St Clement's, King Square

St Clement's, King Square
St Clement's, King Square
London

A view of the south wall of St Clement's Church
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Website
Administration
Parish Parish of St Clement with St Barnabas and St Matthew, Finsbury
Diocese London
Division Archdeaconry of London
Clergy
Bishop(s) Bishop of London
Priest(s) Fr David Allen
Archdeacon Archdeacon of London

St Clement's, King Square is a Church of England parish church in Finsbury in the London Borough of Islington. It is adjacent to King Square, within a walking distance from City Road.

History

Construction

Church Building Commission purchased the land in King Square from the St Bartholomew's Hospital in 1822 and ordered a construction of a new church. Foundation stone was laid on 27 January 1822. French ex-prisoners-of-war and the local community were likely involved in the construction.[1] The building was designed by architect Philip Hardwick, the designer of Birmingham Curzon Street rail terminus. The design style was ancient Greek (Ionic), however the building also featured a spire. Construction was completed in July 1824 and cost £17,000 in total. The church had space for 1600 worshippers; it was consecrated as St Barnabas, King Square on 12 June 1826. At the time the church was part of the St Luke's parish; it was assigned a separate parish in 1846.[2]

20th century

The church suffered minor damage from bombing by German aircraft during the London Blitz in 1940 during the Second World War. In 1952 the parishes of St Barnabas, St Clement, Lever Street and St Matthew, City Road were united due to the fact that the other two churches were badly damaged through wartime bombing. The inside of the church was redecorated and refitted in 1953, including some of the ornaments from St Clement’s church, and was re-consecrated on 12th June 1954. The parish changed its name to St Clement with St Barnabas and St Matthew and the church began to be known as St Clement's. The building is Grade II listed.

Organ

The church organ was built by "Father" Willis for St Thomas, Agar Town in the 1870s and moved to its present location in 1950s, with some alterations, by Manders.

See also

Coordinates: 51°30′40.77″N 0°5′12.81″W / 51.5113250°N 0.0868917°W / 51.5113250; -0.0868917

References

  1. "AIM25 collection description". Aim25.ac.uk. 1975-02-27. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
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