St George in the East
St George in the East seen from the south
51°30′36″N 0°03′35″W / 51.5100°N 0.0598°W / 51.5100; -0.0598
LocationCannon Street Road,
London, E1
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipAnglo-Catholic
History
DedicationSaint George
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade I
Architect(s)Nicholas Hawksmoor
StyleClassical (with Palladian and Byzantine elements)
Years built1714–1729
Administration
DivisionStepney Episcopal Area (Archdeaconry of Hackney)
DioceseLondon
ParishSt George in the East[1]
Clergy
DeanDean of Tower Hamlets
Priest(s)Fr Richard Springer (Rector), Fr Angus Ritchie (Assistant Priest), Caitlin Harland (Curate)

St George-in-the-East is an Anglican Church dedicated to Saint George; located on Cannon Street Road, between The Highway and Cable Street, in the East End of London. Behind the church lies St George's Gardens, the original graveyard.

Community work

In May 2015, the church entered into a partnership with the Centre for Theology and Community (CTC), an ecumenical charity which is based in its East Crypt. Anglican clergy working for CTC now serve the parish, and the second floor is the home to the Community of St George, a group of lay Christians who assist in the worship and mission of the church.

History

The church is one of six Hawksmoor churches in London, England. It was built from 1714 to 1729, with funding from the 1711 Act of Parliament. Its name has been used for two forms of parish (areas of land) surrounding, one ecclesiastical which remains and one a Civil counterpart, a third tier of local government. The latter assisted public facilities in the late 19th century but ceded its dwindling purposes to the Metropolitan Borough of Stepney so was abolished in 1927. The church was designated a Grade I listed building in 1950.[2]

In 1836, the parish of St George in the East was constituted as a Poor Law parish under the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834.

In the 1850s, Archibald Campbell Tait, then Bishop of London, appointed a Low Church lecturer, which was contrary to the High Church attitude of the rector and curate. As a protest, there were catcalls and horn blowing, and some male members of the congregation went into the church smoking their pipes, keeping their hats on, and leading barking dogs.[3] Refuse was thrown onto the altar. The church was closed for a while in 1859, and the rector, owing to his poor health, was persuaded by the author Tom Hughes to hand over his duties to a locum.[4]

The church was hit by a bomb during the Second World War Blitz on London's docklands in May 1941. The original interior was destroyed by the fire, but the walls and distinctive "pepper-pot" towers stayed up. In 1964 a modern church interior was constructed inside the existing walls, and a new flat built under each corner tower.

Ian Nairn wrote of it in his 1966 guide to London: "A ruin among ruins, in the lost part of Stepney, south of Commercial Road. The old life has gone or been deliberately killed, the new has not yet come up with any pattern or buildings worth twopence. It makes no difference to Hawksmoor's bizarre poetry. This is probably the hardest building to describe in London ... This is a stage somewhere beyond fantasy, which is always comfortably related to common sense: it is the more-than-real world of the drug addict's dream."[5]

It appeared in the 1980 film The Long Good Friday starring Bob Hoskins. It also appeared in S02E01 of Killing Eve.

See also

References

  1. "A Church Near You". Achurchnearyou.com.
  2. Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1357779)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  3. SMITH, PHILLIP T. (1986). "The London Police and the Holy War: Ritualism and St. George's-in-the-East, London, 1859-1860". Journal of Church and State. 28 (1): 107–119. doi:10.1093/jcs/28.1.107. ISSN 0021-969X. JSTOR 23916615.
  4. Ben Weinreb; Christopher Hibbert (1993). The London Encyclopaedia (1983 ed.). Macmillan. p. 729. ISBN 0-333-57688-8.
  5. Ian Nairn, Nairn's London (Harmondsworth, Middlesex.: Penguin, 1966), pp.161-2
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