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St Alban's Church, Holborn

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Location
  
Denomination
  
Website
  
stalbansholborn.org

Phone
  
+44 20 7430 2551

Architect
  
Giles Gilbert Scott

Country
  
England

Churchmanship
  
Anglo-Catholic

Dedication
  
St Alban

Diocese
  
Diocese of London

St Alban's Church, Holborn

Address
  
18 Brooke St, London EC1N 7RD, UK

Architectural style
  
Gothic Revival architecture

Similar
  
St Alban - Wood Street, St Andrew Holborn, St Etheldreda's Church, St Botolph's - Aldersgate, St Bartholomew‑the‑Less

St Alban's Church, Holborn is a Church of England parish church in Holborn, central London. It has been Grade II* listed since 1951.

Contents

Beginnings

William Henry, 2nd Baron Leigh gave the site for the church's construction and the design was produced by William Butterfield in 1859. Construction occurred between 1861 and 1862 in yellow and red stock bricks with stone dressings and tiled roofs. In 1862 Alexander Mackonochie became its first perpetual curate. He introduced a daily Eucharist, which featured Gregorian chant and significant ritual elements (e.g. the lighting of altar candles and the cleansing of eucharistic vessels at the altar). St Alban's was the first Anglican church to hold the three-hour devotion on Good Friday (in 1864) and one of the first to celebrate a Harvest Festival. Mackonochie also openly heard confessions. Mackonochie's pastoral ministry was typical of the 19th-century ritualist "slum priest". With his two curates, Arthur Stanton (who remained at the church until his death in 1913) and Edward Russell, and lay assistants he founded schools, soup kitchens, a working men's club, mothers' meetings, clothing funds and more. Though he remained until 1882 and remained as an assistant priest after that date, he became known as "the martyr of St Alban's" for regular Low Church prosecutions against his support for ritualism.

In 1891 a chapel was added to designs by Charles Henry Money Mileham (1837-1917), with the chapel's stained glass by Charles Eamer Kempe added in 1898 - it now also contains two Stations of the Cross by Ninian Comper. The 1890s also saw the future bishop Hensley Henson (then vicar of St Margaret's Church, Barking) frequently visiting St Alban's as a guest preacher.

1900-present

In 1938 the church hosted England's first complete performance of Olivier Messiaen's La Nativité du Seigneur, organised by Felix Aprahamian and played by the composer himself. The church was burned out during the London Blitz in 1941, though the chapel survived. The main church was restored by Adrian Gilbert Scott between 1959 and 1961, including a new organ by John Compton. Beside the church's entrance is a 1985 sculpture by Hans Feibusch entitled 'Jesus being Raised from the Dead' - the same artist had produced the church's current set of Stations of the Cross (date unknown) and a mural of the Holy Trinity for the east wall (1966).

On 9 June 1990 the church hosted the foundation of Affirming Catholicism, representing a liberal strand of Anglo-Catholicism, though the church itself is now considered a traditionalist Anglo-Catholic parish - as such, it is under the Alternative Episcopal Oversight of the Bishop of Fulham (currently Jonathan Baker).

References

St Alban's Church, Holborn Wikipedia


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