This wonderful church has been a favourite with film companies over the years.
A church has been on site for over 900 years.
It also has a small cemetery where many an old Bishop of London lay.
A church has been on site for over 900 years.
It also has a small cemetery where many an old Bishop of London lay.
Text and photo comes from https://www.geocaching.com/geocache/GC56PBB and https://www.allsaints-fulham.org.uk/history.htm |
All
Saints, Fulham’s ancient parish church, lies within the manor of
Fulham. The bishops of London were lords of the manor and their former
home was Fulham Palace whose grounds are adjacent to the churchyard. The
original parish boundaries encompassed both Fulham and Hammersmith
which was only made a separate parish in 1834.
The first written
references to a church and parish priest date from the 13th century, and
the dedication of the church to All Saints is first documented in 1445
at the time when the present Kentish ragstone tower was being built. It
is now the only surviving part of the 15th century building.
By
the end of the 19th century the medieval church, though much altered and
with galleries on three sides, was both not big enough and liable to
regular flooding from the Thames. In 1880 it was decided to demolish it
and a new church was designed by the architect Sir Arthur Blomfield.
This, the present church, is in the gothic perpendicular style and also
built of Kentish ragstone with Bath stone dressings. It was built 3 feet
higher than the mediaeval church to avoid being flooded.
The
interior of the church consists of a nave, with large clerestory windows
above, north and south aisles and chancel. Steps at the west end take
one down into the tower. The bells are accessed by an exterior
staircase. In 1999 glass doors were installed at the west door but the
main entrance is by the porch on the north side. At the east end of the
south aisle is the Lady Chapel which was glassed-in in 2009. The organ
is at the east end of the north aisle and beyond it are the clergy and
choir vestries. Most of the stained glass dates from the rebuilding of
the church but the monuments were saved from the old church and
reinstalled in the present building.
The parish records, dating from 1674, are deposited with the London Metropolitan Archives.
- For more information please find below leaflet
- All Saints brief guide
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