Puneet Varma (Editor)

St Mary's Church, Putney

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Denomination
  
Heritage designation
  
Grade II*

Deanery
  
Dedication
  
Mary

Province
  
Churchmanship
  
Liberal Catholic

Parish
  
Putney Team Ministry

Phone
  
+44 20 8788 4414

Function
  
Church

Architect
  
St Mary's Church, Putney

Address
  
Putney Bridge Approach, London SW15 2JQ, UK

Archdeaconry
  
London Borough of Wandsworth

Similar
  
All Saints' Church - Putney C, All Saints Church - Fulham, Putney Bridge, All Saints Church - Wandsworth, St Mary's Church - Battersea

Profiles

St. Mary's Church (in full, the Church of St. Mary the Virgin), Putney, is an Anglican church in Putney, London sited next to the River Thames, beside the southern approach to Putney Bridge. There has been a centre of Christian worship on this site from at least the 13th century, and the church is still very active today. It is also noteworthy because in 1647, during the English Civil War, the church was the site of the Putney Debates on the English constitution. It has been Grade II* listed since 1955.

The building itself has seen many changes; parts of the existing church have survived from medieval times, such as the 15th century tower and some of the nave arcading, and the early 16th century Bishop West Chapel, built by Bishop Nicholas West. Most of the building, however, dates from the substantial reconstruction of 1836 to the designs of Edward Lapidge. He largely rebuilt the body of the church in yellow brick with stone dressings and perpendicular windows. Some of the medieval pillars and arches in the nave were retained, but both the north and the south arcades were widened.

In 1973 an arson attack gutted much of the church. Rebuilding was not completed until nearly ten years later, when the church was rehallowed by Rt. Revd. Michael Marshall the Bishop of Woolwich, on 6 February 1982. Since the restoration, the altar has not been positioned, as is usual, in the chancel or even at the eastern end of the nave, but instead halfway down the northern side of the nave, with the seating arranged to reflect this. The architect of the restoration was Ronald Sims. The pipe organ is by the Danish firm of Marcussen & Søn.

Inscribed on a wall of the church is a quote from the Putney debates (1647) by Colonel Thomas Rainsborough:

For really I think that the poorest he that is in England hath a life to live, as the greatest he.

In 2005 a new extension to the church, the "Brewer Building", built at a cost of £1.7m was opened by the Bishop of Southwark.

St. Mary's is one of the two churches in the Parish of Putney, the other being All Saints' Church, Putney Common. The parish is within the Wandsworth Deanery, the Kingston Episcopal Area and the Diocese of Southwark. The last vicar of St. Mary's was the Reverend Canon Dr Giles Fraser, who was also lecturer in philosophy at Wadham College, Oxford, and an authority on Nietzsche, and who is currently the parish priest at St Mary's, Newington, in the Elephant and Castle.

Notable people associated

  • Samuel Pepys mentions St. Mary's in his diary for 1667. He attended a service where he heard 'a good sermon'. He saw the girls of the school 'few of which were pretty'.
  • Nicholas West (1461 – 28 April 1533), bishop and diplomatist, was born at Putney, and educated at Eton and at King's College, Cambridge, of which he became a fellow in 1486. He built two beautiful chapels, one in St. Mary's and the other in Ely Cathedral, where he is buried.
  • Thomas Cromwell, born in Putney, was Chancellor of England between 1533 and 1540.
  • Charles Dickens made St. Mary's the setting for David Copperfield's marriage to Dora Spenlow.
  • References

    St Mary's Church, Putney Wikipedia


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