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St Katharine Cree

Coordinates:51°30′48.28″N0°4′44.88″W/ 51.5134111°N 0.0791333°W/51.5134111; -0.0791333
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St Katharine Cree
View from the southwest, showing the 16th century tower
Map
OS grid referenceTQ33398114
LocationLondon,EC3
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
WebsiteOfficial website
History
Dedicated31 January 1631
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade Ilisted building
StyleJacobean
Years built1628–30
Administration
DioceseLondon

The Guild Church of St Katharine Creeis anAnglicanchurch in theAldgate wardof theCity of London,on the north side ofLeadenhall StreetnearLeadenhall Market.It was founded in 1280.[1]The present building dates from 1628 to 1630. Formerly aparish church,it is now a guild church.

History[edit]

Former building[edit]

The parish served by the church existed by 1108, when it was served by theAugustinianHoly Trinity Priory, Aldgate,also called Christ Church, which was founded byMaud,queen at the time ofKing Henry I.The parishioners used the priory church but this proved unsatisfactory and disruptive to the priory's activities.

Thepriorpartly resolved the problem in 1280[2]by founding St Katharine Cree as a separate church for the parishioners. The site of the present church was originally in the priory's churchyard and it is possible that the church began as a cemetery chapel. It took its name from the priory, "Cree" being abstracted from forms likeCrichurch,which were abbreviations of "Christ Church" (H.A. Harben,A Dictionary of London(1918)). It was initially served by acanonappointed by the prior but this did not prove satisfactory either, so, in 1414, the church was established as a parish church in its own right. The present tower was added about 1504.

Describing the building at the end of the 16th century,John Stowwrote:

this church seemeth to be very old; since the building whereof the high street hath been so often raised by pavements that now men are fain to descend into the said church by divers steps, seven in number.[3]

Current building[edit]

Inside thenaveof St Katharine Cree, looking east to the altar

The present church was built in 1628–30,[3]retaining the Tudor tower of its predecessor. It is larger than the previous church, incorporating a piece of ground previously occupied by a cloister on the north side, and the floor level is considerably higher. The rebuilt church was consecrated byWilliam Laud,[4]Bishop of Londonon 31 January 1631.[3]His vestments and the form of service that he used for the consecration were later held against him in his trial and conviction forheresy,whenPuritansaccused him of having displayedCatholicsympathies through his "bowings and cringings". He is commemorated by a chapel in the church.

The church escaped theGreat Fire of Londonin 1666[5]and suffered only minor damage in theLondon Blitzof theSecond World War.[6]However, structural problems required extensive restoration in 1962. It is now one of the City's Guild churches.

St Katharine Cree is a significant church of theJacobeanperiod, a time when few new churches were built. It is the only Jacobean church to have survived in London. The identity of its architect is unknown. It has a highnave,[7]linked with the narrowaislesbyarcadessupported onCorinthian columns.[3]The church is 31 yards (28 m) long and 17 yards (16 m) wide; the height to the ceiling of the nave is 37 feet (11 m).[3]

17th-centuryrose window

Thechancelhas arose window,reputedly modelled on the much larger one inOld St Paul's Cathedral(destroyed in the Great Fire). The window and itsstained glassare original, dating from 1630. Thebaptismal fontdates from around 1640. The vaulted ceiling bears Boss es of the arms of 16 of the City'slivery companiesand of theCity of Londonitself. From the east end the Boss es are:

The present scheme dates mostly from the restoration of 1972. Tradition says that these Companies used St Katharine Cree for a time after the Great Fire of London of 1666, while their own Guild Churches were being rebuilt.

The church is aGrade I listed building.[8]

By the south wall of St Katharine's is a memorial toRMSLancastria,a troopship sunk at sea with huge loss of life during theSecond World Warin 1940. It includes a model of the ship and the ship's bell.[9]

St Katharine's has aringof six bells. Lester and Pack of theWhitechapel Bell Foundrycast five of them including the treble bell in 1754. Thomas II Mears of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry cast the tenor bell in 1842. The church clock has a bell, also cast by Lester and Pack in 1754.[10]In the summer of 2007 they were rung for the first time since 1880. An appeal to raise £60,000 to restore the bells to full ringing order was launched in November 2007, and the project was completed in 2009.[11]It is the only tower in the City where the bells are rung from a ground-floor ringing chamber.

Today St Katharine's is a guild church and has no parish, but chose some years ago to dedicate its ministry to the worlds of finance, commerce and industry.

Notable people associated with the church[edit]

SirNicholas Throckmorton'smonument

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^"The City of London Churches: monuments of another age" Quantrill, E; Quantrill, M p. 38: London; Quartet; 1975.
  2. ^Hibbert, C; Weinreb, D; Keay, J, eds. (2008) [1983].The London Encyclopaedia.London: Pan Macmillan.ISBN978-1-4050-4924-5.
  3. ^abcdeDaniell, AE (1896).London City Churches.London: Constable. pp.94–98.
  4. ^"The City Churches" Tabor, M. p39:London; The Swarthmore Press Ltd; 1917.
  5. ^Pepys, Samuel(1985). Latham, R (ed.).The Shorter Pepys.Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. p. 484.ISBN0-14-009418-0.
  6. ^Cobb, G (1942).The Old Churches of London.London: Batsford.[page needed]
  7. ^Tucker, T (2006).The Visitors Guide to the City of London Churches.London: Friends of the City Churches.ISBN0-9553945-0-3.[page needed]
  8. ^Historic England."Church of St Katherine Cree (Grade I) (1064627)".National Heritage List for England.Retrieved21 January2015.
  9. ^"HMT Lancastria 17 June 1940 and Operation Aerial".The Manchesters.Retrieved19 October2015.
  10. ^Baldwin, John (8 April 2010)."London, Leadenhall Street S Katharine Cree".Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers.Central Council for Church Bell Ringers.Retrieved21 January2015.
  11. ^"St Katharine Cree, Leadenhall St".Love's Guide to the Church Bells of the City of London.

External links[edit]

51°30′48.28″N0°4′44.88″W/ 51.5134111°N 0.0791333°W/51.5134111; -0.0791333