London - All Saints Church, Margaret Street - Corbett RP postcard c.1920s
- Condition : Used
- Dispatch : 2 Days
- Brand : None
- ID# : 138395075
- Quantity : 1 item
- Views : 391
- Location : United Kingdom
- Seller : justthebook (+1694)
- Barcode : None
- Start : Sun 19 Apr 2015 17:26:01 (BST)
- Close : Run Until Sold
- Remain : Run Until Sold
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Seller's Description
- Postcard
- Picture / Image: 'All Saints' Church, Margaret Street, off Oxford Street, London
- Publisher: A. Corbett, 2 Orchard St., W.
- Postally used: no
- Stamp: n/a
- Postmark(s): n/a
- Sent to: n/a
- Notes / condition: light ageing
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Image may be low res for illustrative purposes - if you need a higher definition image then please contact me and I may be able to send one. No cards have been trimmed (unless stated).
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NOTE: All postcards are sent in brand new stiffened envelopes which I have bought for the task. These are specially made to protect postcards and you may be able to re-use them. In addition there are other costs to sending so the above charge is not just for the stamp!
I will give a full refund if you are not fully satisfied with the postcard.
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Text from the free encyclopedia WIKIPEDIA may appear below to give a little background information (internal links may not work) :
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All Saints, Margaret Street, is a Grade I listed Anglican church in London. The church was designed by the architect William Butterfield and built between 1850 and 1859. It has been hailed as Butterfield's masterpiece[1] and a pioneering building of the High Victorian Gothic style that would characterize British architecture from around 1850 to 1870.[2]
The church is situated on the north side of Margaret Street in Fitzrovia, near Oxford Street, within a small courtyard. Two other buildings face onto this courtyard: one is the vicarage and the other (formerly a choir school) now houses the parish room and flats for assistant priests.
All Saints is noted for its architecture, style of worship and musical tradition.
All Saints had its origins in the Margaret Street Chapel which had stood on the site since the 1760s. The chapel had ""proceeded upwards through the various gradations of Dissent and Low-Churchism""[3] until 1829, when the Tractarian William Dodsworth became its incumbent. Dodsworth later converted to Roman Catholicism,[4] as did one of his successors, Frederick Oakeley. Before his resignation from the post, Oakeley, who was later to describe the chapel as ""a complete paragon of ugliness""[3] had conceived the idea of rebuilding the chapel in what he considered a correct ecclesiastical style, and had collected a sum of almost £30,000 for the purpose.[5] He was succeeded at the chapel by his assistant William Upton Richards,[6] who decided to carry on with the scheme.[5]
In 1845, Alexander Beresford Hope realised that this scheme could be combined with the project of the Cambridge Camden Society to found a model church. His proposal met with the approval of Upton Richards, George Chandler, rector of All Souls, and Charles Blomfield, the Bishop of London. It was decided that the architectural and ecclesiological aspects of the project would be put entirely under the control of the Cambridge Camden Society, who appointed Sir Stephen Glynne and Beresford Hope to oversee the work. In the event, Glynne was unable to take an active part, and Beresford Hope took sole charge.[5]
William Butterfield was selected as the architect and the site in Margaret Street purchased for £14,500.[5] The last service at the old chapel was held on Easter Monday, 1850, and the foundation stone of the new building was laid on All Saints' Day of that year by Edward Bouverie Pusey. Services were held in a temporary chapel in Titchfield Street for the next nine years, until the new church was finally consecrated on 28 May 1859.[7] The total cost of the church, including the site and endowments was around £70,000; several large individual donations helped to fund it.[8]
All Saints marked a new stage in the development of the Gothic Revival in English architecture. Simon Jenkins called All Saints 'architecturally England's most celebrated Victorian church'.[9] In 2014 Simon Thurley, the Chief Executive of English Heritage, listed All Saints as one of the ten most important buildings in the country.[10]
The design of the church showed Butterfield (in Sir John Betjeman's words) ""going on from where the Middle Ages left off"" as a neo-Gothic architect.[11] Previous architecture of the 19th-century Gothic Revival had copied medieval buildings. But Butterfield departed considerably from medieval Gothic practice, especially by using new materials like brick.[5]
Charles Locke Eastlake, the 19th-century architect and writer, wrote that Butterfield's design was ""a bold and magnificent endeavour to shake off the trammels of antiquarian precedent, which had long fettered the progress of the Revival, to create not a new style, but a development of previous styles"".[5] The Victorian critic John Ruskin wrote after seeing All Saints: ""Having done this, we may do anything; ... and I believe it to be possible for us, not only to equal, but far to surpass, in some respects, any Gothic yet seen in Northern countries.""[12]
Butterfield's use of building materials was innovative. All Saints is built of red brick. By contrast, Gothic Revival churches of the 1840s had typically been built of grey Kentish ragstone.[9] Red brick had previously been used to build cheap churches. But at All Saints it was chosen specially by Butterfield, who felt a mission to ""give dignity to brick"",[13] and the quality of the brick he chose made it more expensive than stone.[5] The red brick of All Saints is banded and patterned with black brick, and the spire is banded with stone. The decoration of the exterior of All Saints consists, then, of the patterns made by the different colours of the bricks used in building the church. Decoration is built into the structure. This made All Saints the first example of 'structural polychromy' in London.[14]
All Saints is also notable for its interior decoration. The interior is richly patterned, with inlays of marble and tile. The architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner described the interior as ""dazzling, though in an eminently High Victorian ostentatiousness or obtrusiveness. ... No part of the walls is left undecorated. From everywhere the praise of the Lord is drummed into you.""[15]
The east wall of the chancel is covered by a series of painting on gilded boards, the work of Ninian Comper and a restoration of earlier work by William Dyce. The Lady Chapel is also by Comper. The north wall is dominated by a large ceramic tile frieze which was designed by Butterfield. It depicts a variety of figures from the Old Testament, a central Nativity scene and depictions of Early Church Fathers, painted by Alexander Gibbs and fired by Henry Poole and Sons in 1873.[16]
The stained glass windows are limited in All Saints due to the density of buildings around the church and are mostly located in the upper part of the building. The original windows were designed by Alfred Gerente but his work was not held in high regard and was subsequently replaced. The large west window, which was originally fitted with glass by Gerente in 1853–58, was replaced in 1877 with a design by Alexander Gibbs based on the Tree of Jesse window in Wells Cathedral. The glass in the clerestory dates from 1853 and is the work of Michael O'Connor[disambiguation needed], who also designed the east window of the south chancel aisle which depicts Christ in Majesty with St Edward[disambiguation needed] and St Augustine.[17]
The baptistery in the south-west corner of the church is noted for its marble tiling which features an image of the Pelican in her Piety in the ceiling tiles, a symbol of the fall and redemption of man.[18]
type=real photographic (rp)
london borough=city of westminster
period=inter-war (1918-39)
postage condition=unposted
number of items=single
size=standard (140x89 mm)
Listing Information
Listing Type | Gallery Listing |
Listing ID# | 138395075 |
Start Time | Sun 19 Apr 2015 17:26:01 (BST) |
Close Time | Run Until Sold |
Starting Bid | Fixed Price (no bidding) |
Item Condition | Used |
Bids | 0 |
Views | 391 |
Dispatch Time | 2 Days |
Quantity | 1 |
Location | United Kingdom |
Auto Extend | No |