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The church of St Dunstan-in-the-West is in Fleet Street in London. A fragment of the old churchyard remains near Bream's Buildings[1].

First founded around 1000 AD, there is a possibility that a church on this site was one of the Lundenwic strand settlement churches, like St Martin's in the Fields, the first St Mary le Strand, St Clement Danes and St Brides. These may well pre-date any of the churches within the City walled area. It was first mentioned in 1185. Henry III gained possession of it and its endowments from Westminster Abbey by 1237 and then granted these and the advowson to the 'House of Converts' ie of the converted Jews, which led to its neglect of its parochial responsibilities. This institution was eventually transformed into the court of the Master of the Rolls.

The present building was built on its predecessor's churchyard to allow the widening of Fleet Street, and was designed by John Shaw the Elder (1776–1832) who died before the church was completed so it was left in the hands of his son John Shaw the Younger (1803–1870) in 1833[2]. It is based on the design of St Helen's Pavement in York. The Shaws were prominet architects of Fleet Street who designed two other buildings (now offices) close to the church.

The church's facade holds an extraordinary chiming clock, with mannequins which strike the bells with their clubs. They perhaps represent Gog and Magog, the whole clock is mounted in a separate pavilion and dates from 1671 and adorned the previous church, perhaps commissioned to celebrate its escape from destruction in the Great Fire of London of 1666[3]. On the rebuilding by the Shaws it was exiled, in 1828, to a mansion in Regent's Park, which became the St Dunstan's College for the blind. It was returned by the generosity of Lord Rothermere, the press baron, in 1935 to ostensibly mark the Jubilee of King George V.

There is also a statue of Queen Elizabeth I, placed above the entrance to the old parochial school in 1766, which was taken from the front of the old Ludgate which had been demolished at that time. This statue dates from 1586 and hence contemporary with her, it is thought to be the oldest outdoor statue in London. Within the porch below are three statues of ancient Britons also from the gate which were probably meant to represent King Lud and his two sons.

Apart from losing its stained glass, the church survived the Blitz largely intact.

Adjacent to the Virgin Queen is a bust of Lord Northcliffe, the newspaper proprietor; he and Rothermere were the Harmsworth brothers. In 1896 they initiated the first popular daily newspaper, the Daily Mail and founded the Daily Mirror in 1903. Northcliffe acquired The Times in 1914. They were the founders of modern mass circulation journalism.

Samuel Pepys mentions the church in his diary but he only knew the old medieval building which was taken down in the early 19th century because it caused congestion to part of Fleet Street[4].

The church has associations with many famous people, for example:

The church has been associated with the Worshipful Company of Cordwainers (old English for shoemakers) since the fifteenth century. Once a year the company holds a service here to commemorate the benefactors John Fisher and Richard Minge, after which children used to be given a penny for each time they ran around the church.

St Dunstan is the only church in England to share its building with the Romanian Orthodox community.

Coordinates: 51°30′51.3″N, 00°06′36.8″W

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "London:the City Churches” Pevsner,N/Bradley,S New Haven, Yale, 1998 ISBN 0300096550
  2. ^ Pevsner(Ibid)
  3. ^ Mentioned in Pepys Diary "Samuel Pepys-The Shorter Pepys" Latham,R(Ed) p484: Harmondsworth,1985 ISBN 0140094180
  4. ^ "The City of London Churches" Betjeman,J Andover, Pikin, 1967 ISBN 0853721122
  5. ^ "The Churches of the City of London" Reynolds,H: London, Bodley Head, 1922

[edit] External links

This text was last fetched from this Wikipedia page (where you can edit it) on
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St Dunstan-in-the-West in 1842
St Dunstan-in-the-West in 1842
Interior of St Dunstan-in-the-West
Interior of St Dunstan-in-the-West

Annotations

  • St Dunstan-in-the-West is the westernmost church in the City. The Great Fire stopped a few doors east and the church was not burned. However, it was entirely rebuilt about 1833

    in the Gothic style. In the old church the poet John Donne was once vicar, and Isaac Walton, author of The Compleat Angler was a vestryman. Walton described how Donne would preach “in earnest, weeping sometime for his Auditory, sometime with them; always preaching to himself, like an Angel from a cloud…”. On the exterior of the new church is a survivor from the old one - a famous oddity of a clock from 1670, described by Strype: “two savages or Hercules, with clubs erect, which quarterly strike the two bells hanging there..” The clubs still strike at the quarter hour. The church is used by the Russian Orthodox Church, and contains impressive iconic imagery.
    Fleet Street EC4
    Open 9am-3pm Tues and Fri
    10am-4pm Sun
    lifted from
    http://www.cityoflondonchurches.com/stdunstanwest.htm
    see the map of places of sermons.
    http://www.cityoflondonchurches.com/mappage.htm
    modern pic version today :
    http://www.stdunstaninthewest.org/
    more info here:
    http://www.stdunstaninthewest.org/homepage.htm

  • St. Dunstan-in-the-West some entries from the Book of Days…

    The frame of the hour-glass of St. Dunstan’s, Fleet Street, was of solid silver, and contained enough of the precious metal to be melted down, and converted into staff-heads for the parish beadles.

    Strange Marriages…

    but a stranger scene took place at St. Dunstan’s church on one occasion, during the performance of the marriage ceremony. The bridegroom was a carpenter, and he followed the service devoutly enough until the words occurred, ‘With this ring I thee wed.’ He repeated these, and then shaking his fist at the bride added, ‘And with this fist I’ll break thy head.’ The clergyman refused to proceed, but, says the account, ‘the fellow declared he meant no harm,’ and the confiding bride ‘believed he did but jest,’ whereupon the service was completed.

    Curious Advertisements…

    ‘The much approved necklaces of Joynts, of the great traveller J. C., which absolutely eases children in breeding teeth, by cutting them, and thereby preventing feavers, convulsions, &c., are sold by P. Barrel, at the “Golden Ball,” under St. Dunstan’s Church, in Fleet Street.’—1679.

St Dunstan-in-the-West in 1842
St Dunstan-in-the-West in 1842
Interior of St Dunstan-in-the-West
Interior of St Dunstan-in-the-West

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References in the diary

1662
Aug: 10, 17
1664
Jul: 14
1665
Feb: 25
St Dunstan-in-the-West in 1842
St Dunstan-in-the-West in 1842
Interior of St Dunstan-in-the-West
Interior of St Dunstan-in-the-West