St. Ann's Church, Dawson Street
St. Ann's Church, Dawson Street, in Dublin, Ireland, was built in the early 18th century following the establishment of the Anglican parish in 1707. In the early 21st century the church presents itself as ecumenical within the tradition of the Church of Ireland.[1]
Building history
The building of the physical church in baroque style commenced in 1720, to a design by Isaac Wills.[2] The current façade dates to the 19th century. In 1907, St. Ann's was listed with five other churches as Dublin's only church buildings surviving from the 18th century.[3]
Exterior and façade
St. Ann's original façade was never completed above the first floor. In 1868, a competition was held for a new façade, with the architectural firm of Lanyon, Lynn & Lanyon losing the commission to the Deanes, Thomas Newenham Deane and his father. The younger Deane, who had been involved with the creation of significant buildings at Oxford University, designed a neo-Romanesque front.[4] Described by one travel guide as "amazingly ornate,"[5] the façade as it exists in the 21st century lacks some elements of Deane's original conception, most significantly the tallest tower; see the design online as Deane submitted it. From an architectural perspective, this omission has been criticized as disrupting the building's flow from the rectory to the spire.[6]
Interior
The Georgian interior was designed by Isaac Wills, influenced by churches built by Christopher Wren but with variations characteristic of Irish architecture. The church underwent a major renovation in 2009.[7]
St. Ann's is noted for its wood carving. The carved reredos, placed within a shallow rounded apse, shares an unusual decorative feature with the reredos of the former St. Mary's in Dublin: Corinthian pilaster capitals with twin acanthus scrolls. The acanthus frieze is carved with winged angels and bishop's mitre; the segmental pediment, with festoons of flowers. The craftsman's name is unrecorded.[8]
The Bread Shelf
A distinctive woodworking and charitable feature of St. Ann's is the Bread Shelf. Since 1723, as a result of a bequest by Lord Newton of Newtown Butler, the church has made daily bread available to anyone who chooses to receive it. The bread is placed near the altar on a shelf between acanthus-carved volutes. A photograph of the Bread Shelf may be viewed online.
Stained glass windows
Victorian-era stained glass replaced the original 18th-century clear windows. Some windows commemorate people associated with the church. Three windows in the south aisle are notable for their artistic merit; these were designed by Wilhelmina Geddes[2] of the An Túr Gloine (Tower of Glass) studio for stained-glass artists. One on the north aisle was created by Geddes with Ethel Rhind. St. Ann's is said to contain "more stained glass than any other church in Dublin."[6]
Associated people
Oscar Wilde was baptized within the current parish, at the former St. Mark's Church; St. Ann's now possesses the relevant records after the two parishes were merged. Dracula author Bram Stoker was married at St. Ann's (1878), as was Irish patriot Wolfe Tone (1785). Anthony St. Leger, founder of the St Leger Stakes horse race, was buried in the churchyard of St. Ann's. The philanthropist Thomas Barnardo as a boy attended St. Ann's Sunday school.
The church contains memorials to the Irish theologian Alexander Knox; English poet Felicia Hemans, who lived on Dawson Street from 1831; Richard Whately, the "eccentric" Anglican Archbishop of Dublin appointed 1831; and art collector and benefactor Hugh Lane, who created major collections of modern art in Dublin. Sir Thomas Vesey is also buried here, as is William Downes, 1st Baron Downes, Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. The reredos commemorates thirty-two men killed in World War I, and five in World War II, who were from the parish.
The organ
Written sources from 1742 record a subscription drive for the purpose of purchasing an organ for the church. The case of the modern organ, located in the west gallery of the church, is presumed to remain from the original 18th-century instrument. William Telford built the organ in 1834. It has been renovated numerous times. In 1911, the water-powered blower was replaced with an electrical blower, and in 1925 the organ underwent a tubular pneumatic conversion with a new console.[9]
List of organists at St Ann’s
- John McCalley (c1780-c1790)
- George William Torrance (1851-1854)
- William Houghton (?-1871)
- Dr. James C. Culwick (1871-1881)
- Arthur St. George Patton (1881-1892)
- Henry Gladney Gick (1892-1918)
- Sidney Lovett FRCO (1918-1919)
- Lennox Braid (1920-1934)
- William J. Watson FRCO (1935-1987)
- Mark Armstrong (1987-1989)
- David Smith (1990-1991)
- J. Paul Kermode (1991-1992)
- Graham Walsh (1992-1993)
- Hilary Dungan (1993-1995)
- Stanley Monkhouse (1995-2003)
- Peter O'Connor (2003-2004)
- Aiden Scanlon (2004-2009)
- Charles Marshall (2009 – )
References
Information not otherwise attributed comes from the St. Ann's Church visitors pamphlet.
- ↑ "Christians of all traditions are welcome to participate in all services and to receive the sacrament of Holy Communion," according to the visitors pamphlet of the church; see also the church website.
- 1 2 Williams, Jeremy (1994). A Companion Guide to Irish Architecture. p. 131. ISBN 0-7165-2513-5.
- ↑ Samuel A. Ossory Fitzpatrick, Dublin: A Historical and Topographical Account of the City (London, 1907), p. 208, where the façade is described (p. 281) as "Norman."
- ↑ Sidney Lee, ed. (1901). "Deane, Thomas Newenham". Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- ↑ Margaret Greenwood et al., Ireland (Rough Guides, 2003, 7th ed.), p. 88 online.
- 1 2 "St Anne's Church of Ireland, Dawson Street, Dublin," Archiseek.
- ↑ St. Ann's Church, Dawson Street.
- ↑ The Knight of Glin and James Peill, Irish Furniture: Woodwork and Carving in Ireland from the Earliest Times to the Act of Union (Yale University Press, 2007), pp. 41–42 online.
- ↑ Stanley Monkhouse, "The Organ of St Ann's Church, Dawson Street, Dublin," with a detailed technical description.
External links
Coordinates: 53°20′27.5″N 6°15′30.5″W / 53.340972°N 6.258472°W