The church stood on the east side of Ironmonger Lane in theCheapward of the City of London.John Stowsuggested that the name "Pomary" indicated that apple trees had once grown near the church.[2]The patronage of the church belonged to the prior and canons ofSt Bartholomew the Great,until thedissolutionof the priory, when it passed to the Crown.[2]
In 1627 much of the north wall had to be rebuilt, and two years later the whole church was "repaired and beautified" at the cost of the parishioners.[2]The church was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666 and not rebuilt.[2]Instead the parish was united with that ofSt Olave Jewryand the site of the church retained as a burial ground.[2]
Parish Boundary Markers for St Mary Colechurch and St Martin Pomeroy