St Mary's Church, Islington

Coordinates: 51°32′18.26″N 0°6′7.41″W / 51.5384056°N 0.1020583°W / 51.5384056; -0.1020583

St Mary's Church, Islington
The Parish Church of St Mary, Islington

St Mary's Church viewed from the church gardens
Location Upper Street, Islington, London
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Open Evangelical
Website stmaryislington.org
History
Founded 12th Century (estimate)
Dedication Mary the Virgin
Associated people Edward Vaughan, Meredith Hanmer, Robert Browne, John Webster, William Cave, Charles Wesley, Philip Quaque, George Gaskin, Daniel Wilson, Samuel Ajayi Crowther, William Barlow, Donald Coggan, Ralph Stanley Dean, Hugh Gough, Maurice Wood, David Sheppard, George Carey, Pete Broadbent, Graham Kings
Architecture
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Grade II listed[1]
Architect(s) Lancelot Dowbiggin, Reginald Blomfield, Seeley and Paget
Administration
Parish Islington, St Mary
Deanery Islington
Archdeaconry Hackney
Episcopal area Stepney
Diocese London
Province Canterbury
Clergy
Vicar(s) The Revd Simon Harvey

The Church of St Mary the Virgin is the historic parish church of Islington, in the Church of England Diocese of London. The present parish is a compact area centered on Upper Street between Angel and Highbury Corner, bounded to the west by Liverpool Road, and to the east by Essex Road/Canonbury Road. The church is a Grade II listed building.[1]

History

The first recorded church building was erected in the twelfth century and was replaced in the fifteenth century.[2]

Before his consecration as Bishop of St David's in 1509, Edward Vaughan served as vicar.[3]

Robert Browne, who authored the founding principles of Congregationalism, served as Lecturer at St Mary's until around 1578.[4]

John Webster the Elizabethan dramatist, married his heavily pregnant 17-year-old second wife, Sara Peniall, at St Mary's in Lent 1606, by special licence.[5]

William Cave became vicar in 1662, at the age of twenty-five, and held the office until 1689. He was subsequently buried at the church, having died in Isleworth in 1713.

On 24 July 1738, the Vicar of St Mary's, George Stonehouse, invited Charles Wesley to "take charge of his parish, under him, as his Curate."[6] He did not, however, possess any licence to do so from the Bishop of London. Wesley's journal lists many occasions on which he preached, and his regular praying at the church.

Wesley's preaching proved unpopular for some and within a year he and George Whitefield were expelled from the pulpit at St Mary's. On 27 April 1739 he noted, "At Islington vestry the Churchwardens forbad my preaching: demanded my local licence. I said nothing but that "I heard them." Scions was very abusive; bidding me shake off the dust of my feet, &c.; and said, "You have all the spirit of the devil," mentioning Mr. Whitefield, Stonehouse, and me by name."[6] From this point on Wesley joined his brother John and George Whitefield in field-preaching. Following a series of meetings with the Bishop of London, he decided to leave the city and to join his brother in Bristol during August 1739.

The church fell into "very ruinous condition" and the Islington Church Act 1750 was passed to enable it to be rebuilt. The new building was consecrated on 26 May 1754, designed by Lancelot Dowbiggin.[2]

In 1759, Philip Quaque, son of the Fante king Birempong Cudjo, was baptised at St Mary's, having attended the church with his brother for four years. He was the first black African to be ordained priest in the Church of England and returned to Ghana to minister as a missionary.[7][8]

The Revd Daniel Wilson (1778-1858), served as vicar from 1824 until 1832, when he became Bishop of Calcutta.[2] In 1831 he was one of the founders of the Lord's Day Observance Society. The Islington Clerical Conference, founded by Daniel Wilson, ran from 1827-1983 and was held at St Mary's.[9] Wilson's son, also Daniel, served as vicar of the church for fifty-four years, during which time many new parishes were created as the population of Islington soared.[10]

Samuel Ajayi Crowther, the linguist and first African Anglican bishop, came to Islington in 1826 and attended the church and parish school. He was ordained by the Bishop of London and went on to serve in West Africa, later becoming Bishop in Nigeria. He returned to Islington several times and ordained his own son, Dandeson, in St Mary's Church in 1870.[11]

William Hagger Barlow became vicar on the death of Daniel Wilson the second. He built the Bishop Wilson Memorial Hall (subsequently rebuilt as St Mary's Neighbourhood Centre) and the vicarage, which is still in use.[10]

The churchyard was enlarged in 1793, but with the rapid growth of Islington was full and closed for burials in 1853. It was laid out as a public garden of one and a half acres in 1885.[12]

An extensive portico of Portland Stone was built at the west door in 1904, to a design of Sir Reginald Blomfield. It includes a relief of the Nativity.[13]

Donald Coggan, later Archbishop of Canterbury, served as curate from 1934-7. David Sheppard, later Bishop of Liverpool, played cricket for England while an assistant curate at Islington, 1955-7.[12]

On the third night of the London Blitz, at 10.20pm on 9 September 1940, a bomb destroyed the majority of the church, leaving only the tower and spire intact.[14]

The church was rebuilt following an appeal by the incumbent, The Revd Hugh Gough, and dedicated in 1956 when Maurice Wood was vicar. The architects, Seeley and Paget, created an ambitious design which attempted to create a space suitable for a "renaissance of evangelical worship".[15] The main worship space is vast, with a volume of over 5000 cubic metres, and features deep clear windows which allow an unusually high amount of more natural light. The east and west ends have murals by Brian Thomas. The original church's lectern, baptismal font and Royal Arms all survived the bombing and can still be seen.[16]

In 1962, George Carey became curate and, among other innovations, pioneered links with local council departments and founded a new Boy's Club.[17]

In 1967, with the support of Revd Johnson brothers Dr Majeeb Chowdhry, Najeeb Chowdhry, Waheeb Chowdhry and their friend Emmanuel Din started the first Asian Christian Church in the UK, at St Mary's Church. Revd Daniel Gill became the first Pakistani Minister to lead an Urdu service in the UK, though he was not an ordained minister in the Church of England. This British Pakistani Church inspired the growth of similar 'Urdu Fellowships' across London and eventually the UK. Sadly with the movement of the Pakistani Christian diaspora to less expensive areas of London the Urdu fellowship ended in the 1990's.

St Mary's role in British Evangelicalism waned as the Islington Clerical Conference (of which the vicar had been ex-officio president) ended in 1983. In 2003, the then vicar, Graham Kings and others founded Fulcrum, which seeks to renew the evangelical tradition at the centre of the Church of England.

From the 1990s, as Islington became a more fashionable place to live and Upper Street developed a significant nightlife, St Mary's retained a concern to serve the widening range of people in the locality. The crypt beneath the church was radically transformed with an innovative regeneration programme and, in 2009, the St Mary Islington Community Partnership (SMICP) was formed to deliver and expand the range of community services that take place in the crypt and Neighbourhood Centre.

Worship

Worship services take place at St Mary's most days of the week. On Sundays, the main act of worship is the eleven o'clock service. A quieter evening service begins at 6pm. The Book of Common Prayer is used for a service of Holy Communion at 9am once per month.

A daily morning prayer meeting takes place at 9.30am on weekdays and Saturdays.

References

  1. 1 2 Historic England. "Church Of St Mary (1195776)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 9 July 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 John Richardson, Islington Past, Revised Edition, Historical Publications Limited, 2000;pp 59-60.
  3. Table: Vicars of Islington in St Mary's Islington, Pamphlet published for the church rebuilding appeal, 1949.
  4. Cromwell, Thomas (1835). Walks through Islington. London. pp. 82–4.
  5. Rene Weis, editor of John Webster: The Duchess of Malfi and Other Plays (Oxford World's Classics, 1996) in programme notes for The Duchess of Malfi, The Old Vic, Spring 2012
  6. 1 2 Charles Wesley, The Journal of Charles Wesley 1707-1788, 1738 http://wesley.nnu.edu/charles-wesley/the-journal-of-charles-wesley-1707-1788/the-journal-of-charles-wesley-january-5-april-30-1738
  7. Carretta, Reese, Vincent, Ty M. (2010). The Life and Letters of Philip Quaque, the First African Anglican Missionary By Carretta, Ty M. Reese. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 978-0-8203-3319-9.
  8. Website article: Ghanains in London - retrieved from http://www.culture24.org.uk/places+to+go/london/art47250 10 May 2011.
  9. http://www.fulcrum-anglican.org.uk/news/2003/20030930watercourses.cfm?doc=2 (endnote 3)
  10. 1 2 James Hewitt, Essay: Islington Parish Church - a short history in St Mary's Islington, Pamphlet published for the church rebuilding appeal, 1949.
  11. Jacob Oluwatayo AdeuyanThe Journey of the First Black Bishop, AuthorHouse 2011.
  12. 1 2 T F T Baker, C R Elrington (Editors), A P Baggs, Diane K Bolton, Patricia E C Croot, A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 8,1985.
  13. Brian Vermeulen, Quinquennial inspection report of St Mary's Church 1999
  14. History of St Mary's Church
  15. Hugh Gough, Essay: The Proposed New Church - Symbol of Evangelical Worship in St Mary's Islington, Pamphlet published for the church rebuilding appeal, 1949.
  16. Information leaflet available at the church.
  17. George Carey, Know the Truth, Harper Collins, 2004.

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