St Cuthbert's, Earls Court

St Cuthbert's Church, Earls Court
Location 50 Philbeach Gardens, Earls Court, London, SW5
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Anglo-Catholic
Website www.saintcuthbert.org
History
Founded 1883
Dedicated 1884
Architecture
Heritage designation Grade I
Architect(s) Hugh Roumieu Gough
Style Gothic Cistercian
Years built 1884–87
Administration
Deanery Chelsea
Archdeaconry Middlesex
Diocese London
Province Canterbury
Clergy
Bishop(s) Jonathan Baker (Alternative Episcopal Oversight to the Bishop of Kensington)
Priest(s) Rev'd Fr Paul Bagott
Laity
Churchwarden(s) Nicholas Green
Paul Hills

St Cuthbert's, Philbeach Gardens (Earls Court) is a Grade I listed Anglican church at 50 Philbeach Gardens, Earls Court, London SW5.[1]

The Church was built 1884–87, designed by the architect Hugh Roumieu Gough (1843–1904), son of Alexander Dick Gough.[1] The interior furnishings designed by William Bainbridge Reynolds (1845–1935) who was a member of the congregation. It has been hailed as Jewel of the Arts and Crafts movement of the late 19th and early 20th Centuries.

The church is situated on the north west of Philbeach Gardens in Earls Court near the West Cromwell Road (A4). Adjoining the church is the clergy house and to that Philbeach Hall.

St Cuthberts is noted for its interior decoration and its style of worship.

History

St. Cuthbert's is much the grandest church to have been built in western Kensington. It was built from 1884 to 1887 and was greatly enriched and beautified over the succeeding thirty years. A clergy house attached to the north-west corner of the church was incorporated into Gough's scheme and was the first element to be built. It was undertaken in the latter half of 1883 for a contract price of £1,622 by S. Belham and Company of Buckingham Palace Road, who were to be the builders for the church as well. The church itself followed on from the spring of 1884, slowly at first due to lack of funds. Belhams took up the first contract for £2,937 and the foundation stone, a block quarried at Lindisfarne, was laid by Earl Beauchamp on 2 July 1884. Not long afterwards work had to be stopped while Westall appealed for a further £4,000. Tenders for the second contract were not submitted until May 1886, when Belhams resumed their work for a price of £7,836. In July 1887 the structure was being roofed in. The consecration by Bishop Temple finally took place on 18 November 1887 but the Lady Chapel was apparently not finished until the following year. As completed, the church seated about 950; the cost of its construction was estimated roundly at £11,000.

Under Westall, St. Cuthbert's grew rapidly in influence, until it was soon the most flourishing High-Church foundation in Kensington. On Good Friday, 15 April 1898, John Kensit a well known agitator, with some of his followers attended the service, and waiting until his turn came to kneel down and kiss the cross. Instead, he 'seized the crucifix, and, holding it aloft, said in a clear and distinct voice, "I denounce this idolatry in the Church of England; may God help me".' A scrummage ensued, and Kensit and his supporters were with difficulty ejected from the church, Kensit was charged, convicted and fined £3 (about £350 today), but acquitted on appeal at the Clerkenwell Quarter Sessions, though without costs. The incident did St. Cuthbert's no harm, and Westall's calm deportment throughout the proceedings enhanced his reputation. It became Kensit's fate to be depicted on the misericord in the Vicars Stall in the Sanctuary with protruding asses' ears, Kensit's likeness forever residing beneath the Vicars derrière!

Kensit Misericord

Of later building works at St. Cuthbert's, the most considerable was the Philbeach Hall, erected north of the clergy house to Gough's designs in 1894–96. This building (No. 51 Philbeach Gardens) housed a library, a hall, a gymnasium and six sets of bachelor chambers for curates. Extra land was leased for this purpose from Lord Kensington, and the total cost of the project came to some £6,570 The northern end of the building was largely destroyed by a bomb in 1940 and more simply rebuilt in 1956–57 to designs by J. Harold Gibbons working in partnership with D. R. Humphrys and R. W. Hurst. Another project, prepared in 1908 by J. Harold Gibbons, would have added a mortuary chapel and cloister on the south side of the church. For this purpose the lease of the adjacent garden was acquired, but Lord Iveagh (from 1902 the freeholder of Philbeach Gardens) objected and the idea was dropped. There was damage to the church in the Second World War, on 2 August 1944, by the blast of a V-1 flying bomb opposite the East end of the church which killed three people and caused 77–83 Philbeach Gardens to be demolished and rebuilt. In 1946–8 the church was deprived of its damaged western bellcote and entirely re-roofed in copper under the supervision of J. Harold Gibbons.

Architecture

Gough designed an austere, lofty structure of Transitional style and Cistercian type, with proportions modelled upon Tintern Abbey. It was unified by a single main roof and lit from a tall clerestory running the whole length of the church. There are lean-to aisles uninterrupted except in the south-east corner, where an apsidal Lady Chapel was built. Below the church was a crypt for vestries, a public meeting-room, and a mortuary chapel, it had been intended to use this crypt as a temporary church, but the Bishop had vetoed the suggestion on the grounds that people would not 'go into the ground to say their prayers'. No tower was intended, its function being supplied by a slender flèche upon the roof, a double bellcote above the western gable was planned, and twin finials at the east end.

The most unusual feature of Gough's design was a great blank arch in the east wall, furnished externally with niches for statues instead of window lights. At first the interior walling was finished off in plain brick, in anticipation of decorative glories to come. Some rich fittings had been installed by the date of consecration, notably the Caen stone pulpit, designed apparently by Gough and carved by Baron Felix de Sziemanowicz of Kennington (placed in continental fashion almost halfway down the nave, as though to distance it from the altar), some carving outside the Lady Chapel and the sedilia and piscina on the south of the Sanctuary (1888).The soundingboard designed by J. Harold Gibbons and made by Pearson, Brown and Company of Manchester was added in 1907. The seven sacrament font in its baptistery all designed by Gough and carved by Sziemanowicz with panels 'after Müller's pictures at Düsseldorf', (1888), the walls were still plain brick. Lighting was by means of metal gas fittings (1887) looking rather like open thimbles, which have sadly long since vanished. They were provided by the firm of J. Starkie Gardner, for whom they had been designed by William Bainbridge Reynolds.

Interior Decoration

Interior of the church and Rood Screen
south wall stations of the cross and lectern

Associated with the vigour of St. Cuthbert's was a policy of beautification, which proceeded without a pause from 1887 until 1914 and turned an impressive but unoriginal building into a monument to turn-of-the- century AngloCatholic taste. Several architects and many craftsmen, professional and amateur, were involved in the process. The more elaborate jobs were entrusted to skilled professionals such as Bainbridge Reynolds, the clergyman-designer Ernest Geldart and the architect J. Harold Gibbons. But in addition the church's supporters organized themselves into 'guilds' which took on manifold decorative tasks in the Arts- and-Crafts spirit. Classes and workshops under professional guidance were arranged in stone- and woodcarving, metal-working and church embroidery, and the guilds then proceeded to their long labours. For example, the carved stone diapering of varying pattern gradually extended round the walls between 1890 and 1909 was the responsibility of the Guild of St. Peter, the chancel stalls were made by the Guild of St. Joseph, and the vestments by the Guild of St. Margaret.

The Rood

H. R. Gough contributed little to the church after 1888, but he did design The Rood screen and made by Jones and Willis, (1893), with the figure of Christ after that in Capilla Real, Granada Cathedral. The Rood loft has an altar on the south side with a Tabernacle where the Blessed Sacrament was reserved as the bishop of London, John Jackson, objected to the Sacrament being reserved in the Lady Chapel, so to strictly comply with the bishop's instruction The Sacrament was reserved in the Rood Screen altar Tabernacle. On the Feast of the Translation of The Relics of St Cuthbert on 4 September 2015 the three Relics held by the parish were moved to the altar to a permanent reliquary. The Latin inscription is from the first chapter of St John's Gospel – Verbum caro fact est et habitat in nobs – The Word was made flesh and dwelt among us.

Rood Screen Altar

The Reredos

High Altar and Reredos
The Lectern

The great reredos filling the whole eastern wall, was entrusted to the Reverend Ernest Geldart apparently at his own request. The subject is The Worship of the Incarnate Son of God with Incense and Lights, his overwhelming Hispanic design was made in 1899–1900 but had to wait until 1913–14 for funds sufficient for its execution. During cleaning in the early 2000s glass was found embedded in it, presumably from the V1 blast in 1944.

Bainbridge Reynolds

Contributed a fantastic amount of glories to St Cuthbert's. Screens between north aisle and organ chamber, south aisle and Lady Chapel, and on north and south sides of chancel, c. 1895–1904 The Clock on west wall, (1898). Lady Chapel Altar rail. Royal arms (hanging in south arcade), (1904) as a parish memorial to Queen Victoria. Paschal candlestick, (1905) High Altar with silver-panelled front, (1910) Which replaced the front of 1890 designed by G. Somers Clarke junior and painted by Reynolds. Tabernacle designed by J. Harold Gibbons and made by Reynolds, (1933). The most obvious and striking is the lectern which Sir John Betjeman described as 'Nouveau Viking'.

High altar Tabernacle

The Stations of the Cross

Were painted by Franz Vinck of Antwerp, (1888)

Statuary

The statues over piers are by Gilbert Boulton of Cheltenham. Statue of St. Gregory in niche on east wall by Gilbert Boulton, (1908)

Stained Glass

The Lady Chapel and baptistery had stained glass windows by Kempe, the Clerestory and aisle windows mainly designed by Charles Edward Tute, (1890) The Lady Chapel windows were blown out in 1944. The lost glass was replaced with new stained glass by Hugh Easton in 1947–60. Many in the clerestory were also destroyed

The Calvary

Stands outside east end designed by J. Harold Gibbons and made by Guglielmo Tosi (1919) as a memorial to those lost in the First World War

The Organ

Gough added an organ chamber breaking the line of the north aisle roof to house an instrument which extends from crypt level to above the clearstorey and is far larger and noisier than is strictly necessary by Dove Brothers In 1896–7. The Organ itself was made by Robert Hunter of Clapham, 1899–1900

Embellishments to the interior of St. Cuthbert's continued unabated until 1914, but few changes were made after the war of 1914–18. Westall died in harness in 1924 but his traditions were continued by his successors to this day as the church garden and borders are maintained by a small group of parishioners.

Anglo-Catholicism

The church's style of worship is Anglo-Catholic, "the Catholic faith as taught by the Church of England", offering members and visitors a traditional style of liturgy, as advocated by the Oxford Movement of the mid-nineteenth century, including ritual, choir and organ music, vestments and incense.

Masses are now generally according to the liturgy of Common Worship (with the High Mass on Sunday according to Order 1 in traditional language), the offices are also prayed according to Common Worship.

Incumbents

Services

References

1. All Glorious Within an appreciation of St. Cuthbert’s Philbeach Gardens by DONALD FINDLAY from the Annual of the Victorian Society, 1991. (Downloadable from the church website as a pdf)

2. Jenkins, Simon (2009). England's Thousand Best Churches. London: Penguin Books. p. 479. ISBN 978-0-141-03930-5.

3. British History Online

Media related to St Cuthbert's, Earls Court at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 51°29′28″N 00°12′01″W / 51.49111°N 0.20028°W / 51.49111; -0.20028

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.