NOTES: Sir Christopher Wren's church (1687) was extensively damaged by bombs in December 1940. It was restored by Cecil Brown in association with E. B. Glanfield between 1954 and 1957, but no longer as a parish church, instead as the official church of the Corporation of the City of London.
NOTES: Sir Christopher Wren's church (1687) was extensively damaged by bombs in December 1940. It was restored by Cecil Brown in association with E. B. Glanfield between 1954 and 1957, but no longer as a parish church, instead as the official church of the Corporation of the City of London.
NOTES: Sir Christopher Wren's church (1687) was extensively damaged by bombs in December 1940. It was restored by Cecil Brown in association with E. B. Glanfield between 1954 and 1957, but no longer as a parish church, instead as the official church of the Corporation of the City of London.
NOTES: Sir Christopher Wren's church (1687) was extensively damaged by bombs in December 1940. It was restored by Cecil Brown in association with E. B. Glanfield between 1954 and 1957, but no longer as a parish church, instead as the official church of the Corporation of the City of London.
NOTES: Sir Christopher Wren's church (1687) was extensively damaged by bombs in December 1940. It was restored by Cecil Brown in association with E. B. Glanfield between 1954 and 1957, but no longer as a parish church, instead as the official church of the Corporation of the City of London.
NOTES: Sir Christopher Wren's church (1687) was extensively damaged by bombs in December 1940. It was restored by Cecil Brown in association with E. B. Glanfield between 1954 and 1957, but no longer as a parish church, instead as the official church of the Corporation of the City of London.
NOTES: Sir Christopher Wren's church (1687) was extensively damaged by bombs in December 1940. It was restored by Cecil Brown in association with E. B. Glanfield between 1954 and 1957, but no longer as a parish church, instead as the official church of the Corporation of the City of London.
NOTES: The Royal Association in Aid of the Deaf and Dumb (later the Royal Association for Deaf People) began in 1854. Their first purpose-built deaf church, at Oxford Street and Lumley Street, opened in 1873 to designs by A. W. Blomfield. This church was demolished in 1923 in the face of redevelopment by the Grosvenor Estate and the compensation paid enabled the charity to purchase two new sites, in Acton and Clapham, and they commissioned Edward Maufe who provided two very similar sets of designs for the new churches. The Acton church retained the dedication and some of the fittings from the Oxford Street church. The institute is on the ground floor with the church above it with a raked floor. The church and institute building (but not the former, and much altered, chaplain's house) is listed Grade II. The church closed in 2014 and was sold in 2015; it opened in 2016 as St Thomas Cathedral in the Syriac Orthodox Church.
NOTES: The Royal Association in Aid of the Deaf and Dumb (later the Royal Association for Deaf People) began in 1854. Their first purpose-built deaf church, at Oxford Street and Lumley Street, opened in 1873 to designs by A. W. Blomfield. This church was demolished in 1923 in the face of redevelopment by the Grosvenor Estate and the compensation paid enabled the charity to purchase two new sites, in Acton and Clapham, and they commissioned Edward Maufe who provided two very similar sets of designs for the new churches. The Acton church retained the dedication and some of the fittings from the Oxford Street church. The institute is on the ground floor with the church above it with a raked floor. The church and institute building (but not the former, and much altered, chaplain's house) is listed Grade II. The church closed in 2014 and was sold in 2015; it opened in 2016 as St Thomas Cathedral in the Syriac Orthodox Church.