church in 1720–1,
and the floor and roofing at the base of the tower
in 1721–2. (ref. 97) The mason did a small amount of
work on the ’Ten Middle Peers’ in the vaults
under the church in 1722–3. In the following
year he did other work in the vaults and on the
’window seats’ and ’Enrichments of the Cornices
within the Church’. This included the provision
often keystones to the nave arcade arches ’Carved
with Cherubs heads’ at £1 10s. each (ref. 98) (Plate 38b).
The smith fitted the windows with their iron
frames in 1722–4. (ref. 99) In 1723–4 the plasterer
began his work on the inside walls and decorative
features, including the ’Glory’ over the altar, for
which he charged £12 (ref. 100) (Plate 37d). At the
beginning of 1724 the interior was, however, still unfurnished.
For some five years, from early in 1719 to early
in 1724, little advance was made in the main
structure of the church, apart from the roofing of
the nave. In January 1722/3 the ’Ministers
Church Warden and other Antient Inhabitants’
of the hamlet petitioned the Commissioners,
pointing out that the church ’has for some time
past been Almost finished, Yet of late they have
had the Griefe to see a Stopp put to the Good
Work which but a little more Time and Money
would have perfected’. (ref. 101) The Commissioners
resolved ’to give Orders To finish that Church as
soon as it can be done’. James was asked to
estimate the cost of completing the church ’and
particularly what sum will suffice for that purpose
in case the finishing the Steeple should be deferr'd
till some convenient time after ye said Church is
finish’. (ref. 102) A fortnight later Hawksmoor and
James gave in their estimate to ’make the New
Church in Spittlefields fit for Divine Service’.
The total was £5,160 4s. 10d. compared with
some £18,000 actually spent before the work was
finished. (ref. 103) The Commissioners may have contemplated the completion of the church in a less
imposing form than that finally adopted, without
the addition of spire or portico.
The comparative lull in the work on the church
probably made it more liable to damage from pilfering intrusions. In November 1723 Hawksmoor recommended a watchman to the Commissioners for payment ’he having bin very Usefull in
Preserving the said Buildings from Mischife
daily done by the Mobb’. (ref. 104)
The following year, 1724, saw the furtherance
of work on a large scale. The mason and bricklayer carried the tower up some twenty-four feet
to the top of the ’Corbel Cornice’. They also
built the steps at the east end, and those in the
centre of the north and south sides, which were
soon to be swept away. (ref. 105) The carpenter worked
on the flooring and boarding of the pews, galleries,
vestry room, sacristies and stairs to the galleries. (ref. 106)
The original intention in 1714 (ref. 107) had been to
construct two tiers of galleries (see Plate 9b) but
in the end it appears that only one tier was built
along each side, with two tiers at the west end.
The plasterer completed most of his work, and
the joiner did his first work pewing the church, (ref. 108)
largely according to Hawksmoor's plan shown in
Plate 24b. The glazing and painting of the windows was also begun.
By the summer of 1725 the church had stood
for some six or seven years with a west front consisting of the first two stages of the tower rising
directly from the stepped approach. Before the
development of the design for the tower into a
steeple with spire Hawksmoor's conception of the
west front would have had a closer affinity to St.
George's-in-the-East than that finally constructed.
This conception of the west front without spire
or portico is represented in fig. 37. When the
spire was first projected is not certain; the ’steeple’
referred to in January 1722/3 may not necessarily
have included a spire. It may, however, have been
the decision to add a spire to the tower that made
it seem desirable to provide a balancing projection
on the west front in the form of a tetrastyle portico.
The first explicit mention of both spire and portico
occurs in an estimate from Hawksmoor and James
in July 1725, which included £1,000 for ’Makeing a plain Spire and finishing ye Steeple’ and
£700 for ’The four Tuscan pillars and the ascent
and portico’. (ref. 109) On 12 July the Commissioners
’order'd that ye Tower [and Spireinserted] of the
Church in Spittle-fields being well nigh finished
and the Scaffolding ready put up, the Tower [and
Spire inserted] be carried on and finished, as less
expensive now then it will be hereafter’. At the
same meeting they ’Ordered that ye Portico at ye
west end be finished in the plainest manner and at
ye least Expence that can be’. (ref. 110) By the end of
1726 the spire had been taken up by the mason
and bricklayer to ’ the bottom of the Cills to the
Second Tire of Windows in highth of the Spire’,
the mason charging for lifting material to 180
feet. By that time he had carved the four largest
and lowest ’Crockets’ at £4. each. (ref. 111) Work on the
portico was not begun, however, until 1727.

Figure 37:
Christ Church, west front, without portico and spire;
hypothetical drawing based on Hawksmoor's sketches
By the spring of 1725 the greater part of the
carpenter's work in the body of the church had
been completed. Between March 1725 and
December 1726 the elaborate joinery work on the
altar, altar-table, pulpit and reading-desk was
carried out (see below), together with the wainscoting of the galleries and staircases, and the
making of screens for the north and south doors
and all the outer and inner doors of the church.
The joiner's work was delayed by his ’ taking
down the whole work of the altar & making
several alterations in the same and fixing it up
again’. (ref. 112) This may have been in order to set the
altar back against the east wall instead of in the
more forward position shown in an undated plan
in the British Museum, (ref. 113) which left a passage way behind the altar from one ’sacristy’ or vestry
to the other, and this may perhaps have caused the
direction to the joiner in March 1725/6 to finish
his work with all possible speed. (ref. 114) By February
1726/7 the altar was in its final position and the
placing and size of the altar-table was being
planned by Hawksmoor. (ref. 115)
The carving on the pulpit, reader's and clerk's
desk, screens and galleries was executed in 1725–1726. The steps and paving at the altar were
carried out by the mason in ’Purbeck paving’,
’Rygate hearth’, ’Portland Paving with Black
dots and Black Marble Border’ and ’White and
veined Marble Paving laid Arris-wise’. The
faces of the stone capitals were painted and the
plasterer set the King's arms upon the eastern
entablature at a cost of £62. The glazing and
painting of the windows was completed. The
surveyors’ salaries, which had been reduced from
March 1719/20, were subsequently restored retrospectively from January 1724/5, the work
being ’branch'd out and spread among all the
artificers’ both at Spitalfields and elsewhere (see
page 149).
The Commissioners had determined the limits
of the new parish in the summer of 1724 (ref. 116) and
the parish boundaries, coincident with those of the
hamlet, had been assigned in January 1724/5. (ref. 117)
The enclosure of the churchyard with ’a plain
wall not exceeding 7 ft. high’ was ordered in July
1725. (ref. 118) In April 1726 plans for this were still
being ordered, (ref. 119) but this work presumably had
been executed by September 1727 when the
’raising of the church ground’ was held to have
damaged adjacent parish buildings. (ref. 120)
By the end of 1726 no work had yet been done
on the portico. In February 1726/7 the Commissioners directed the workmen ’to finish ye …
Spire and Portico with all possible expedition’. (ref. 121)
In March the spire was ordered to ’be finish'd
according to ye Design sent in by Mr. Hawks
moor’. (ref. 122) By March of the following year the
spire had been taken up to its full height and surmounted by a ’Copper Ball and Vane’ for which
the smith charged £55 2s. 6d., and which the
painter gilded for twelve guineas. (ref. 123)
In March 1726/7 the Commissioners had also
ordered a further estimate to be made of the cost
of the portico. (ref. 124) It was probably at about this
time or a little earlier that the elevation of the
portico, dated 1726 (?/7), was made, showing its
construction partially in wood and brick (Plate
11a). The use of these materials for ’the Portico
and Entablement’, authorized in May 1727, (ref. 125)
was presumably necessitated by the financial difficulties that caused the Commissioners at the same
time to contemplate the erection of churches ’that
may be built as cheaply as possible’. (ref. 126) The portico
and steps before it were built by the end of March
1728. The mason's work included ’Cutting way,
in the Facia for ye £ columns of the portico and
cutting holes for ye Roof of the same’ to adapt the
existing and completed west front for this belated
addition. (ref. 127)
The final major works in the interior of the
church were completed at the same time. The
altar, churchwardens’ pew and christening pew
were finished by the joiner and carvers, the mason
relaid the marble paving at the altar, and the
smith, John Robins, provided some twenty feet
of ’fine Iron-rail to the altar with leaves, Cherubs
Heads, Scroll work, etc’ for £51 5s. The vestry
meeting room was wainscoted and panels at the
altar damaged by damp were mended and the front
doors shortened and refitted. (ref. 128)
Iron gates and railings with stone piers were
provided by the smith and mason, probably on the
north-east side of the church. (ref. 129) The pavior
completed his work, including the pavement in
the front of the church, or ’Esplanade’, to the
south of which the engine-house and Charity
School were later built. (ref. 120)
By the spring of 1728 the church was thus
brought almost to completion, but such work as
remained was not quickly finished, and in April
1729 a ’Town Meeting’ was moved to ask ’the
Committee appointed to Manage the Affairs
relating to the Church’ to attend the Commissioners ’in order to Get the Church Finished’. (ref. 130)
In the meantime, a little work was done on the
portico by the plasterer, while the painter's work
included ’145 Pews Number'd with Figures
Guilded and back Shadow'd each at 2s.’ (ref. 131)
It was not until 14 May 1729 that the Act
making the hamlet a parish and providing a
maintenance for the rector (ref. 132) received the royal
assent, (ref. 133) together with a similar Act for St.
George's-in-the-East. The Act provided for the
Commissioners to endow the rectory with £3,000,
and for an additional £125 per annum to be raised
by the parish. In March 1725/6 the hamlet had
been willing to raise £200 per annum, (ref. 134) but by
March 1726/7 the Commissioners were satisfied
that £150 per annum was the most that could be raised ’by reason of the great decay of trade and
fall of rents since that first Proposal was made’. (ref. 135)
By the time the Bill came before the Commissioners in February 1728/9, the sum was further
reduced. (ref. 136) By the Act the great tithes continued
to be paid to Brasenose College, the patrons of the
new livings made out of the old parish of Stepney.
The Commissioners paid £100 towards the £370
spent by the parish in obtaining the Act. (ref. 137)
Christ Church, Spitalfields, Building Accounts
Payments to Craftsmen for Labour and Material
|
|
Labourer |
Bricklayers |
Carpenters |
Mason |
Smiths |
Plumbers |
Pwviors |
Plasterers |
Joiner |
Painter |
Glazier |
Carvers |
Totals |
|
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
£ |
s. |
d. |
| 1 Jan. 1713/14–31 Dec. 1714 |
120 |
9 |
10 |
996 |
9 |
9 |
510 |
0 |
8 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
1627 |
0 |
3 |
| 1 Jan. 1714/15–31 Dec. 1715 |
10 |
0 |
0 |
909 |
5 |
6 |
87 |
18 |
2 |
2832 |
19 |
7 |
288 |
2 |
10 |
76 |
17 |
8 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
4205 |
3 |
9 |
| 1 Jan. 1715/16–31 Dec. 1716 |
– |
565 |
7 |
6 |
82 |
1 |
8 |
2389 |
10 |
4 |
2 |
12 |
3 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
3039 |
11 |
9 |
| 1 Jan. 1716/17–31 Dec. 1717 |
2 |
10 |
2 |
458 |
8 |
2 |
107 |
3 |
11 |
2858 |
16 |
8 |
14 |
10 |
6 |
33 |
18 |
4 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
3475 |
7 |
9 |
|
(fn. f) 1 Jan. 1717/18–25 Mar. 1719 |
– |
457 |
13 |
3 |
464 |
10 |
3 |
4378 |
10 |
2 |
144 |
2 |
1 |
515 |
7 |
7 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
5960 |
3 |
4 |
| 25 Mar. 1719–25 Mar. 1720 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
2 |
6 |
4 |
– |
2 |
16 |
6 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
5 |
2 |
10 |
| 25 Mar. 1720-25 Mar. 1721 |
– |
– |
997 |
10 |
10 |
320 |
5 |
2 |
4 |
4 |
0 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
1322 |
0 |
0 |
| 25 Mar. 1721–25 Mar. 1722 |
– |
62 |
1 |
0 |
22 |
18 |
8 |
454 |
18 |
3 |
12 |
19 |
9 |
372 |
9 |
4 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
925 |
7 |
0 |
| 25 Mar. 1722–25 Mar. 1723 |
– |
20 |
15 |
9 |
16 |
9 |
7 |
75 |
11 |
3 |
201 |
18 |
8 |
217 |
13 |
0 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
– |
532 |
8 |
3 |
| 25 Mar. 1723–25 Mar. 1724 |
– |
– |
39 |
2 |
3 |
348 |
16 |
0 |
350 |
9 |
0 |
81 |
16 |
2 |
– |
444 |
14 |
7 |
– |
– |
– |
– |
1264 |
18 |
0 |
| 25 Mar. 1724–25 Mar. 1725 |
– |
694 |
7 |
9 |
914 |
13 |
0 |
1894 |
0 |
7 |
102 |
2 |
4 |
38 |
16 |
1 |
– |
518 |
12 |
z |
532 |
0 |
2 |
21 |
11 |
4 |
127 |
8 |
6 |
– |
4843 |
11 |
11 |
|
(fn. f) 25 Mar. 1725–31 Dec. 1726 |
– |
852 |
6 |
4 |
194 |
19 |
4 |
2840 |
3 |
3 |
399 |
6 |
1 |
77 |
6 |
10 |
163 |
17 |
8 |
62 |
0 |
0 |
1287 |
3 |
10 |
87 |
7 |
2 |
14 |
2 |
9 |
211 |
19 |
5 |
6190 |
12 |
8 |
|
(fn. f) 1 Jan. 1726/7–25 Mar. 1728 |
– |
– |
419 |
19 |
9 |
3241 |
17 |
7 |
600 |
16 |
2 |
260 |
6 |
4 |
249 |
8 |
6 |
40 |
19 |
9 |
96 |
18 |
6 |
57 |
15 |
6 |
8 |
7 |
7 |
32 |
14 |
6 |
5009 |
4 |
2 |
|
(fn. f) 25 Mar. 1728–24 June 1729 |
– |
– |
– |
11 |
17 |
6 |
41 |
1 |
5 |
22 |
6 |
4 |
– |
19 |
17 |
0 |
– |
21 |
14 |
9 |
– |
– |
116 |
17 |
0 |
|
(fn. f) 25 June 1729–25 Mar. 1731 |
– |
– |
217 |
16 |
6 |
184 |
19 |
9 |
179 |
4 |
5 |
10 |
17 |
9 |
1 |
7 |
0 |
– |
– |
7 |
12 |
11 |
43 |
10 |
6 |
– |
645 |
8 |
10 |
| Totals |
133 |
0 |
0 |
5016 |
15 |
0 |
4075 |
4 |
7 |
21832 |
6 |
1 |
2343 |
15 |
10 |
1707 |
15 |
5 |
417 |
9 |
8 |
1086 |
3 |
6 |
1916 |
2 |
6 |
196 |
1 |
8 |
193 |
9 |
4 |
244 |
13 |
11 |
|
| Sum Total: |
£39162 |
17 |
6 |
Also £179 3s. paid to Stephen Hall for watching and cleaning the church.
The church was consecrated by Edmund Gibson, Bishop of London, on 5 July 1729, in the
same month as St. George's-in-the-East. (ref. 138)
Some £666 remained to be paid to workmen
for the period from 25 June 1729 to 25 March
1731. The carpenter was paid for ’Enclosing the
East and West Staircases’ and for ’fixing a Wainscot Board and Benches to the Pulpit’. (ref. 139) The
mason provided the chimneypiece in the vestry
and also ’A Purple Marble Bason molded, fluted,
Guthernd and Sunk 7 Inches deep’ for the font at
£18. (ref. 140) The smith and mason also set up the iron
railings that ran across the north-west angle of the
church and across the foot of the steps at the west
end. (ref. 141)
By the time all the work had been completed
the Commissioners had spent £39,162 17s. 6d. on
workmen's wages, and £179 3s. for cleaning and
watching the church, in addition to the £1,260
paid for the site.
Craftsmen Employed in the Building of the Church
Mason. Thomas Dun, or Dunn, of Southwark
was employed throughout, and was also responsible for the monument to Edward Peck. He
worked at St. Anne's, Limehouse, and St. Mary
Woolnoth. (ref. 142) He was an executor of William
Seager of Spitalfields, carpenter. Other Southwark builders of the same surname occur in deeds
relating to domestic buildings in Spitalfields and
Mile End New Town contemporaneously with
the building of the church, and Charles Dunn of
Southwark did the mason's work on the French
Church in Fournier Street in 1743.
Unsuccessful tender from Richard and Michael
Crutcher of ’Billiters Lane, Fanchurch Street,
London’.
Bricklayers. Thomas Sleymaker of Stepney
(d. 1715); Richard Goodchild of Stepney (d.
1722); Thomas Lucas of Deptford (1725–6).
Sleymaker, who was not employed after 1715,
may probably be identified with Thomas Sleymaker of Stepney who died in that year, possessed
of property in Booth Street and Bell Lane. In his
will he calls himself a mason, but refers to money
of his put in the stock of the ’Society of Bricklayers’. (ref. 143) He and Goodchild, who was probably
the Master of the Tylers’ and Bricklayers’ Company in 1720–I, (ref. 144) were partners and had
premises in Cannon Street, Wapping. (ref. 142)
All three were employed at St. George's-in-the-East and St. Anne's, Limehouse.
Carpenters. James Grove of Greenwich
(1714–23); Samuel Worrall of Spitalfields (from
1723).
Grove worked at most of the Commissioners’
other churches. (ref. 142) On his death Worrall, a
prominent Spitalfields builder, was appointed
to succeed him. (ref. 145)
Unsuccessful tenders from John Brookes of
College Hill, William Seager, and Thomas
Denning.
Smiths. John Skeat of Bow Lane (1715–23);
John Cleave (1723–9); John Robins (1724 onwards).
Robins obtained the locksmith's contract. (ref. 146)
Skeat and Cleave worked at most of the Commissioners’ other churches. Robins worked at St.
Mary Woolnoth, St. John Horsleydown and on
the tower of St. Michael, Cornhill. (ref. 142)
Joiner. Gabriel Appleby (from 1724). He
worked also at St. Mary Woolnoth.
Unsuccessful tenders from ’Lane and Beaverstock’ and John Simmonds.
Plumbers. George Osmond of Fetter Lane
(1715); Richard Marples (1717); George Deval
(1718 onwards).
Osmond worked at most of the Commissioners’
other churches; Marples at St. Mary-le-Strand,
St. Mary Woolnoth, St. George's, Bloomsbury,
and St. Michael's, Cornhill; and Deval at St.
John's, Smith Square, St. Anne's, Limehouse, St.
Luke's, Old Street, and St. George's, Bloomsbury. (ref. 142)
Unsuccessful tender from Richard Smith.
Plasterer. Isaac Mansfield (from 1723). He
worked also at St. George's, Hanover Square, St.
John's, Smith Square, St. Luke's, Old Street, and
St. George's, Bloomsbury.
Paviors. William Church (in 1719); John
Mist (from 1725).
Carvers. Thomas Darby and Gervas Smith
(1725–8).
Darby worked at many of the Commissioners’
other churches and Smith also at St. Mary Woolnoth.
Painter. James Preedy (from 1724). He
worked also at St. Mary Woolnoth and St.
Michael, Cornhill. (ref. 142)
Unsuccessful tender from John Reynolds.
Glazier. Jos. Goodchild (from 1724).
Labourer. George Norris was employed as
labourer to dig foundations.
The Organ
The only reference in the Commissioners’
records to the organ is to the provision by the carpenter in 1727–8 of some forty-five feet of oaken
flooring in ’ye Organ Gallery’. The form of
the west end and the manner in which the western
entablature is broken to admit the organ suggest
that the design of the church may not have taken
account of the position that the organ in fact
occupies.
The organ was installed some seven years after
the church was consecrated, a subscription being
raised and a committee formed for its purchase
early in 1734. The faculty for its erection was
dated 7 February 1735/6. (ref. 148)
The organ was designed, apparently at a cost of
£600, by Richard Bridge, who was also paid £12
per annum ’for his care and trouble in the keeping
the organ in repair and tune’. (ref. 149) The rector
described it in 1851 as ’the only specimen extant
of the sole workmanship of the celebrated
Bridge’, (ref. 150) and it has been called ’his best organ’. (ref. 151)
In March 1735/6 the first organist was elected
at a salary of £30 per annum. This was Peter
Prelleur, a musician of note who lived in Rose
Lane. He died in the summer of 1741. In
1748 the salary was reduced to £20 per annum.
A woman, Margaret Rondeau, perhaps the
sexton's wife, was a candidate for the post in 1764,
coming bottom of the poll, and in 1807 two of
the eleven candidates were women. (ref. 152)
In 1822 the organ was repaired by James
Bishop of ’7 York Buildings, New Road’ (ref. 153) for
£111 18s. (ref. 154) The repairs of which this was a
part provoked opposition, and in February 1827
a public meeting in Spitalfields considered the
supposed cost of these repairs, which appear to have
been inaccurately stated. Part of the report in
The Times runs:
’The next item was—
’ For taking the organ to pieces, cleaning
and repairing the pipes, and adding a new
stop thereto £221 19s.
’ “Stop indeed!” exclaimed the chairman, “for
I understand it has stopped altogether.” ’ (ref. 155)
In February 1836 a fire in the tower damaged
the organ, and H. C. Lincoln of 196 High Holborn (ref. 156) was paid £222 16s. 6d. for ’repairs and
improvements’. (ref. 157) In 1851 the rector commented
on the ’very defective’ condition of the organ,
which he considered had been ’not fairly dealt
with’ in the repairs of 1836, when much of Mr.
Lincoln's work had been ’altogether ineffective’.
It was agreed to raise £200 for further repairs. (ref. 150)
This was done, as part of the ’restoration’ carried
out in that year, and by November it was reported
that ’a considerable outlay’ had been made upon
the organ, ’which will place it upon an equality
with any in London’. (ref. 158)
From 1858 to 1868 no organist was appointed,
for lack of funds to pay him. (ref. 159)
The Bells
A committee to install bells in the church is
said to have been appointed by the vestry in
1730, (ref. 160) and the great bell, costing £162 10s.,
to have been hung in May 1731. A gift of £600
towards the cost of a peal of bells is said to have
been given in 1734. (ref. 161) In 1746 the vestry
ordered the tenor and fourth bells to be recast by
’Mr. Lester the Bell founder’, (ref. 162) and in the
following year the chimes were ordered to be set
to two tunes, ’The March in Scipio and the Tune
of the 113 Psalm,’ for ten guineas. (ref. 163) In 1764
Mr. Thomas Lester and Mr. Thomas Park
undertook ’To Recast The Old Bell into a good
and Musicall Bell in Tone and Tune to the other
Bells’ and to move the seventh bell and take down
the tenor bell. (ref. 164) A new set of chimes ’on a
mahogany barrell’ was provided by Mr. George
Harman of High Wycombe for £220 in April
1788: the seven tunes chosen in November were
the ’Easter Hymn, Hymn of Eve, Lass of Pattie's
Mill, Sir Chas. Sedley's Minuet, Merionethshire March, Something else to do, and March in
Scipio or [? Madge's] Gavott’. (ref. 165) It was later
said that early in the nineteenth century ’Spitalfields’ Chimes were in great renown. Crowds
used to assemble to hear those bells play the Easter hymns at midnight; and the selection of
airs was always remarkably eclectic’. (ref. 160) In 1802
two new trebles were added to the peal of bells, (ref. 166)
making twelve in all.
On 17 February 1836 the steeple was gutted
by fire. An appeal for funds stated that the ’Peal
of Twelve Bells, hardly inferior in power and
sweetness to any in the kingdom, are either
shivered to pieces in their fall or fused by the
heat of the Conflagration’. The sale of bellmetal produced £690 2s. and £899 was paid to
T. Mears of Whitechapel for a new peal of eight
bells. (ref. 167) In 1914 they were described (ref. 168) as
’undoubtedly one of the finest peals in the kingdom’, and were listed as follows:
|
|
|
Cwt. |
Qrs. |
Lb. |
| Tenor |
C |
33 |
2 |
7 |
| 7 |
D |
25 |
2 |
18 |
| 6 |
E |
l7 |
0 |
24 |
| 5 |
F |
14 |
1 |
17 |
| 4 |
G |
12 |
2 |
12 |
| 3 |
A |
10 |
I |
12 |
| 2 |
B |
8 |
0 |
l4 |
| Treble |
C |
7 |
3 |
14 |
The Clock
According to the Rev. J. H. Scott, rector of
Spitalfields 1888–96, a clock with four dials was
first started on 27 January 1732. (ref. 161) The stone
roundels at the base of the tower may have been
intended to house the clock-dials. An engraving
of the west front published in 1795 (ref. 169) but said to
be made from a drawing by Hawksmoor shows
the clock immediately above the roundel and
occupying the lower part of the tall arch-headed
opening. It retained this position when the dial
of the clock was repainted and regilt in 1797. (ref. 170)
In 1822 J. B. Gaze of Princelet Street was paid
some £43 for repairing the clock. (ref. 154) The fire of
1836 entirely destroyed it, and it was replaced by
an eight-day clock supplied by J. P. Paine for
£222 I6s. 6d. (ref. 171) In 1866 clock dials illuminated
by gas were installed by B. R. and J. Moore of
Clerkenwell Close, at a cost of about £290, in
the higher position in the spire that they now
occupy. (ref. 172)
The Plate
The communion plate was ’sacriligeously
stolen’ between 23 March and 8 April 1799. The
churchwardens were ordered by the vestry to
replace it with plated articles similar to those used
in St. Mary's Whitechapel. (ref. 173)
Later History of the Church
For a few years the church stood, white, new
and complete. But its imaginative conjunction of
massiveness and complexity was probably never
readily likeable, and had by the time of its completion already fallen out of harmony with the
taste for a more correct and orderly architecture.
Five years after its consecration the Palladian
critic Ralph remarked that the ’monstrous
expense’ lavished on it had resulted in the erection
of ’one of the most absurd piles in Europe’. (ref. 174) The
opinion of practising architects has been more
favourable, but the subsequent history of the
church is one of many alterations that have
significantly modified its appearance as it stood in
1729.
The first important change was not long delayed. The Vestry minute book for the years
1729–43 is not known to have survived, but an
entry near the beginning of the 1743–55 book
records that on 14 June 1743 it was resolved
that ’the Stepps on the North side of the Church
shall be removed and taken away’, which was
done by ’Mr. Pasco’ for £23. The Vestry rejected
a higher tender from ’Mr. Dunn’, perhaps the
Charles Dunn who was then employed on the
mason's work at the French Church at the other
end of Church (Fournier) Street. (ref. 175) The present
form of the central window on the north side
(Plate 31b) presumably dates from this alteration:
the removal of the steps on the south side, with
an identical reshaping of the central window, is not
recorded. (fn. g)
In 1763 the Vestry accepted a proposal from
one of its members, Thomas Kinlyside, to fit the
interior of the church with wainscoting, for
£65 10s. The work was described as: ’For
Enclosing the Middle Isle of the Church under
the Organ Loft and East [sic, should be ’each’]
Side Isle at the End of the Pewing under the
Gallery at the West End and at the East Ditto,
Also the Opening Leading from the side Isles at
the East End to the Choir, All to be done according to a Drawing made for that Purpose with
Inch & ½ wainscot framed with Ovolo on both
sides, Raised Pannells and Beed on the raising on
one Side and Flat on the other. All the Doors to
be raised on both sides a Beed only on one Side—
All the aforesaid Work to be Compleatly Fixt
with Best Crown Glass in Doors and in the Fan
over the Doors in the Middle Isle.…’
In execution the wainscot at the east end of the
church was increased to a thickness of two inches,
for which Kinlyside was paid an additional
£14 4s. (ref. 176) Some of this screen-work may have
been re-used in forming the present central lobby
between the vestibule and the body of the church.
In 1766 the Vestry considered ’the best Method
of Repairing or Removing the Iron Palisades
before the Church,’ but whether this was done is
not known. (ref. 177)
Three years later, in August 1769, the Vestry
decided to make a church rate of 6d. in the pound,
to repair the church ’by Contract’. In the following year £713 7s. 6d. became due to workmen
’towards repairing and Beautifying the Church’
and a further church rate of Is. in the pound was
made. (ref. 178) The nature of this work is again not
known, although it may have included the replacement of the original altar-table by one of more
elaborate design.
The next substantial renovations were carried
out in 1797 when the Vestry decided to execute
repairs suggested by two of their members, Mr.
Benson and Mr. Kinlyside. These included the
complete repair of the roof, the renewal of exterior
paintwork, the repainting and regilding of the
clock and the whitewashing of the interior plasterwork. Mr. Benson was put in charge of the work.
A church rate was made, to raise,£602, to meet
the cost of these repairs, which was estimated at
£220, and to meet a further debt of £382 owed
on account of the church, perhaps for some previous repairs. The work done at this time
probably included the releading of the south aisle
and some interior painting. (ref. 179)
(fn. h) At the time of the
public resistance in 1826–7 to the collection of a
church rate the repairs of 1797 were compared
favourably with those of 1822. The earlier
work appears to have been in the end rather more
expensive than appears from the Vestry minutes.
In 1826 a writer described the work of 1797 as ’a
thorough and complete repair’ by which the
church ’was embellished and fitted up in a chaste
style, highly becoming a place of worship, the
whole expense of which was under £1,000’. (ref. 181)
In 1827 it was said that this cost of ’ under £1,000’
had at the time been thought so extravagant ’that
even to the present time the whole of the charges
had not been paid’. (ref. 155)
The external appearance of the west front of the
church in the early nineteenth century is recorded
in Ackermann's print of 1815 (Plate 25a). (fn. i)
On 15 March 1822 the Vestry decided that the
church should be ’thoroughly repaired’: (ref. 182) a
decision from which much trouble arose. A committee was appointed to obtain an estimate of the
work needed from Alfred Burges, a surveyor who
was later described by a hostile critic as ’nothing
more than a civil engineer’. (ref. 183) He was said in
March 1822 to be ’of Poplar’ and later in the
year lived at ’No. 3 Worship Square’, Shoreditch. (ref. 154) On 4 April Burges estimated that the
expense would be £ 2,400. (ref. 184) On 25 April the
Vestry elected Mr. Burges to supervise the repairs
in preference to a James Benson, junior. ’Mr.
Benson, senior’, a Vestryman who had been in
charge of the repairs in 1797, and was probably
the unsuccessful candidate's father, withdrew
from the committee: that this Vestry meeting was
contentious is suggested by the unprecedented
inclusion in the minutes of a vote of thanks to the
chairman ’for his impartial conduct of the
Chair’. (ref. 185)
Eight years later the methods by which the
ensuing repairs and decorations were financed and
contracted for were the subject of questions put to
the then Vestry Clerk by Hobhouse's Committee
on Select Vestries. (ref. 186) The answers appeared to
establish the existence of a number of irregularities.
Mr. Benson had submitted an estimate of less
than £1,800 although Burges's higher tender had
been accepted. Being asked whether the tradesmen employed on the work by the Vestry committee were not, with one exception, themselves
Vestrymen, the Vestry Clerk replied, ’I believe
most of them were’. The upholsterer, William
Hale, whose charges were the most generally
criticized, was, however, said by the clerk not to have been a Vestryman. (fn. j) The money to pay
their bills had been raised partly by borrowing
£5,000 at 5 per cent. interest. When asked ’were
not the lenders chiefly vestrymen?’ the clerk
replied ’I believe they were’, and further stated
that no attempt had been made to borrow at a
lower rate. One of the two churchwardens in
office in 1822 had since failed to settle his accounts
and had absconded with £300 of the parish
money. (ref. 186)
The work done at this time (ref. 188) included an
important alteration in the church's external
appearance by the removal from the spire of the
Georgian ’crockets’ and decorated rectangular
dormers which had continued and carried up the
sequence of openings from the lower storeys of
the steeple. The spire was thus given a more
Gothic character than it possessed when first
built, a change completed, perhaps in 1836 or
1841, by the removal of the cornice-capping and
its replacement by a more pointed termination.
This stripping of the spire formed part of the bill
for £1,077 4s- Id. from the mason, Benjamin
Nicholson, and was said to be necessary because
the decorations had become insecure and dangerous. (ref. 155)
(fn. k) Other work by the mason included
the relaying of paving in Portland stone and
marble.
The heaviest bill was from Messrs. Lee and
Leach for plasterer's and bricklayer's work, which
came to £1,317 8s. 8½d. This included charges
for ’cutting out and making good settlements to
North South and West staircases… cutting
down and repairing defective parts of cieling,
cutting out and making good defective parts to
settlement of walls.… Repairing defective parts
of ornaments and cornices.’ The churchyard
wall was repaired. The charges also included
£422 15s. 1d. for scaffolding.
The next heaviest two bills were probably put
in by Vestrymen. John Leschallas charged
£967 15s. 9d. for ’painting the church throughout’, mainly in white and stone colour. In the
course of this work he painted Gabriel Appleby's
altarpiece in imitation of marble. (fn. l) The other bill,
for work widely regarded as outrageously lavish,
was from William Hale, the upholsterer, for
£972 9s. 9d. Hale's charges included £292 5s.
for ’crimson moreen-covered cushions’, £76 2s. 6d.
for ’174 feet of rich crimson genoa velvet hanging
round front of Gallery, rich gold silk fringe’,
£101 for covering eleven pairs of doors with
crimson cloth and brass nails, £97 10s. for
’stout crimson silk and worsted damask’ for
curtains to the ’principal pews’ and £14 5s. for
’Best in grain crimson moreen for curtains
round national school pews’. The communion
table cover ’of rich crimson Genoa velvet, real
gold lace on edges, real gold fringe round the
hanging and a rich real gold glory in front’ cost
£58 10s., and ’crimson moreen damask drapery’
for the ’altar window’ £50. The pulpit, like the
altar, was upholstered in crimson velvet and gold.
In the subsequent disputes the expense of 'the
gorgeous cushions and the rich curtains and fittings
up of the parish officers pews’ was particularly
criticized, (ref. 181) and the extravagance of the altar
fittings was the subject of questions by the Parliamentary Committee in 1830. A hostile
observer remarked that ’the Church was certainly
hung in a very tasty manner—not even the dressboxes in Covent-Garden had more of fringe and
ornament’. (ref. 183) Others said that the work could
have been done for £200. (ref. 190)
The carpenter's bill of Thomas Burton
amounted to £730 4s. 8¾d. for work on wainscot
and pews, repairs to the nave roof, the timbers of
which were said to be dangerously decayed, (ref. 155)
alterations to the ’National schools’ galleries, and
work on the staircase, belfry and clock room. It
was probably the carpenter who fitted ’ 11 pair of
folding doors, covered with red cloth (having a
circular light) for the several entrances to the
Church and galleries’ which were later said to be
of deal and to have been ’substituted for oak doors
which were coeval with, and added dignity to, the
church, and would have lasted as long’. It was
asserted that the original doors had been sold for
trifling sums. (fn. 155) The carpenter also provided the
conspicuously plain pedestal for the new royal
arms: this was lower than the original pedestal.
The royal arms were supplied by William
Croggon and Co. of ’Coade's Ornamental Stone
and Scagliola Works’ at Lambeth, at a cost of
£66 14s. (Plate 36a) which was about the same
as the cost of the original arms. These were said
to have been decayed by dry rot. The new ones
were criticized as being ’not so good’. (ref. 155) The
original arms and pedestal were perhaps more
richly modelled (see page 296) but the new arms
were well designed.
The plumber, G. W. Pemberton, put in bills
for £607 6s (fn. m)
The church had hitherto been lit by candles.
The bill of the smith, Thomas Hack, totalling
£136 5s. 4½d., included a charge for taking the
chandeliers to pieces. These were removed, ’to
give a job to someone’ as a critic later asserted. (ref. 155)
If this critic is to be believed, the ’large chandeliers’
had cost £1700 and were sold for £16 7s. 6d.
Whether or not the motives for the work were
mainly discreditable, the removal of the chandeliers was followed by the installation of gas-lighting
by William Smith at a cost of £257 17s. 2½d.
£152 2s. 1d. was spent on ’Two Improved
Patent Hot Air Dispensers’, £135 13s. 11d. on
glazier's work, £58 13s. 4d. on ironwork and
£35 16s. 1d. on the coppersmith and founder's
bill.
It was said that the altar-table was removed,
although it was of ’exquisite workmanship’ and
’the carving of the legs only cost £80’. (ref. 155) It seems
likely, however, that the ’elegant wainscot communion table’ offered for sale in 1851, ’the legs of
which are carved with scroll-work, having horned
capitals and claws of exquisite workmanship’ (ref. 192)
was this table. It was evidently not the original
of 1725–6 and had perhaps been substituted for
the simpler Doric table in 1769–70. The vestry
furniture was said to have been sold and replaced
by inferior articles. (ref. 155)
The workmen's bills amounted to £6,669 19s.
6¼d. Alfred Burges was paid 5 per cent. on
£6,500 for superintending the repairs, making a
total cost of £6,994 19s. 6¼d.
In April 1823 the bills were laid before the
Vestry, (ref. 186) which was later said then to have decided to borrow £5,000 at 5 per cent. interest,
giving promissory notes for £100 to lenders,
who were to be repaid out of a church rate: (ref. 193)
the authorization of this loan is not recorded in the
Vestry minutes until June 1826. (ref. 194) In October
1823 a church rate of 1s. in the pound was
ordered to be made. (ref. 195) By the summer of 1824
the Vestry was conscious of the difficulty it would
have in paying off its debt, (ref. 196) and in July 1825
’the alarming deficiency’ in the collection of the
rate caused a ’Collector of the Church Rate’ to be
appointed. (ref. 197) In May of the following year ’a
great number of inhabitants’ were summonsed for
non-payment of the rate. They challenged the
necessity for much of the expenditure, the justice
of the apportionment of the rate, and also its
legality, probably because it was made retrospectively: the magistrates therefore judged the case to
be outside their jurisdiction. (ref. 198) A week or two
later a public meeting resolved to take legal
measures to force the parish authorities to submit
their accounts for inspection. (ref. 199) Personal acrimony was not lacking. The Vestryman, John
Leschallas, who painted the altar, was said to have
procured Alfred Burges's appointment as surveyor,
despite his higher estimate, in consideration of ’the
connection which is said to be about to take place
between that Gentleman and his daughter’: Leschallas's own charges were said to be his ’share
of the job’. During the summer other public
meetings were held and a committee was empowered to consult counsel. (ref. 200) In June the
Vestry obtained approval from the Bishop of
London for their proceedings, and authorized the
borrowing of £5,000. (ref. 201) In October eight
inhabitants were cited in Doctors’ Commons for
refusal to pay the rate. (ref. 202)
A public meeting was held in the following
February 1827 ’for the purpose of receiving a
statement of the costs of repairing and embellishing the Church, etc., and the state of proceedings
in the Consistorial Court’. (ref. 155) A subscription was
started to meet the expense of defending the suit,
and the repairs were roundly termed ’a most gross
job’. The details of the work were strongly
criticized for extravagance and incompetence.
By March 1827 the Consistorial Court had
decided that the levying of the church rate was
legal. The Vestry Clerk reported that the judge
had observed ’that it appeared to him that the
Vestry and Church Wardens had acted throughout
with perfect propriety in what had been done
regarding the repairs’. (ref. 203) The dispute with the
ratepayers was thereupon brought to a compromise settlement. (ref. 204)
Payment on the Vestry's
promissory notes was begun by lot in 1828, continuing until at least 1835. (ref. 205)
The expense of these repairs and the difficulty
the Vestry found in meeting it had obliged them
to reply in July 1824 to an inquiry from the
Commissioners for Building New Churches that
’with a debt of Six thousand pounds now owing…
which there is no early prospect of discharging it
appears to this Vestry totally impossible to raise
any funds by rate or otherwise towards the expense
of building a new church or chapel’. (ref. 196)
The parish was ’just recovering’ from this
expenditure when a serious fire, caused by the
negligence of the ’steeple-keeper’, broke out in
the steeple, on 17 February 1836, destroying all the
woodwork from the ceiling of the vestry upwards
and damaging most of the interior masonry. The
bells, chimes and clock were destroyed and the
organ damaged. (ref. 206)
Messrs. Wallen, Son and
Beatson, of No. 11 Spital Square, estimated the
repairs at £3,615 but the final expenditure, under
the same firm's superintendence, was reduced to
£2,461 3s., including £730 12s. paid to ’R.
Ashby, builder’, for repair of the tower. (ref. 207)
A further ’calamity’ befell the steeple when it
was struck by lightning on 3 January 1841. The
repairs cost some £408. (ref. 208)
It is not known
whether the ’capping’ that terminated the spire
was replaced by the present more pointed apex in
the course of either of these repairs to the steeple.
In 1851 a ’thorough internal restoration’ was
carried out by John Young of No. 35 King
Street, Cheapside, of which the most important
feature was the replacement of the original altar
piece by the present reredos. The Vestry voted in
July to raise £800 by a church rate ’to put the
interior of the Church in a state of decency and
render it fit for public worship’, (ref. 209)
and tenders
were invited in August. (ref. 210)
In September the
Vestry made a contract for the repairs at £790. (ref. 211)
By the end of November ’T.Y. junior’ was able
to report on the reopening of the church,
although work on the chancel remained to be
done. (ref. 158)
His general observations on the character of the church showed some appreciation of the
’peculiar style’ of Hawksmoor's works, wherein
’the element of power is strongly developed,
arising from the ponderous masses of masonry,
extensive flat surfaces, mixed with intricate
multangular figures, and minute perforations
which are their characteristics’. He thought to
detect the influence of Wren's mind on Hawks
moor at Christ Church: ’with an exterior massive
and commanding, it possesses a striking interior;
with a grandeur of proportion, propriety of distribution, and an elegance and variety of decoration which render it the most pleasing and elegant
church which he erected’. The work of restoration included the stripping of paint from the
interior stonework which was ’rubbed down and
reworked to a fair surface’. In the woodwork ’the
innovations made at various times in the oak
fittings have been removed, and the original
character of the screen work restored’. (ref. 158)
The
altarpiece, now painted, had nevertheless been
disposed of, being offered for sale as ’well adapted
for any church of classic architecture’. The
’elegant wainscot communion table’ was offered
for sale at the same time. (ref. 192)
They were replaced
by the present ’reredos of Caen stone’, which at
that time was intended to be ’highly enriched with
carvings emblematical of the Eucharist, …
having a basso-relievo of the Lord's Supper,
taken from the celebrated cartoon of Leonardo da
Vinci’. The ’great improvements’ being made in
the chancel included also the decoration of its walls
in colour. (ref. 158)
By April 1853 the cost, including ’a
considerable amount for work done in the Roof’
but excluding work in the chancel which was
apparently paid for by the rector, amounted to
£820 os. 6d.
(ref. 211)
The appearance of the interior of the church
after the restoration of 1851 is shown in Plate 24a.
The last extensive alterations to the church
were made in 1866 under the direction of Ewan
Christian, by which the appearance of the church
both inside and out was significantly altered. The
appeal for funds for this work (ref. 212)
described the
church as ’the noblest and stateliest in the East of
London’, but emphasized the need to improve the
accommodation, then ’both unsuitable and repulsive’, by substituting ’low open and convenient
seats’ for ’the present high uncomfortable Pews’.
It was at this time intended to reconstruct the
galleries ’to make the Church light and cheerful
instead of being dark and gloomy’, and to render it
’as comfortable in its accommodation, as it is now
magnificent in its structure and proportions’. In
April 1865 Ewan Christian submitted his estimate, amounting to £4,482. (ref. 213)
Apart from
general repairs and cleaning the work then proposed included the refitting of the ground floor with new oak, but with the retention in altered
form of the original pulpit and desk. He proposed
also ’the entire re-construction of the Galleries at
a lower level but with increased pitch’: as the
galleries already rested on the pedestals of the
columns it is difficult to see what was intended by
this. The estimate included the heating of the
church, and its lighting ’by sunlights in the main
body of the Church and brackets and standards
elsewhere’. In August 1865 the plans of proposed
alterations were approved by the Vestrymen. (ref. 214)
By this time the complete removal of
the side galleries had been decided on, and permission
for this was included in the Bishop of
London's faculty, which was not, however,
issued until 23 May 1866. This also authorized
the consequent alteration of the five pairs of windows
in the central sections of the north and south
sides, with a lengthening of the upper windows by
moving the heads of the lower windows downwards.
The whole of the ground-floor seating
was to be removed, ’cut down and altered and rearranged’
to give slightly increased accommodation
despite the removal of the galleries. The pulpit
was to be ’lowered and refixed against the large
North Pillar’, and a ’new Desk and Lectern’ provided.
The cost was estimated at about £4,500,
of which Messrs. Hanbury (Truman, Hanbury
and Buxton of Brick Lane) and Robert Hanbury,
esquire, had contributed £2,000. (ref. 215) In the following
month the church was closed for seven
months, reopening on 1 January 1867. The
work was carried out by George Myers and Sons
of Lambeth. (ref. 216)
The alterations did not completely conform to
the specifications given in the faculty. The
original pulpit was not used in altered form but
was evidently disposed of. The place intended for
it was occupied by the present pulpit which may
doubtless be identified with the former reader's
desk to which carved pendants, probably taken
from the original pulpit, were added. The pedestals
of the columns were also doubtless chamfered at
the same time: a hypothetical explanation of this
is that the removal of the wainscot may have disclosed
some mutilation of the pedestals. The
cleaning of the ceiling included work by which its
decorations were ’brought into relief’. (ref. 217) In the
end the total cost of the work was £6,680, which
was raised by a committee of parishioners. (ref. 218)
The appearance of the interior was drastically
altered by these changes, the effect of an excessive
height in the nave colonnade created by the removal
of the side galleries and box pews being
increased by the substitution of the low pulpit for
the original high pulpit. In the side elevations the
lowering of the heads of the bottom row of windows
to lengthen the upper windows has, together
with the much earlier conversion of the central
doorways into windows, given the exterior a more
mannerist character than it possessed originally.
In 1873 the gates and railings at the east end of
the church, on the south side of Fournier Street,
were built by W. Poole to the designs of Messrs.
Tolley and Dale of Throgmorton Street, at a
cost of about £363. (ref. 219)
In the same year the decoration of the chancel
and the writing of the Lord's Prayer, Creed and
Ten Commandments was completed by Christopher
Forrest of Victoria Park Square, Bethnal
Green, at his own expense. (ref. 220)
A large outdoor pulpit was erected in about
1899 against the southern wall of the portico as a
memorial to Doctor Billing, rector from 1878
to 1888. (ref. 221)
Repairs to the stonework of the church and the
reroofing of the north and south aisles were
carried out in 1896. (ref. 222)
The Churchyard
When the churchyard was first laid out it
stretched from Brick Lane on the east to the
back of the houses in Red Lion Street on the
west, and was entered from its north-western
corner. In 1779 the Vestry decided to replace the
brick wall at the east end with an iron fence. (ref. 223)
In the late eighteenth century the churchyard
consisted of three parts, ’the best Ground’ at the
west end, ’the Middle Ground’, and ’the lower
and Poors Ground’ at the east end. By 1791 it
had become necessary to enlarge the area ’heretofore
set apart and appropriated for the Interment
of the Poor’ by the addition to it of a strip
of ground under the south wall, it being ordered
by the Vestry ’that a Row of Trees be planted by
way of boundary to ascertain the same’. (ref. 224)
In 1859 the Commissioners of Works agreed
to grant a lease to the Whitechapel District
Board of Works of a piece of ground on the east
side of Commercial Street, to be added to the
churchyard, which was thereby extended to front
the new street. (ref. 225) In June of the same year the churchyard was closed for burials, which had been
prohibited in the vaults under the church from
April of the previous year. (ref. 226)
By a faculty from
the Bishop of London of 18 June 1859 the
churchyard was authorized to be used as a ’Lawn
or Ornamental Ground … to secure an open
space in the midst of a crowded and dense population’. It was to be enclosed from the road by ’a
lofty and substantial iron railing’. (ref. 227)
In 1861 ’Mr. Churchwarden Buxton’ of the
Brick Lane brewery, by whom the patronage of
the living was then possessed, offered ’to lay out
and improve the churchyard’: he was told that
the Vestry was unable legally to do more than
keep the churchyard in decent order. (ref. 228)
By an agreement of October 1891 the Metropolitan Public Gardens Association undertook to
maintain the churchyard as a public garden for
not more than five years. (ref. 229)
Most of the monuments in the churchyard
were removed (fn. n) and some of the trees felled by the
Stepney Borough Council in 1950. (ref. 230)