All Saints Notting Hill

Church in Notting Hill, United Kingdom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

All Saints Notting Hill

All Saints Notting Hill is a Church of England parish church in Talbot Road, Notting Hill, London that is affiliated to the Anglo-Catholic Forward in Faith movement.[1] The church is built in a Victorian Gothic Revival style with striking polychromatic decoration. For heritage purposes the church is a Grade II* listed building.[2]

Quick Facts Location, Country ...
All Saints Notting Hill
Thumb
Thumb
LocationTalbot Road, Notting Hill
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipAnglo-Catholic
WebsiteAll Saints Notting Hill
History
Founder(s)Samuel Walker
DedicationAll Saints
Associated peopleWalter Passmore
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade II*
Designated29 July 1949
Architect(s)William White, with Sir George Gilbert Scott
StyleGothic Revival
Years built1861
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseLondon
Episcopal areaKensington
ArchdeaconryKensington
DeaneryKensington and Chelsea
Clergy
Priest(s)Philip Corbett SSC
Curate(s)Bello Mahilum
Laity
Reader(s)Gladvin Allen
Close

History

Summarize
Perspective

The building of All Saints' Church was begun in 1852 for the Reverend Dr Samuel Walker. Walker was a wealthy property speculator, one of several buying up land in the area that was then to be known as Kensington Park.[3]

The church was designed by architect William White, working with Sir George Gilbert Scott as to be the centrepiece of Walker's local property development, and a church without pew rents.[4]

Thumb
Engraving of William White's design for All Saints, complete with spire

Walker's property speculation in the area was a financial failure and he sold his interests to others speculating on property in the newly emerging area of Kensington Park.[5]

As a result, the church-building was left unfinished for a number of years during which time in some quarters it received the epthet "All-Sinners-in-the-Mud".[6]

All Saints was eventually completed in 1861 at a cost of £25,000, without its spire,[4] for the incumbency of Reverend John Light of Trinity College Dublin.[7]

The tower is 100 feet (30 m) high and is said to resemble the Medieval Gothic Belfry of Bruges, Belgium.[8]

All Saints suffered serious bomb damage in The Blitz of World War II,[9] along with neighbouring buildings including Pinehurst Court, at 1–9 Colville Gardens. The first bombs fell on 26 September 1940, and the church was hit again in March and June 1944. The Lady Chapel and the south transept chapel were destroyed.[4] Restoration work was completed in 1951.[10]

On October 14, 1966, Pink Floyd played the first of a number of events known as Notting Hill Fayre at All Saints church hall. The events, staged by the London Free School, were the forerunners of the internationally-renowned Notting Hill Carnival. Three years later Hawkwind also played the church hall. [11]

Clergy

From 1931 to 1961 the vicar was the outgoing and gregarious Fr John Twisaday, who established the high church worship tradition at All Saints. From January 2025 Rev. Charles Card-Reynolds will be Vicar.[12]

Vicars

  • 1861–85 John Light
  • 1885–96 Robert Trench
  • 1896–1907 Philip Herbert Learyk
  • 1907–31 Herbert Ridley
  • 1932–61 John Herbert Cloete Twisaday
  • 1961–66 John Herbert Brewer
  • 1966–67 John Henry Dixon
  • 1967–74 Peter Clark
  • 1976–2018 John Brownsell
  • 2019-2024 Philip Corbett
  • 2025- Charles Card-Reynolds

Decoration and fittings

The chancel has paintings by Henry Holiday.[9][13]

Notable parishioners

Walter Passmore (1867–1946), a singer and actor best known for his comic baritone roles in Gilbert and Sullivan operas with the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, was a choirboy at All Saints.[14]

Organs and Organists

Organs

Thumb
1866: interior looking east with the organ briefly glimpsed in the south aisle.
The north transept of All Saints', Notting Hill, was designed by Mr. White, specially for the reception of the organ, and with this end in view he fenestrated it with a large traceried rose placed high up in the wall [...] the authorities caused the organ to be placed in the south transept, thus completely blocking up a very beautiful four-light window. The effect of the opposite transept, with the blank wall space left perfectly bare, is very unpleasing. [...] The organ in question, by Gray and Davison, occupies an elevated position, and has the somewhat unusual appendage (for a modern instrument) of a choir organ.[16]
  • 1902. A new three-manual organ by Norman and Beard was installed,[17] in the north chancel and north transept.[18]
  • 1952. The organ was reconstructed by Percy Daniel & Co, Clevedon, with the pipe-work placed inside the tower speaking into the church via an opening onto the west gallery.[19]

Organists

Assistant Organists

  • 1877-79 Henry William Richards (16 April 1865, Notting Hill) - 4 January 1956. Reading). Mus.D. (Dunelm, 1903), Hon.R.A.M., Hon.R.C.M., F.R.C.O.[20]
  • September 1959 Assistant organist post advertised at £40 p.a.[30]

Notes

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.