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St Mary Abbots
Church in Kensington, London, England
Church in Kensington, London, England
Field
Value
name
St Mary Abbots
image
St Mary Abbots Church Kensington.jpg
imagesize
200px
caption
St Mary Abbots Church in 2007
osgraw
TQ 25605 79707
location
Kensington Church Street, Kensington, London W8 4LA
country
England
denomination
Church of England
churchmanship
High Church
website
founded date
consecrated date
1262
status
Parish church
functional status
Active
heritage designation
Grade II*
architect
Sir George Gilbert Scott
style
Neo-Gothic
completed date
1872
capacity
700
length
179 feet (55m)
width
109 feet (34m)
width nave
height
diameter
floor area
spire quantity
One
spire height
278 feet (85m)
bell weight
parish
Kensington
deanery
Kensington
archdeaconry
Middlesex
episcopalarea
Kensington
diocese
London
province
Canterbury
bishop
The Right Revd Dr Emma Ineson
vicar
The Revd Mthr Emma Dinwiddy Smith
asstpriest
The Revd Fr Evan McWilliams and The Revd Fr Tim Carroll
curate
vacant
St Mary Abbots is a church located on Kensington High Street and the corner of Kensington Church Street in London W8.
The present church structure was built in 1872 to the designs of Sir George Gilbert Scott, who combined neo-Gothic and early-English styles. This edifice remains noted for having the tallest spire in London and is the latest in a series on the site since the beginning of the 12th century.
The church, and its railings, are listed at Grade II* on the National Heritage List for England.
History
Foundation
Sir Aubrey de Vere was a Norman knight who was rewarded with the manor of Kensington, among other estates, after the successful Norman Conquest. Around 1100, his eldest son, Godfrey (great-uncle of Aubrey, 1st Earl of Oxford), was taken seriously ill and cared for by Faritius, abbot of the Benedictine Abbey of St Mary at Abingdon. After a period of remission, Godfrey de Vere died in 1106 aged about 19.
The de Vere family's gratitude to the abbey for their son's care was recognised by its bequest of land 270 acre. In 1262 the abbey founded a church and parish in Kensington, dedicated to St Mary. The epithet of Abbots is deemed to derive from its link with the ancient Abingdon Abbey rather than that subsequently with the diocese of the Bishop of London. However, this led to a dispute with the bishop and legal action followed in the diocesan consistory court. This resulted in the patronage of the church passing to the bishop in perpetuity but rights over the surrounding land remaining with the abbey. The succession of vicars is recorded in a direct line back to this foundation in 1262.
Rebuilds
Old St Mary Abbots Church, in 1869, shortly before its demolition
In 1370 the Norman church was rebuilt.
When William III relocated the Royal Court to Kensington Palace in 1689 the area became fashionable rendering the medieval church too small, thus it was demolished at the end of the 17th century and replaced by a Late Renaissance-style building. This in turn proved too small as London urbanised in the 19th century.
Around 1860 the vicar, [John Sinclair], launched a campaign for the building of a striking new church. The architect George Gilbert Scott was engaged and recommended the demolition of the existing church to take advantage of the site at the road junction. St Mary Abbot's design is almost certainly influenced by Scott's earlier work on Dunblane Cathedral - its west front's tall window and carved tympanum are similar to those in the Cathedral. The 278 ft high spire is clearly influenced by that of St Mary Redcliffe, Bristol. The present church retains many fittings from the earlier churches, especially funeral monuments from the mid-17th century onwards.
In March 1944 fire-bombs caused significant damage at St Mary Abbots. The nave and chancel roof caved in, landing in the pews below, and there was some damage to some of the stained glass windows and the organ, however the main structure was not seriously harmed. The Church was temporarily repaired to allow services to continue; and in February 1956 a service of thanksgiving was held in the Church. The original Victorian pews still bear burn marks and repair patches from the fallen roof.
In 2000 the Friends of St Mary Abbots led a fundraising campaign to install lights outside the church to highlight the spire and outside of the building as part of the Millennium celebrations.
In 2023, as part of the 150 Anniversary celebration, a permanent access ramp was added outside the South Door, the church spire was cleaned and restored and the lights updated and replaced.
Bells
The tower holds a ring of ten bells hung for change ringing. Five of these bells – the fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth and ninth of the current ring – date from 1772 and were cast by Thomas Janaway. The other five – the treble, second, third, seventh and tenor – were cast in 1879 by John Warner & Sons.
The five bells were funded through a donation by Phyllis Cunliffe (1890–1974), mother to coin designer Christopher Ironside.
Primary school
The church has an associated primary school in its churchyard, founded in 1707 as a charity school. The school buildings were designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor in 1711, but demolished in the 1870s to make way for a town hall. The present buildings date from 1875 and are notable for the painted stone statues by Thomas Eustace of a boy and girl, dating from about 1715, now on the north face of the school; its playgrounds intersperse with the churchyard, and the school maintains close links with the Church of England.
Notable people
Notable clergy
Canon Donald Allchin, theologian, served his curacy here from 1956 to 1960
Notable parishioners
Joseph Addison
David Cameron
George Canning
Tennessee Claflin (married Sir Francis Cook, 1st Baronet at the church in 1885)
Alec Clifton-Taylor
Edmund Fanning
Michael Gove
Adrian Hardy Haworth
P. D. James
John Lockwood Kipling and Alice Kipling (parents of Rudyard Kipling, married at the church in 1865)
Thomas Babington Macaulay
Sir Isaac Newton (commemorated by a window in the north transept)
Beatrix Potter (married William Heelis at the church in October 1913)
William Thackeray
William Wilberforce
Diana, Princess of Wales (in 1997 the church became a focus for mourners)
Gallery
File:St Mary Abbots Church Northwest Entrance, Kensington, London, UK - Diliff.jpg|West stained-glass window
File:St Mary Abbots Church Altar, Kensington, London, UK - Diliff.jpg|Altar and nave
File:St Mary Abbots Church nave, Kensington, London, UK - Diliff.jpg|Nave wide-angle view
References
References
[https://www.rbkc.gov.uk/leisure-and-culture/churches-borough Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea – Churches] ''rbkc.gov.uk'', Accessed 29 July 2019
{{NHLE
[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=45435 British History Online: Kensington] ''british-history.ac.uk'', Accessed 29 July 2019
[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=49864#s9 British History Online: The village centres around St. Mary Abbots church and Notting Hill Gate] ''british-history.ac.uk'', Accessed 29 July 2019
[http://www.rbkc.gov.uk/leisureandlibraries/idoc.ashx?docid=6ee2aff9-52bf-4838-baf6-98e01ae46daf&version=-1 Grouped Pieces and Miscellaneous Items] ''rbkc.gov.uk'', Accessed 29 July 2019
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