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Grade II listed church in York, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St Lawrence Parish Church, York | |
---|---|
OS grid reference | SE 61203 51258 |
Denomination | Church of England |
Churchmanship | Traditional Anglo-Catholic/Prayer Book Catholic |
Website | stlawrenceparishchurch |
History | |
Status | Parish church |
Dedication | St Lawrence |
Consecrated | Churchyard 12th-century or earlier – new building consecrated 1883 |
Architecture | |
Functional status | Active |
Heritage designation | Grade II listed [1] (with Grade I listed tower[2] and scheduled monuments in churchyard)[3] |
Designated | Grade I: 14 June 1954, Grade II: 24 June 1983, Scheduled monument: 24 April 2002 |
Administration | |
Province | Province of York |
Diocese | Diocese of York |
Archdeaconry | Archdeaconry of York |
Deanery | York Deanery |
Parish | St Lawrence with St Nicholas, York |
Clergy | |
Vicar(s) | vacant |
Laity | |
Director of music | Jonty Ward |
St Lawrence Parish Church is an active Anglican church in York, England. It is situated in Lawrence Street, just outside Walmgate Bar.
It is dedicated to St Lawrence, possibly in deliberate reference to the Basilica of Saint Lawrence outside the Walls, in Rome. The tower of the old church building remains in the churchyard – the doorway and lower half date to the 12th century. This tower is now cared for by the Churches Conservation Trust.[4] The oldest gravestones in the churchyard lie on the site of the demolished nave and chancel and include tombs of the Heskeths and Yarburghs of Heslington Hall.
The parish was united with that of St Nicholas after that church was destroyed in the Siege of York. St Lawrence was also severely damaged, but was rebuilt at the Restoration, and silver and furniture from c. 1669 remain.[5] Sir John Vanbrugh married Henrietta Maria Yarburgh here on a snowy day in 1719.[6] The churchyard contains the 1830 Rigg Memorial – built by public subscription for six children who died in a boating accident, with an epitaph by James Montgomery – and the 1820 'medicine pot' memorial to Dr Oswald Allen (who ran the York Dispensary charity) and his wife.[7] These monuments, together with the tower, are Grade I listed.
The old church was demolished in 1881–83 to build a much larger building, the second-largest religious building in York after York Minster. It is the leading work of J. B. Hall of Canterbury. The spire was added in 1891–3, with an illuminated clock given in memory of his parents by Alderman Robert Fawcett.[8] The church contains the elaborate c. 1400 font, moved from the old church. Much of the stained glass was produced by the Knowles family of Stonegate, including the recently restored east window.[9] There is a very unusual and large art deco First World War memorial window depicting the Somme battlefield, the city of York, and a knight and grail cup, designed in 1929 by Joan Fulleylove. The chancel area was remodelled by Robert 'Mousey' Thompson of Kilburn as a Second World War memorial. The church has otherwise been little altered.
The tower of the old church is designated as a Grade I listed building,[2] and as part of a scheduled monument which includes the buried remains of the medieval church and majority of its burial ground.[3] The 19th-century church is Grade II listed.[1]
Fr. Adam Romanis, who became Vicar in 2020, retired from the post in August 2024.[10][11]
The church was given a set of 8 bells hung for change ringing in 1999, by the bellringers of York, to mark the millennium. They were all cast (in 1947, 1988, and 1999 respectively), and hung together, by John Taylor & Co, of Loughborough. These are rung by the St Lawrence Society of Change Ringers. Four of the bells formerly hung in Charrington's Brewery, London. The bells were all 'christened' on Easter Day of 1999 after the historic dedications of religious houses within the modern parish: (treble-tenor) St Helen, St Edward the Confessor, St Andrew, All Hallows, St Catherine, St Michael, St Nicholas, St Laurence.[12]
The church has a large Community Hall, built on the former site of a line of cottages belonging to the Vicars Choral of York Minster in 1935.
In early 2014, the east window of the church was severely damaged in high winds. The window has since been restored.[13]
St Lawrence in 2014 made online and print news due to wide online circulation of a video of the Trololo song being performed there as part of a University of York Brass Band Society concert.[14]
In the last few years the parish church has seen fresh rejuvenation. In 2020 an organ which had previously been in St Michael Le Belfrey church, central York, was moved to St Lawrence's, refurbished and installed. The church hall has been fully refurbished.[15] In 2016 the Rigg Memorial was restored by York Civic Trust[16] and was dedicated by the Archbishop of York on 11 March 2017.[17] During 2016 and 2017 the church underwent a major building project which included the installation of a new heating system, significant re-wiring and lighting costing in excess of £200,000.[18] In conjunction with the York Civic Trust the Vicar and Churchwardens are working on an extensive churchyard improvement project which will look to address parking, lighting, the footprint of the medieval church and the boundary walls. These improvements to the church and the excellent acoustics have led to an increased use of the building for concerts.[19]
The church has links with the York Normandy Veterans' group, and in 2021 installed a newly designed memorial window on the Western wall of the tower lanai, created by Helen Whittaker of Barley Studios.[20]
In September 2023, York CAMRA held their annual beer festival in the church and hall, with great success.[21] This was repeated in September 2024, which marked the Fiftieth York Beer Festival.[22][23]
The church maintains a robed choir. It currently holds four services every Sunday, using predominantly Book of Common Prayer rites, and is one of only two York parish churches still to sing Evensong every Sunday. The church also recites the Ten Commandments at every B.C.P. Communion.[24]
According to the Church website, the regular services are as follows:
Sunday
08:00—Matins (Book of Common Prayer)
08:30—Holy Communion (B.C.P.)
10:15—Parish Eucharist (according to 1928 Prayer Book)
18:30—Choral Evensong (B.C.P.)
Tuesday
07:30—Matins (B.C.P.)
12:00—Eucharist followed by Social Club
Wednesday
12:30—Eucharist (B.C.P.)
19:00—Holy Hour followed by Mass or Eucharistic devotion.
Thursday
07:30—Matins (B.C.P.)
18:30—Evensong (B.C.P., lay-led)
Friday
07:30—Matins and Communion (B.C.P.), followed by communal breakfast.[25]
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