St. John's Church (Jhelum)

Marble Lectern at St. John's, Jhelum, in memory of 35 slain British soldiers
Part of a series on
Christianity
in Pakistan
Background

Christianity
Church of Pakistan
Roman Catholicism in Pakistan

People

Alvin Robert Cornelius
Anthony Mascarenhas
Esther John
Julius Salik
Mervyn Middlecoat
John Permal
Cecil Chaudhry
Gulshan Esther
Sara Alfred
Anthony Theodore Lobo
Joseph Coutts
Mary Emily
Colin Saldanha
Menin Rodrigues
Antao D'Souza
Wallis Mathias
Bohemia (musician)
Shallum Asher Xavier
Shahbaz Bhatti
Michael Chowdry

Churches

Universal Gospel Assembly International (UGA)
Pakistan Gospel Assembly Church (PGA)
Sacred Heart Cathedral, Lahore
St. Patrick's Cathedral
Philadelphia Pentecostal Church, Karachi
Evangel House, Faisalabad
Christ Church Rawalpindi
All Saints Church
St Philip's Church
St John's Church
St. Luke's Church, Abbottabad
St. George's Church, Karachi
Sacred Heart Church, Karachi

St. John's Church is an Anglican church, now under the Church of Pakistan, located in Jhelum cantonment, Pakistan, beside the river Jhelum. It was built in 1860 and is a landmark of the city. It is a Protestant church and was in use during the British colonial period. For forty years it remained closed, but has been renovated and reopened.

On 7 July 1857, 35 British soldiers of the 24th Regiment of Foot were killed by mutineers in Jhelum during the Indian Rebellion of 1857. Among the dead was Captain Francis Spring, the eldest son of Colonel William Spring.[1] The church was built to commemorate the eventual British victory in the rebellion, and a lectern now stands in the church as a memorial to the dead British soldiers.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to St. John's Church (Jhelum).

References

Coordinates: 32°55′17″N 73°43′20″E / 32.92139°N 73.72222°E