Christ Church, Marylebone Explained

Former Christ Church, Marylebone
Other Name:Greenhouse Centre
Coordinates:51.5217°N -0.1664°W
Denomination:Church of England
Architect:Thomas Hardwick
Philip Hardwick
Style:Neoclassical
Status:closed
Years Built:1822–1824
Dedicated Date:1825
Closed Date:1977
Rector:1825–1828: George Saxby Penfold
1828–1856: Robert Walpole
1856–1889: John Llewelyn Davies
1891–1899: Oswald Wardell-Yerburgh
1899–1907: Harry Alsager Sheringham
1907–1923: George Mould
1923–1941: Thomas G. B. Kay
1941–1948: Oswin Harvard Gibbs-Smith
Location:35 Cosway Street, Marylebone, Westminster
Country:United Kingdom

Christ Church, Marylebone, also called Christ Church, Lisson Grove, and Christ Church, Cosway Street, is a Grade II* listed former Church of England church, built in the 1820s in Marylebone in the City of Westminster to designs by Thomas and Philip Hardwick.

After deconsecration in 1977, the church became an antiques market and restaurant and is now a sports centre named the Greenhouse Centre. It stands on a busy street mid-way between Paddington Station and Regent's Park.

The church

Christ Church was one of the first of the Commissioners' churches, which were some six hundred new churches built between the 1820s and 1850s by the Church Building Commission, using £1,500,000 given by Parliament so that the growing populations of the suburbs could be better served by the Established Church.[1] The church is an example of square Georgian neoclassical architecture, covered in pale limestone, with the nave inside built of brick. It has a four-columned Ionic portico at the front, with a blank pediment, and further pairs of pillars on each side. A square tower rises above the church, with clock faces and Corinthian pillars, above which is an octagonal cupola with a roof shaped like a bell.[1] Inside the church is an eight-bay Corinthian arcade, with Corinthian pilasters on the east wall. Clerestory windows sit above an entablature, and the nave has a low arched ceiling with ribs and oval panels. The church also has galleries.[2] Lacking a graveyard, like many other metropolitan churches, Christ Church was provided with a large vault for its burials.[3] In 1887, some alterations were made to the church, designed by Sir Arthur Blomfield.[2]

Due to parish reorganization, the church was declared redundant and closed in 1977. The building was sold and converted by Umano architects in the 1980s,[4] becoming first an antique market and restaurant.[5]

In 2014, the church was bought by Greenhouse Sports, a youth charity, with the help of Michael Sherwood, a former banker. The Sport England Lottery, the London Marathon Charitable Trust, and the People's Postcode Lottery supported its refurbishment as a multi-sports centre. As part of the new use, the crypt was converted into changing rooms and meeting rooms.[6] The new sports centre, named the Greenhouse Centre, was formally opened by Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and Prince Harry on 30 April 2018.[7]

The parish

The parish of Christ Church, Cosway Street, was created in 1825 by Act of Parliament as one of four new district rectories within the ancient parish of St Marylebone. It was provided with a Rectory called Christ Church House.[8]

George Saxby Penfold was appointed as the first Rector, but in 1828 moved on to serve as the first Rector of the newly built Holy Trinity, Marylebone.[9] He was succeeded by a notable classical scholar, Robert Walpole.

In 1892, shortly after the arrival of Oswald Wardell-Yerburgh as Rector, a new Christ Church House was built in Shroton Street, in polychromatic brick, and provided parish rooms and a Boys’ Club in the basement. It was formally opened in December 1892 by the Duke of Fife.[10] In 1898, the St John's Wood Chapel became a chapel of ease to Christ Church, Marylebone.[11] In 1932, the Rector of Christ Church moved from Christ Church House into St John's House and increasingly the parish appears to have been administered from there.[8]

Oswin Gibbs-Smith, who was appointed as Rector of Christ Church in 1941, was also in charge of the parishes of St Barnabas, Bell Street, and St Stephen, Avenue Road, with St Andrew, Allitsen Road.[8] During the Second World War, by agreement with Gibbs-Smith, the Royal Air Force took over Christ Church School, in Cosway Street, Christ Church House, in Shroton Street, the De Walden Institute, in Charlbert Street, and the St John's Wood Chapel, to provide accommodation for airmen.[12]

In 1945, a scheme for the reorganization of the Marylebone parishes proposed that the parish of Christ Church should be united with Saint Barnabas, Bell Street, while losing St John's Wood Chapel, which would become a new parish church, covering most of the former parish of St Stephen, Avenue Road. This scheme was not legally implemented until 1952, but at the beginning of 1948 Gibbs-Smith resigned and different incumbents were appointed for the parishes of Christ Church with St Barnabas and St Stephen with St John.[8] Gibbs-Smith became Archdeacon of London[13] and was later Dean of Winchester.[14]

In 1971 the parish of Christ Church was united with St Paul, Rossmore Road, to create a parish called Christ Church and St Paul. Both churches were parish churches of this new parish until Christ Church was declared redundant in January 1977. In July 1978 the parish was united with St Mark with St Luke, Marylebone, to be served by a team ministry.[8]

Rectors of Christ Church

Other notable people

Constance Lloyd, who later became an author and the wife of Oscar Wilde, was baptized at Christ Church on 9 June 1858.[22]

In 1850, aged only fifteen, Arthur Sweatman, later Archbishop of Toronto, began to teach in the Sunday school of Christ Church, Marylebone.[23]

Charles Wheatstone, scientist and inventor, married Emma West, daughter of John Hooke West, at Christ Church on 12 February 1847.[24]

John Percy Groves, a military author, married Harriet Augusta Raines at Christ Church, Marylebone, on 11 March 1873.[25]

Edward William Cox, writer and publisher, married his second wife, Rosalinda Alicia Fonblanque, only daughter of J. S. M. Fonblanque, Commissioner of Bankruptcy, at the church on 15 August 1844.[26]

On 2 November 1830, at Christ Church, Marylebone, John Sterling married Susannah, a daughter of Lieutenant-General Charles Barton and his wife Susannah.[27]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Bob Speel, "Christ Church Cosway Street, Marylebone by Thomas Hardwick" at speel.me.uk, accessed 20 November 2020
  2. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1356972 "CHRIST CHURCH"
  3. Mrs Basil Holmes, The London Burial Grounds: Notes on their history from the earliest times to the present day (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1896), Appendix C, p. 329
  4. https://londonchurchbuildings.com/2015/04/04/christ-church-former-cosway-street-st-marylebone/amp/ "Christ Church (former), Cosway street, St Marylebone"
  5. Punch, Vol. 287 (1984), Part 1, p. 35: "Christ Church, Cosway Street, in London, for example, became an antique market and restaurant..."
  6. https://www.greenhousesports.org/2018/04/26/prince-harry-to-open-the-greenhouse-centre/ "Prince Harry to open the Greenhouse Centre"
  7. https://www.greenhousesports.org/2018/04/30/the-duke-of-cambridge-and-prince-harry-launch-the-greenhouse-centre/ "The Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry launch the Greenhouse Centre"
  8. https://search.lma.gov.uk/scripts/mwimain.dll/144/LMA_OPAC/web_detail/REFD+P89~2FCTC "CHRIST CHURCH, SAINT MARYLEBONE: COSWAY STREET, WESTMINSTER"
  9. https://en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/Alumni_Oxonienses:_the_Members_of_the_University_of_Oxford,_1715-1886/Penfold,_George_Saxby Penfold, George Saxby
  10. http://www.locallocalhistory.co.uk/mp/p100/page144.htm "Christchurch House"
  11. The National Archives, "Saint John, Saint John's Wood, Westminster", accessed 20 November 2020
  12. London Metropolitan Archives: City of London, file reference P89/JN1/86/1-3 "Church Fabric: Christ Church and St John's Chapel:" Notes of agreements between the Revd. O. H. Gibbs-Smith and the Secretary of State for Air for living accommodation for RAF in Christ Church School, Cosway Street, Christ Church House, Shroton Street, St John's Wood Chapel and the DeWalden Institute, 42-48 Charlbert Street NWB, nationalarchives.gov.uk, accessed 21 November 2020
  13. Radio Times, 22 March 1948, "20.45 The Eye of the Artist: The Life of Christ", accessed 21 November 2020
  14. http://cwtarchive.co.uk/index.php/9-agm62-65/57-agm64-01 "Trust Annual Report 1964"
  15. https://theclergydatabase.org.uk/jsp/persons/DisplayPerson.jsp?PersonID=19192 "Penfold, George Saxby"
  16. Walpole, Robert (1781-1856) . 59 . Wroth . Warwick William . Warwick William Wroth . 207 . 1.
  17. "Death of Mr. Llewelyn Davies Scholar and Liberal Churchman" (obituary), in The Times, Friday, May 19, 1916, Issue 41171, p. 11, col. B (text at Wikisource)
  18. The Genealogical Magazine, Volume 3 (1900), p. 368
  19. The London Gazette, 3 November 1899, p. 1032: "CROWN OFFICE October 30, 1899The Queen has been pleased, by Letters Patent, to present the Reverend Harry Alsager Sheringham, M.A., to the Rectory of Christ Church, Marylebone, in the county of London and diocese of London, void by the resignation of the Reverend Oswald Pryor Wardell-Yerburgh, the last Incumbent, and in Her Majesty's gift in full right."
  20. The London Gazette, 4 June 1907, p. 3831
  21. The London Gazette, 20 March 1923, p. 2162
  22. Anne Clark Amor, Mrs. Oscar Wilde, a Woman of Some Importance (1983), p. 12: "Saturday's child, she was baptized on 9 June 1858 at Christ Church, Cosway Street, Marylebone. Although registration of birth was already compulsory, Constance's birth was never registered."
  23. "Noted Archbishop Claimed by Death" (obituary) in The Evening Record (Windsor, Ontario), 21 January 1909, p. 1, col. A
  24. Brian Bowers, Sir Charles Wheatstone FRS, 1802–1875 (London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1975), p. 155
  25. https://www.priaulxlibrary.co.uk/articles/article/royal-guernsey-militia The Royal Guernsey Militia
  26. Peter Spiller, Cox and Crime: An Examination of Edward William Cox, 1809-1879 (1985), p. 14
  27. [Thomas Carlyle]