Monday, April 21, 2025

St Mary-at-Lambeth Church and Tower

St Mary-at-Lambeth Tower

Standing beside Lambeth Palace is all that remains of St Mary-at-Lambeth church. Or, more correctly, its tower.

There has been a church on this site since before 1086, while Lambeth Palace opened in 1435.

In 1851 the church was demolished, with the exception of the tower, and rebuilt, so that more seats could be added. This Middle Ages inspired building remained in use until 1972. 

St Mary-at-Lambeth Immersion Font

At the base of the tower, is an immersion font. Archbishop of Canterbury Edward Benson (1883-1896) appointed his close friend John Reeve as the Rector of St Mary's, in 1894. Reeve commissioned this font in Benson's memory. It is one of only two known examples of an immersion font to be found in an Anglican church.

St Mary-at-Lambeth Tower

The tower is still accessible to visitors who, for a small fee, can climb the 131 steps to the roof of the tower.

St Mary-at-Lambeth Tower Viewing Platform

The viewing area allows for a 360° panoramic view over London. This includes the River Thames, the Palace of Westminster, Lambeth Palace, the South Bank, the City of London, The Shard, Canary Wharf and more.

St Mary-at-Lambeth stained glass

The Howard family, who lived opposite the church in Norfolk House, used St Mary's as their chapel. They were a powerful family, most famous among them being Katherine Howard, fifth wife of Henry VIII.

John Tradescant family tomb

Many famous people have been buried here, including Archbishops of Canterbury, William Bligh, John Tradescant and his family, Ann Boleyn's mother and many more.

It is the oldest structure in Lambeth, except for the crypt of Lambeth Palace itself, with its burials and monuments being a record of over 950 years of the community

St Mary-at-Lambeth stained glass

Timeline

1042 - King Hardicanute dies at wedding feast on site of church

1062 - First church built by Countess Goda, sister of Edward the Confessor

1086 - The Domesday Book records a church dedicated to St Mary standing on this site, and a village of 79 households, meadows, and plough-land.

1200 - On land adjacent, a Palace was built as the London residence of the Archbishops of Canterbury.

1378 - The wooden church was rebuilt in stone. The interior was enriched with the tombs of members of the Archbishop's household, and gifts of furniture and ornaments.

1552 - Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk extends the East end of the North Aisle.

1610 - Richard Bancroft is the first of six Archbishops of Canterbury to be buries in the church.

1620 - John Tradescant, and his son John, came to live in the parish.

1623 - The bells are rung for the return of Charles I from Spain.

1633 - The grandson of John Tradescant the Elder was baptised at St Mary's.

1638 - John Tradescant buried in a tomb outside the church. He had introduced, into England,  many of the plants taken for granted today.

1647 - The artist Wenceslaus Hollar climbed the Tower to draw the view of London. There was still no bridge, and a ferry crossed to a landing stage outside the doors of the church.

1662 - John Tradescant who followed his father as Royal gardener and made several voyages to America, is buried here.

1688 - Mary of Modena, wife of James II, sheltered under the church tower while awaiting to flee the country.

1692 - Elias Ashmole is buried in the church. He acquired the Tradescant collection to form the Ashmolean Museum.

1787 - Richard Bacon, who, while sitting in his home in Lambeth, was struck by a thunderbolt is buried in the church.

1790 - At the age of 15 the painter J M W Turner made his debut at the Royal Academy when he exhibited a watercolour of Lambeth Palace and the church tower.

1814 - The churchyard was full and extended. Fields and the riverbank became factories, and St Mary's was surrounded by industrial slums.

1817 - Admiral Bligh, of the Bounty, is buried in a tomb in the churchyard.

1842 - Arthur Sullivan, of Gilbert & Sullivan, is baptised in the church.

1851 - The church, except for the tower, was demolished and rebuilt in order to make more seats for the poor. The new work was designed in the style of the Middle Ages.

1854 - The churchyard is closed, with an estimated 26,000 burials having taken place.

1904 - A total immersion font is installed to commemorate Archbishop Benson. There is only one other in an Anglican church.

1904 - The West window is presented in memory of Archbishop Moore, who consecrated to American Bishops.

1972 - The congregation moved to a modern building which better suited their needs. The old church was declared redundant, deconsecrated, and its interior emptied in readiness for demolition.

1974 - Rosemary Nicholson visited to see the tomb of John Tradescant, her gardening hero, and determined to rescue the church.

1977 - The world's first museum of garden history opened.




3 comments:

  1. Visited yesterday. Very impressed. So much to see and enjoy including the Café serving excellent food and set in a small garden of rare and unusual plants. The permanent Garden Exhibition is fascinating as is the Immersion Font and the Monument to Captain Bligh. Well worth a visit.

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  2. Visited yesterday. What an interesting venue with it's Permanent Garden Exhibition, unusual Immersion Font dedicated to Archbishop White Benson, lovely Café serving very good food and all the beautiful monuments to famous people like Captain Bligh of the Bounty fame. Being a volunteer at Canterbury Cathedral was interested in the partially obscured stained glass window depicting Thomas Becket with the sword through his head and also another of St. Augustine.

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    Replies
    1. It is a wonderful and unique place, that I have since revisited. There is so much history, contained within this building, that I am glad that much of it was saved.

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