Useful information
Patron
Special Patronage Board
Episcopal Area
Woolwich Episcopal Area
Deanery
Charlton Deanery
Archdeaconry
Lewisham and Greenwich Archdeaconry
Details of the Church
Built
1866-67
Architect
Newman & Billing
Listing
2
The church was designed in the ‘thirteenth century’ Gothic style, to seat a congregation of 1,000 people.
It consists of a six bay nave flanked by aisles to the north and south with a chapel to the east. The main entrance porch is on the north side together with an unfinished staircase addition and also a tower containing the choir vestry, organ loft and bell chamber. The tower is topped by a short spire. The priest’s vestry is in an octagonal addition on the south side of the chancel together with WC and utility room.
Shortly after the church was completed in 1881 serious subsidence occurred in the chancel and the east wall and parts of the north and south walls had to be demolished and rebuilt. Further and more serious damage occurred in the second world war when first a land mine and later a V2 rocket destroyed the octagonal stone spire, the nave roof, windows and much of the interior. The church was rebuilt and refurbished in 1951.
The walls are constructed of brick faced with coursed Kentish ragstone and Bath stone dressings. Windows are in the Gothic style with geometric tracery, stone hoods and carved bosses. Glazing is direct to stone.