St Andrew's Church, Leytonstone

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St Andrew's Church, Leytonstone
View of the eastern end of St Andrew's Church
LocationColworth Road Leytonstone, London, E11 1JD
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
Websitehttps://www.standrewsleytonstone.org/
History
StatusActive
DedicationAndrew the Apostle
Dedicated1887
Architecture
Functional statusParish church
Heritage designationGrade II listed
Designated27 February 2006
ArchitectArthur Blomfield
StyleEarly English Gothic
Years built1886–1893
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseChelmsford
Episcopal areaBarking
ArchdeaconryWest Ham
DeaneryWaltham Forest
ParishSt Andrew Leytonstone

The Church of St Andrew, Leytonstone, is a Victorian era Church of England parish church in Leytonstone, East London, adjacent to Epping Forest. It is a Grade II listed building.

The church is built on land which was part of the Wallwood Estate, which had been purchased in 1817 by William Cotton,[1] a wealthy banker who would become the Governor of the Bank of England in 1843. He was also a leading philanthropist; besides supporting educational charities, he founded three new churches in the East End of London and made donations towards more than seventy others.[2] William Cotton died in 1866; his son Sir Henry Cotton sold the estate for housing development in 1874,[1] but one plot of land adjoining Forest Glade, part of Epping Forest, was reserved for the building of a new church as a memorial to his father.[3]

St Andrew's, Leytonstone, seen from the north from Forest Glade; circa 1904 before the construction of the vestries.

In 1882, a temporary corrugated iron building or "tin tabernacle" was erected on the plot to serve as a chapel of ease to St John the Baptist's Church,[4] and was provisionally called the Cotton Memorial Church.[2] Initially, the services were conducted by the clergy of St John's,[5] but William Manning was appointed as the first incumbent in 1885.[6] Work started on a large new church building to the design of Sir Arthur Blomfield, funded jointly by the Cotton family, the Bishop of St Alban's Fund and by the new congregation.[5] The foundation stone was laid by Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught in a ceremony on 18 June 1886, which was also attended by the Lord Mayor of London and five bishops;[2] an account of the construction work by Woodward and Wilson, and a copy of The Times were sealed under the stone.[7] The chancel was funded by the Cotton family as a memorial to William Cotton and was built to the highest standards;[2] this and the first three bays of the nave were completed and closed off with a temporary wall so that the church could be consecrated and opened for services;[5] the ceremony was conducted by Thomas Legh Claughton, the Bishop of St Albans on 30 April 1887.[7] It became a separate ecclesiastical parish on 29 December 1887 and Manning became the first vicar. The congregation set about raising the £2,500 to complete the west end of the building,[5] which when finished was dedicated by Bishop Claughton on Maundy Thursday, 30 March 1893.[7]

St Andrew's quickly became the most popular church in the district, and in 1903 were able to report a total Sunday congregation of 1,519 people, 723 in the morning and 796 in the evening.[8] In 1904, a church hall was built in the Arts and Crafts style, designed by Henry Charles Smart,[9] an architect who lived in the parish.[10] A vestry was added in 1913.[4]

By the late 1960s, declining congregations at St Andrew's brought the threat of redundancy and a scheme to make the buildings more viable was put in hand. The church hall was sold,[2] and in a conversion completed in 1977, the western bays of the nave were split from the main part of the church with a full-height wooden partition, glazed to the top.[3] One of the bays was converted into a modern kitchen.[9] The old church hall, which had been purchased by the adjacent Leytonstone School, was burned down in a suspected arson attack in September 2002,[11] and a sympathetic three-storey development of thirteen flats was later constructed in its place.[12] St Andrew's Church was given Grade II listed building status on 27 February 2006.[3]

In June 2007, Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, together with Eric Pickles, the Secretary of State for Communities, visited St Andrew's in connection with the church's cooperative work with the nearby Shri Nathji Sanatan Hindu Mandir in Whipps Cross Road.[13] Under the leadership of the current vicar, Fr Paul Kennington, the church has applied for a grant from the National Lottery Heritage Fund for improvements and the repair of subsidence to the vestry.[14]

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