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St Andrew's Church, Hornchurch

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Denomination
  
Church of England

Organist(s)
  
Andrew Losq

Diocese
  
Diocese of Chelmsford

Archdeaconry
  
Barking

Vicar(s)
  
Barry Hobson

Phone
  
+44 1708 441571

Province
  
Province of Canterbury

St Andrew's Church, Hornchurch

Website
  
The parish of Hornchurch

Churchwarden(s)
  
David Butcher and Anne Jarrett

Address
  
222 High St, Hornchurch RM12 6QP, UK

Deanery
  
London Borough of Havering

Similar
  
Church of St Laurence, Church of St Mary Magdale, St Edward the Confesso, Church of St Helen and St Gil, Hylands Park

The church of St Andrew's, Hornchurch, is a Church of England religious building in Hornchurch, England.

Contents

History

During the Anglian ice age around 450,000 years ago, the ice sheet reached The Dell, a few metres south of the current location of the church. This is the furthest south reached by any ice sheet in Britain during the Pleistocene epoch.

There has been a church on this site since at least 1163. The tower and the north porch were added in the 15th century. The tower contains 10 bells hung in a clockwise ring. The tenor is 18cwt (2016 lb or 914 kg) in Eb (622.0 Hz) dating from 1779. The bells were augmented from six bells to eight in 1901, then from eight to ten in 2001. On Monday May 27, 1912 a band of ringers led by William Pye rang a peal of 15,264 changes of Bristol Surprise major in 9 hours and 49 minutes. This was at the time the longest length rung in any surprise method.

Design

The current church is an example of late Gothic architecture.

Interments

St Andrew's contains a number of funereal monuments and memorials to local families and dignitaries. Among these are memorials to the daughters of William Blackborne, who lived at Hornchurch and who was related to Abraham Blackborne, the long-serving rector (58 years) of Dagenham, as well as Levett Blackborne, Lincoln's Inn barrister and grandson of Sir Richard Levett, Lord Mayor of London. In addition to the Blackborne memorial, there is also a stone tablet incised with verses proclaiming it as the resting place of the "Right Hon. Thomas Clutterbuck, treasurer of the Navy, and one of his Majesty's (king George II) most honourable privy council," who died 1742. The churchyard contains the war graves of 37 Commonwealth service personnel of World War I and four of World War II.

References

St Andrew's Church, Hornchurch Wikipedia