The story would have stopped there if some people in the church had got their way. They proposed to clear the site and sell the land for redevelopment but the discovery that the south aisle and east window survived and a public outcry led to the rebuilding of the church. In 2002 the long reconstruction project came to an end and the church was reopened as a centre for peace and reconciliation. Of the 3 million pounds it cost to rebuild the Clothworkers company contributed 1.2 million to the project. The rest of the money was collected from a variety of sources from individual donations to the heritage lottery. It was incredible that the facade was rebuilt closely to the original when these days architects like making great distinctions between the old and the new, in one proposal one of these architects wanted to replace the facade with glass but was quickly dropped due to its insensitive nature. The building today offers a haven in the centre of the busy and noisy commercial district, if not rebuilt the church would have only been replaced by characterless dull office block. It also helps to give a sense of the original scale of the street, where once the church was the tallest building it is now the smallest, the street being dominated by ever more high rise office blocks. left how the church looks today, a tribute to the determination of people to maintain the cities medieval heritage.
I've been trying to find images of the three windows commemorating the explorer Henry Hudson that were installed in St Ethelburga in 1928-30, and destroyed by the bomb in 1993. Surprisingly, pre-1993 photos of the interior are as rare as hen's teeth online, though it must have been photographed many times. Do you have any recommendations of places I might look (either online or perhaps more likely in print)?
The 1.2 million pounds generously donated by the Clothworkers' Foundation towards the restoration of St Ethelburga's was at least matched by the late Sir William McAlpine, who had promised in the aftermath of the 1993 bombing to rebuild the medieval church at cost. Several years later, after the City of London planning committee had voted 17 to 1 for the restoration option, McAlpine honoured his earlier commitment, with the splendid result that we see today. A worthy home for the Centre for Reconciliation and Peace, opened by the Prince of Wales in 2002, with the Bishop of London Richard Chartres and the late Cardinal Basil Hume as joint patrons.
Very nice story about St. Ethelburga.
ReplyDeleteThank-you for commenting, Yes it is a nice story, with the church rising like a phoenix from the ashes of a disaster.
ReplyDeleteI've been trying to find images of the three windows commemorating the explorer Henry Hudson that were installed in St Ethelburga in 1928-30, and destroyed by the bomb in 1993. Surprisingly, pre-1993 photos of the interior are as rare as hen's teeth online, though it must have been photographed many times. Do you have any recommendations of places I might look (either online or perhaps more likely in print)?
ReplyDeleteA wonderful feat to restore this ancient building thus preserving the scale and sense of the medieval
ReplyDeleteCity.
The 1.2 million pounds generously donated by the Clothworkers' Foundation towards the restoration of St Ethelburga's was at least matched by the late Sir William McAlpine, who had promised in the aftermath of the 1993 bombing to rebuild the medieval church at cost.
ReplyDeleteSeveral years later, after the City of London planning committee had voted 17 to 1 for the restoration option, McAlpine honoured his earlier commitment, with the splendid result that we see today. A worthy home for the Centre for Reconciliation and Peace, opened by the Prince of Wales in 2002, with the Bishop of London Richard Chartres and the late Cardinal Basil Hume as joint patrons.