St Mark's, Hamilton Terrace
St Mark's Church, Hamilton Terrace, is an Anglican church in the St John's Wood neighbourhood of the City of Westminster, London. The building was completed by 1847 and was badly damaged in an unexplained fire on 26 January 2023.[1] It is located at the intersection of Abercorn Place and Hamilton Terrace.
History
Dating to 1846–1847, St Mark's was designed by Thomas Cundy with a spire built by his son in 1864, and is Grade II* listed with Historic England.[2] The church contained a collection of mosaics by Salviati.[3][4]
Robinson Duckworth was appointed vicar of St Mark's in 1870, after spending four years as the tutor of Queen Victoria's youngest son Prince Leopold.[5] The Prince laid the building's foundation stone in 1877.[6]
St Mark's survived being hit by a bomb in 1941 during World War Two, with work to rebuild its spire being completed in 1955.[5]
The church has been part of the Affirming Catholicism movement within the Church of England, and their main Sunday service included a Choral Parish Eucharist.[7]
2023 fire
The church was badly damaged by an unexplained fire during the late night and early morning of 26–27 January 2023.[5] BBC News described the church as "destroyed", noting that the roof had collapsed but the steeple (rebuilt in 1955) was still standing. The vicar, the Reverend Kate Harrison, said that the fire was "heart-breaking for us as a church and a local community". The London Fire Brigade carried out investigations into the cause of the fire.[5] On 27 January 2023, the parish stated that "we don't yet know the full extent of the damage, but we will rebuild."[8]
Gallery
- St Mark's
- Nave
- East window
- Hobling mosaic
- Norman Kerr mosaic
- Erskine memorial mosaic
- Charles Drayson mosaic
- Thomas Morton mosaic
References
- ^ "London church described as 'historical treasure' destroyed by fire". the Guardian. 27 January 2023. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
- ^ "Church of St. Mark". Historic England. Retrieved 21 November 2017.
- ^ "St Mark's Hamilton Terrace – a Church with Mosaics". The Second Website of Bob Speel.
- ^ "St. Mark's Church, Hamilton Terrace". The Salviati Architectural Mosaic Database. 12 February 2015.
- ^ a b c d Walsh, Aoife; Olulode, Celestina (27 January 2023). "St John's Wood: Historic church destroyed in large blaze". BBC News. Retrieved 27 January 2023.
- ^ "Canon Duckworth DD CVO 1834 -1911". St John's Wood Memories.
- ^ "MISSION ACTION PLAN" (PDF). ST MARK'S HAMILTON TERRACE. 2014. Archived from the original (pdf) on 1 June 2022. Retrieved 1 June 2022.
- ^ https://twitter.com/StMark_HT/status/1619089681123262467
External links
- Official website
- St Mark's, Hamilton Terrace on Twitter
- St Mark's, Hamilton Terrace on Facebook
- v
- t
- e
churches
(pre-1800)
deconsecrated |
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daughter
churches
- All Saints, Margaret Street
- All Souls, Langham Place
- Annunciation, Marble Arch
- Grosvenor Chapel, Mayfair
- Guards Chapel, Wellington Barracks
- Holy Trinity, South Kensington
- St Augustine, Kilburn
- St Cyprian, Clarence Gate
- St Gabriel, Pimlico
- St James, Paddington
- St James the Less, Pimlico
- St John's Wood Church
- St Mark, Hamilton Terrace
- St Mary, Bourne Street
- St Mary, Bryanston Square
- St Mary, Paddington Green
- St Mary Magdalene, Paddington
- St Matthew, Bayswater
- St Matthew, Westminster
- St Paul, Knightsbridge
- St Peter, Eaton Square
- St Saviour, Pimlico
- St Stephen, Rochester Row
- St Stephen, Westbourne Park
deconsecrated |
---|
Catholic
churches
denominations
- Crown Court Church, Covent Garden
- Dormition Cathedral
- Emmanuel Evangelical Church
- Enon Chapel
- French Protestant Church, Soho
- Hinde Street Methodist Church
- St Mark's, Mayfair
- Regent Hall
- St John's Wood Road Baptist Church
- St Sophia's Cathedral, Bayswater
- Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral of the Holy Family in Exile, Mayfair
- Ulrika Eleonora
- Welsh Church of Central London
- West London Methodist Mission
- West Street Chapel
- Methodist Central Hall
- Westminster Chapel
51°31′56″N 0°10′56″W / 51.53213°N 0.18230°W / 51.53213; -0.18230