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Building    From 1825 

St Luke's Church West Norwood

Categories: Religion

St Luke's Church West Norwood

Designed by Francis Octavius Bedford. Unusually it is orientated north-south instead of east-west. This is because of a stipulation at the time that no building in Lower Norwood should be built within 100 feet of an existing building without the permission of the owner of the other building.

Credit for this entry to: Alan Patient of www.plaquesoflondon.co.uk

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This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
St Luke's Church West Norwood

Creations i

St Luke's West Norwood - railing replacement

These railings were completed in 2009 to replace the original railings which ...

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St Luke's West Norwood WW2 Memorial Garden

This Memorial Garden, re-dedicated in 2009, commemorates the residents of Wes...

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Other Subjects

Gravel Pit Chapel

Gravel Pit Chapel

Taking its name from a nearby gravel pit, this was established in Hackney between 1715 and 1716. Initially it was for a nonconformist congregation, but eventually became Unitarian. In 1809 it moved...

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1 memorial
Rodney Smith

Rodney Smith

Evangelist. Born in a gipsy tent in Epping Forest, Wanstead. He began to hawk clothes pegs and tinware made by his father and became known as 'The Singing Gipsy Boy' because of his eagerness to sin...

Person, Religion, USA

1 memorial
Royal Garrison Church of St George

Royal Garrison Church of St George

Built by Thomas Henry Wyatt, in the Italianate style. It became a royal garrison church in 1928, following a visit by King George V. It contains many mosaics, particularly one by Antonio Salviati, ...

Building, Armed Forces, Religion

1 memorial
Miss M. Dutton

Miss M. Dutton

Committee Member of Kingston Spiritualist Church in 1927.

Person, Religion

1 memorial
St Leonards, St Martin's-le-Grand

St Leonards, St Martin's-le-Grand

The church seems to have occupied a site between St Martin's-le-Grand and Foster Lane. Destroyed in the Great Fire its ruins were, amazingly, not removed until the early 1800s.

Building, Religion

1 memorial