St Mary's Church, Battersea Explained

St Mary's Church, Battersea
Pushpin Map:United Kingdom London Wandsworth
Map Caption:Location in the Borough of Wandsworth
Coordinates:51.4766°N -0.1754°W
Location:Battersea Church Road, Battersea, Greater London, SW11 3NA
Country:England
Denomination:Church of England
Churchmanship:Inclusive Central
Founded Date:c.800 AD
Status:Active
Functional Status:Parish church
Heritage Designation:Grade I listed
Completed Date:1777
Diocese:Diocese of Southwark
Vicar:Reverend Canon Simon Butler
Asstpriest:Reverend Joe Moore
Warden:Stuart McAlpine (People's Warden)
Evalyn Lee (Vicar's Warden)

St Mary's Church, Battersea, is the oldest of the churches in Battersea in the London Borough of Wandsworth, in the inner south-west of the UK's capital city.[1] Its parish shared by three Anglican churches is in the diocese of Southwark. Christians have worshipped at the site continuously since around 800 AD. It is a Grade I listed building for its combined heritage and architectural merit.[2] [3]

History

St. Mary's is among the earliest five documented Christian holy sites south of the River Thames in London, historically in Surrey, in the Diocese of Winchester. The original church was built around 800 AD, and the present building was completed in 1777.[2] It was designed by Joseph Dixon, a local architect.[4]

The church is built of brick, with stone used for quoins and other dressings. It consists of a nave, rectangular in plan, an apse at the east end forming the sanctuary, and a west tower. The west front has a single storey entrance porch with Tuscan columns supporting a pediment. The tower, rising immediately behind it, is topped with a clock chamber and a small spire. Inside, the whole width of the church is spanned by a flat ceiling, and there are wooden galleries supported by columns on three sides. The nave windows are in two tiers, the upper ones round-headed.[4] [5]

The modern triptych in the side chapel is by John Napper (1946). It shows the Annunciation with Battersea Park and the Power Station in the background. To the right Christ walks on the Thames and to the left Lazarus rises beneath the church porch.[6]

The organ is by Saxon Aldred (1993), with a carving of a ram in recognition of the Ram Brewery.[6]

In the sanctuary the east window dates from 1379, the painted window glass dates from 1631 with portraits of Henry VII, Margaret Beaufort, and Queen Elizabeth I.[7] The Dove and Lamb windows, originally from 1796, by James Pearson, were restored in 1946 after being damaged by a V1 in 1944.[6]

At the back is the terracotta War Memorial by Freda Skinner, depicting the Gate of Life guarded by the Angel of Sacrifice.[6]

The glass doors to the Vestry were added in 2008 and were engraved by Sally Scott FGE.[6]

The church has strong connections with art and literature through the artist and poet William Blake, who married Catherine Boucher there on 17 August 1782,[8] and J. M. W. Turner, who painted the river from the vestry window.

Windows

There are four new windows by John Hayward added between 1976 and 1982.[9]

Monuments

The church includes several important monuments from the earlier church.[11]

Two busts for Baron Oliver Nicholas St John of Lydeard (Viscount Grandison), (d.1630), Lord High Treasurer and Lord Deputy of Ireland, and his wife, Joan Roydon. The sculptor was Nicholas Stone the Elder (1586/7-1647).

Sir Edward Wynter (d.1685). The monument has a bust at the top. The lower panel shows him fighting a tiger and Moors. The epitaph describes his adventures.[3]

Sir John Fleet, Knight, (d.1712). He was Lord Mayor in 1695.

James Bull, Merchant, aged 44 years, (d. 1713), son-in-law of Sir John Fleet.

Henry St John, (d.1751), Viscount Bolingbroke, Secretary of War and Secretary of State under Queen Anne, and Mary Clara des Champs de Marcilly, Marchioness of Villette and Viscountess Bolingroke, (d.1750). There are cameo portraits of them, facing each other, either side of the shield. The epitaphs are by Bolingbroke. The sculptor is Louis-François Roubiliac, signed at the base.

John Camden, (d. 1780), and his eldest daughter Elizabeth Neild, (d. 1791). Girl by a funeral urn with a poetic eulogy. Signed by Coade of Lambeth (1792).

Richard Rothwell, (d.1821), and his wife Eleanor, (d.1834). By J. G. Bubb.

Notable interments

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: St Mary's Church Battersea. 18 February 2020. London Borough of Wandsworth.
  2. Web site: Church of St Mary and Churchyard Wall and Gates. British Listed Buildings. 7 February 2015.
  3. Book: Lysons, Daniel. 'Battersea', in The Environs of London: Volume 1, County of Surrey. 1792. 26–48. 21 December 2021. British History Online.
  4. Web site: St Mary, Battersea. Diocese of Southwark. 1 June 2015.
  5. Book: London 2: South. Buildings of England. Bridget. Cherry. Nikolaus. Pevsner. 1983. 688. Yale University Press. 978-0300096514. subscription. 18 February 2020.
  6. A brief guide to St Mary's Church, Battersea. Church leaflet.
  7. Web site: Church of St Mary, Battersea, London SW11 . Visit Stained Glass.
  8. Web site: St Mary's Battersea. Tate. 2 June 2015.
  9. Web site: St. Mary's Church Parish website . St Mary's Modern Stained Glass .
  10. Curtis. Samuel. 1828. Memoirs of the Life and Writings of the late Mr William Curtis. Curtis's Botanical Magazine. Index 1-53. v-xxxii. Google Books.
  11. Web site: St Mary's Church, Battersea and its Monuments. The Second Website of Bob Speel.
  12. Book: Wallace, Audrey. Benedict Arnold: Misunderstood Hero?. March 5, 2003. Burd Street Press. Google Books. 978-1572493490.