91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Plaque

Christ Church Spitalfields - alterations

Erection date: 1/1/1867

Inscription

This church was re-opened January the first 1867 after being closed seven months for entensive alterations and improvements under the direction of a committee of parishioners.  The cost nearly £7,000 was defrayed by voluntary subscriptions of which Robert Hanbury Esquire and his partners contributed £3,500.  The large clock erected in 1836 was also repaired and illuminated at the expense of Charles Buxton Esquire MP.

John Patteson MA – Rector
Robert Arnold, Benjamin Brookman – Church wardens
Ewan Christian – architect

"Entensive" seems to be a portmanteau (mash-up) of "extensive" and "intensive".

Site: Christ Church Spitalfields - porch (3 memorials)

E1, Commercial Street, Christ Church Spitalfields - porch

Church, erected 1714 - 29, by Hawksmoor. . The church has a history of selecting nominatively-determined architects: Ewan Christian and Samuel William Iron (see Isambard Brunel for more.)

These 3 plaques are inside the porch: 'fire' and 'alterations' on the back wall, with 'western entrance' on the left side wall.

This is useful.

The rest of the text here comes from a modern information board in the garden to the south of the church:

Christ Church Gardens - Purchased by the church commissioners from the Heath distillery family for £600 in 1711, they stretched from Brick Lane in the east to the back of the houses in Red Lyon Street in the west. By 1732 the engine house occupied the south west corner with Christ Church School standing in the north west corner of the gardens.

An 1838 parliamentary report described Spitalfields as one of the poorest, most overcrowded and most crime-ridden districts in London: harbouring “an extremely immoral population”. During 1843-45 Red Lyon Street and its slums were cleared to make way for the new Commercial Street which now runs alongside the church gardens. In June 1859 the churchyard was closed to burials and dedicated as a ‘lawn or ornamental ground’ with a new school building at the east end on Brick Lane opening in 1873.

In 1888 trams began running along Commercial Street, and in 1891 the local authority undertook the garden maintenance, however by 1903 the gardens were widely known as Itchy park; a notorious rendezvous for homeless men seeking casual work in the fruit market.

During the 1900’s the gardens housed a small park, an adventure playgound and a youth club. Entered through the gardens, the church crypt was used as an air raid shelter during the war. Today the gardens still provide space for rest and renewal in the lee of what many believe to the architect Nicholas Hawksmoor’s finest church building.

There are 4 other plaques on the outside of this church: 2 at the entrance to the crypt, on the south side of the porch, and 2 more on the north side.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Christ Church Spitalfields - alterations

Subjects commemorated i

Christ Church Spitalfields - alterations

Wikipedia says the works were done in 1850 but the church's own website confi...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Charles Buxton

MP. Born Surrey.  Son of the anti-slavery campaigner first baronet, he entere...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Ewan Christian

Architect.  Born Marylebone.  Designed the National Portrait Gallery.  Primar...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Robert Hanbury

Nephew to Sampson Hanbury (1769-1835) from a family of Quaker merchants, bank...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Christ Church Spitalfields - alterations

Created by i

Robert Arnold

Church warden of Christ Church Spitalfields in 1867.

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Benjamin Brookman

Church warden of Christ Church Spitalfields in 1867.  There was a butcher wit...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

John Patteson

Instituted as Rector of Christ Church Spitalfields on 15 Feb 1856 and still t...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Christ Church Spitalfields - alterations

Also at this site i

Christ Church Spitalfields - fire

Christ Church Spitalfields - fire

Did they point out that the fire happened on Ash Wednesday because they saw t...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Christ Church Spitalfields - western entrance

Christ Church Spitalfields - western entrance

The western entrance is this porch but we can find no details of how it was i...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Plaque 1 - Geards

Plaque 1 - Geards

SW18, Chapel Yard, 2, Clore Building

Currently, 2011, used by the National Opera as a studio. The current building is a hall, opened in 1883, with a total of 6 plaques all on...

1 subject commemorated
David Sheppard

David Sheppard

SE15, Asylum Road, 12

Lord David Sheppard, 1929 - 2005, England cricket captain, Bishop of Woolwich then Bishop of Liverpool. Lived here from 1969 to 1975. Pec...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Corporal Charles Garforth VC

Corporal Charles Garforth VC

NW10, Letchmere Road

This stone was laid exactly 100 years to the day from his first act of bravery.

War served | WW1
1 subject commemorated
Royal Avenue

Royal Avenue

SW3, St Leonard's Terrace, 14

The plaque is actually in Royal Avenue on the side of this building. Note: Unusually traffic travels anti-clockwise around Royal Avenue.

6 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
David Cassidy - Phoenix Garden

David Cassidy - Phoenix Garden

WC2, Stacey Street, 21, Phoenix Garden, Wishing Wall

"Tell Me It's Not True" is a song sung at the end of "Blood Brothers", a musical theatre production which had a 24-year run in the West E...

1 subject commemorated