Country England Previous denomination Roman Catholic Website www.addington.org.uk Designated as world heritage site 29 January 1951 | Churchmanship Modern Catholic Phone +44 1689 842167 Dedication Mary Heritage designation Listed building | |
![]() | ||
Similar Addington Palace, Croydon Minster, Croydon Palace, Fieldway tram stop, St John the Evangelist - Upper No Profiles |
The Church of St Mary the Blessed Virgin is an Anglican church in Addington, in the Borough of Croydon, London. It is associated with the Archbishops of Canterbury of the 19th century, who lived at nearby Addington Palace: five of the archbishops are buried at the church.
Contents
History
There is evidence for a church on this site since at least 1080 AD. It was once the only church in Addington village when it was the centre of a larger parish then incorporating Shirley. It has an 11th-century chancel and windows. The south aisle, built in the early 13th century, is narrow as it once had a thatched roof, hence its falling roofline. The belltower assumed its current form in 1876. The church tower has a belfry with 6 bells, the earliest probably dating from 1380 as well as two 17th Century bells.The bells were restored in 1957. The chancel was richly decorated in 1898 in memory of Archbishop Benson.
On 29 January 1951, St Mary's became a Grade I listed building.
The parish was part of the Diocese of Canterbury until 1984 when it joined the Diocese of Southwark.
Notable burials
The crypt is now inaccessible, but the church is the burial place of a Lord Mayor of the City of London, the armigerous Leigh family who were Lords of the manor, and five of the six Archbishops of Canterbury who spent time at their residence nearby of Addington Palace.
The Archbishops interred at St Mary's are:
There is also a memorial to the Archbishops in the graveyard.
The churchyard also contains Commonwealth war graves of thirteen service personnel, four from World War I and nine from World War II.
Present day
Now the church ministers to the people living in the more immediate vicinity that includes Addington village, the southern elevation of and escarpment running down from the Addington Hills, the residences along Fieldway on the northernmost part of the New Addington estate, Addington and Forestdale.