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{{Infobox church
{{Infobox church
|name = St Luke's, West Norwood
|name = St Luke's, West Norwood
|image = St Luke's Church TQ3172 019.jpg
|image = St Luke, West Norwood - geograph.org.uk - 1336037.jpg
|dedication =
|dedication =
|denomination = [[Church of England]]
|denomination = [[Church of England]]
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|vicar = Rev'd Donald Davis
|vicar = Rev'd Donald Davis
|curate =
|curate =
|website =https://stlukeswestnorwood.wordpress.com/
|website = {{url|stlukeswestnorwood.wordpress.com}}
}}
}}


'''St Luke's Church''' in [[West Norwood]] is an Anglican church that worships in a Grade&nbsp;II* [[listed building]],<ref>{{NHLE |num=1116506 |accessdate=9 May 2010}}</ref> It stands on a prominent triangular site at the south end of [[Norwood Road]], where the highway forks to become Knights Hill and Norwood High Street.
'''St Luke's Church''' in [[West Norwood]] is an Anglican church that worships in a Grade&nbsp;II* [[listed building]].<ref>{{NHLE |num=1116506 |accessdate=9 May 2010}}</ref> It stands on a prominent triangular site at the south end of [[Norwood Road]], where the highway forks to become Knights Hill and Norwood High Street.


== Parish ==
== Parish ==


When St Luke's church was first built, the area was sparsely populated and mainly comprised meadows cleared from [[Great North Wood|woodland]]. The relatively few houses included a mixture of modest cottages and villas for the rich. The only significant public buildings at that stage were the Independent (later Congregationalist) chapel in Chapel Road, which was completed in 1821, and a [[Workhouse|House of Industry]] for the Infant Poor in Elder Road. An outline of the vast subsequent changes to the locality appears in the article about [[West Norwood]].
When St Luke's church was first built, the area was sparsely populated and mainly comprised meadows cleared from [[Great North Wood|woodland]]. The relatively few houses included a mixture of modest cottages and villas for the rich. The only significant public buildings at that stage were the Independent (later Congregationalist) chapel in Chapel Road, which was completed in 1821, and a [[Workhouse|House of Industry]] for the Infant Poor in Elder Road. An outline of the vast subsequent changes to the locality appears in the article about [[West Norwood]].


During the nineteenth century, a number of new parishes were created that took in parts of the original parish of St Luke's. These were [[Holy Trinity Church, Tulse Hill|Holy Trinity Tulse Hill]], [[Christ Church, Gipsy Hill|Christ Church Gipsy Hill]], Emmanuel West Dulwich, [[St Peter's Church, Streatham|St Peter Streatham]] and [[All Saints Church, West Dulwich|All Saints West Dulwich]].
During the nineteenth century, a number of new parishes were created that took in parts of the original parish of St Luke's. These were [[Holy Trinity Church, Tulse Hill|Holy Trinity Tulse Hill]], [[Christ Church, Gipsy Hill|Christ Church Gipsy Hill]], Emmanuel West Dulwich, [[St Peter's Church, Streatham|St Peter Streatham]] and [[All Saints Church, West Dulwich|All Saints West Dulwich]].


By 1886, the population of St Luke's parish amounted to 10,377 and was served by four clergy. The total (morning and evening) attendance as a proportion of the parochial population at that time stood at 9.1%.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Cox|first = Jeffrey|year = 1982|title = The English Churches in a Secular Society - Lambeth, 1870-1930 |location= Oxford|publisher = Oxford University Press|page=294|isbn= 0195030192}}</ref> In 1901, the population of the parish stood at 16,180 but in the following year only one clergyman was in post at St Luke's and attendance at services there represented 6.0% of the parochial population.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Cox|first = Jeffrey|year = 1982|title = The English Churches in a Secular Society - Lambeth, 1870-1930 |location= Oxford|publisher = Oxford University Press|page=286|isbn= 0195030192}}</ref>
In 1886, the population of St Luke's parish amounted to 10,377 and was served by four clergy. The total (morning and evening) attendance as a proportion of the parochial population at that time stood at 9.1%.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Cox|first = Jeffrey|year = 1982|title = The English Churches in a Secular Society - Lambeth, 1870-1930 |location= Oxford|publisher = Oxford University Press|page=294|isbn= 0195030192}}</ref> In 1901, the population of the parish stood at 16,180, but in the following year, only one clergyman was in post at St Luke's and attendance at services there represented 6.0% of the parochial population.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Cox|first = Jeffrey|year = 1982|title = The English Churches in a Secular Society - Lambeth, 1870-1930 |location= Oxford|publisher = Oxford University Press|page=286|isbn= 0195030192}}</ref>


Based on statistics from the [[UK census]], the Diocese of Southwark estimates the population of St Luke's parish was 15,400 in 2001 and 16,500 in 2011.<ref>http://extranet.southwark.anglican.org/Unrestricted/OpenContent.aspx?id=56a910a600d74357bc93e24e4a8686a1</ref>
Based on statistics from the [[UK census]], the Diocese of Southwark estimates the population of St Luke's parish was 15,400 in 2001 and 16,500 in 2011.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://extranet.southwark.anglican.org/Unrestricted/OpenContent.aspx?id=56a910a600d74357bc93e24e4a8686a1|title=Getting to know your parish|publisher=[[Church of England]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131224110715/http://extranet.southwark.anglican.org/Unrestricted/OpenContent.aspx?id=56a910a600d74357bc93e24e4a8686a1|archive-date=24 December 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Building ==
==Building ==
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St Luke's Church was designed by [[Francis Octavius Bedford]] in 1822, as a result of the Church Building Act of 1818, which had been passed in response to the end of the [[Napoleonic wars]] and the growing urban population.<ref>Gilley, S. Stanley, B., ''The Cambridge History of Christianity World Christianities c1815-1914'', p106, Cambridge University Press, 2007</ref> It is known as a "[[Commissioners' church]]" because it received a grant from the Church Building Commission towards the cost of its construction; the church cost £12,947 to build, and the grant was £6,447.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Port|first = M. H|year = 2006|title = 600 New Churches: The Church Building Commission 1818-1856 |edition = 2nd|location= Reading|publisher = Spire Books|page=327|isbn= 978-1-904965-08-4}}</ref> It was constructed along with [[St Matthew's Church, Brixton|St. Matthew's, Brixton]], St. Mark's, Kennington and St. John's, Waterloo Road. These four "[[Waterloo church]]es", each dedicated to one of the four authors of gospels of the [[New Testament]], were specified to have 1800-2000&nbsp;sittings, vaults for burials, be constructed of brick with stone dressing and cost no more than £13,000 each.<ref>Revd F Lambert & K Holdaway''St Luke West Norwood 1825-1975''</ref><ref>[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=49785 Series of architectural plans of the Lambeth Waterloo churches] ''Survey of London: volume 26'' London County Council, 1956</ref>
St Luke's Church was designed by [[Francis Octavius Bedford]] in 1822, as a result of the Church Building Act of 1818, which had been passed in response to the end of the [[Napoleonic wars]] and the growing urban population.<ref>Gilley, S. Stanley, B., ''The Cambridge History of Christianity World Christianities c1815-1914'', p106, Cambridge University Press, 2007</ref> It is known as a "[[Commissioners' church]]" because it received a grant from the Church Building Commission towards the cost of its construction; the church cost £12,947 to build, and the grant was £6,447.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Port|first = M. H|year = 2006|title = 600 New Churches: The Church Building Commission 1818-1856 |edition = 2nd|location= Reading|publisher = Spire Books|page=327|isbn= 978-1-904965-08-4}}</ref> It was constructed along with [[St Matthew's Church, Brixton|St. Matthew's, Brixton]], St. Mark's, Kennington and St. John's, Waterloo Road. These four "[[Waterloo church]]es", each dedicated to one of the four authors of gospels of the [[New Testament]], were specified to have 1800-2000&nbsp;sittings, vaults for burials, be constructed of brick with stone dressing and cost no more than £13,000 each.<ref>Revd F Lambert & K Holdaway''St Luke West Norwood 1825-1975''</ref><ref>[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=49785 Series of architectural plans of the Lambeth Waterloo churches] ''Survey of London: volume 26'' London County Council, 1956</ref>


[[File:Church of Saint Luke, West Norwood (West Face - 01).jpg|thumb|left|The west face of the Church of Saint Luke]]
Unusually for a church it is oriented north-south instead of east-west. This is due to a stipulation in the original planning permission 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. An objection from the owner of the Horn's Tavern meant St Luke's had to be built in a north-south orientation to avoid falling within 100 feet of the tavern.<ref>London County Council, ''The Survey of London: Volume 26, Lambeth: Southern Area'' (London: London County Council, 1956) pp.173-80</ref>


Unusually for a church, it is oriented north–south instead of east–west. This is due to a stipulation in the original planning permission 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. An objection from the owner of the Horn's Tavern meant St Luke's had to be built in a north–south orientation to avoid falling within 100 feet of the tavern.<ref>London County Council, ''The Survey of London: Volume 26, Lambeth: Southern Area'' (London: London County Council, 1956) pp.173-80</ref>
The builder was Mrs Elizabeth Broomfield of Walworth and the foundation stone was laid by the Archbishop of Canterbury on 14&nbsp;April 1823. The church was consecrated by the Bishop of Winchester on 25 July 1825.<ref name=lambeth/> The main front, in a rather simplified version of the [[Corinthian order]], has a stone portico with six fluted columns. A tower rises in three stages from the roof just behind the portico.<ref name=lambeth/> The church is very similar in appearance to St John's, Waterloo, and to two other churches by the same architect: St&nbsp;George, Wells Way, Camberwell, and Holy Trinity, Trinity Square, [[Southwark]].<ref>{{cite journal|title=Architecture of the New Churches|journal=The Every-Day Book|author=E.I.C. [Edward John Carlos]|authorlink=Edward John Carlos|year=1825|volume=|page=}}</ref>


The builder was Mrs Elizabeth Broomfield of Walworth and the foundation stone was laid by the Archbishop of Canterbury on 14&nbsp;April 1823. The church was consecrated by the Bishop of Winchester on 25 July 1825.<ref name=lambeth/> The main front, in a rather simplified version of the [[Corinthian order]], has a stone portico with six fluted columns. A tower rises in three stages from the roof just behind the portico.<ref name=lambeth/> The church is very similar in appearance to St John's, Waterloo, and to two other churches by the same architect: St&nbsp;George, Wells Way, Camberwell, and Holy Trinity, Trinity Square, [[Southwark]].<ref>{{cite journal|title=Architecture of the New Churches|journal=The Every-Day Book|author=E.I.C. [Edward John Carlos]|author-link=Edward John Carlos|year=1825}}</ref>
At first the building was furnished with [[box pew]]s, galleries and a triple-decker [[pulpit]],{{citation needed|date=December 2012}} with seating for a total congregation of 1,412.<ref name=lambeth/> The original design had only provided one gallery, above the entrance, facing the altar. This made it possible to have one row of large windows on each of the long sides of the church rather than two storeys of smaller ones Bedford used in churches with side galleries. However, before the church opened, a decision was made to increase its capacity by installing an extra gallery. To avoid blocking the windows, this was put at the end opposite the entrance, and the altar was placed against one of the long walls, with the pulpit and reading desk against the other.<ref name=lambeth>{{cite book|title=The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Lambeth|url=https://archive.org/details/historyantiquiti00alle|first=Thomas|last=Allen|pages=[https://archive.org/details/historyantiquiti00alle/page/430 430]–3|year=1827|location=London|publisher=J. Allen}}</ref><ref>The axis of the church runs north-south, with the entrance at the north end; in both Bedford's original plans and Street's rearrangement the altar is at the north end, while the initial arrangement had it against the east side See Cherry and Pevsner 1990, pp.335-6.</ref> Thomas Allen in his ''History and Antiquities of the Parish of Lambeth'' (1827) wrote:<blockquote>Whoever looks at the exterior of this edifice will be greatly disappointed on entering it to find the church has been turned on one side; where he expects to meet with the altar he will find a gallery; if he looks for the pulpit, it meets his eye in an unusual and awkward situation, rendered still more apparent by its relative situation to the altar.<ref name=lambeth/></blockquote>


At first the building was furnished with [[box pew]]s, galleries and a triple-decker [[pulpit]],{{citation needed|date=December 2012}} with seating for a total congregation of 1,412.<ref name=lambeth/> The original design had only provided one gallery, above the entrance, facing the altar. This made it possible to have one row of large windows on each of the long sides of the church rather than two storeys of smaller ones Bedford used in churches with side galleries. However, before the church opened, a decision was made to increase its capacity by installing an extra gallery. To avoid blocking the windows, this was put at the end opposite the entrance, and the altar was placed against one of the long walls, with the pulpit and reading desk against the other.<ref name=lambeth>{{cite book|title=The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Lambeth|url=https://archive.org/details/historyantiquiti00alle|first=Thomas|last=Allen|pages=[https://archive.org/details/historyantiquiti00alle/page/430 430]–3|year=1827|location=London|publisher=J. Allen}}</ref><ref>The axis of the church runs north-south, with the entrance at the north end; in both Bedford's original plans and Street's rearrangement the altar is at the north end, while the initial arrangement had it against the east side See Cherry and Pevsner 1990, pp.335-6.</ref> Thomas Allen in his ''History and Antiquities of the Parish of Lambeth'' (1827) wrote:<blockquote>Whoever looks at the exterior of this edifice will be greatly disappointed on entering it to find the church has been turned on one side; where he expects to meet with the altar he will find a gallery; if he looks for the pulpit, it meets his eye in an unusual and awkward situation, rendered still more apparent by its relative situation to the altar.<ref name=lambeth/></blockquote>
In 1872-3 the building was extensively altered by [[George Edmund Street|G E Street]], who dramatically rearranged the interior, creating a conventional chancel at the end opposite the entrance, and dividing up the nave with [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]] arcades supporting a plaster [[barrel vault]].<ref name=BoESouth>{{cite book |last1=Cherry |first1= Bridget |last2=Pevsner |first2=Nikolaus |title=London 2: South |edition= |series=The Buildings of England |volume= |year=1990 |origyear=1983 |publisher=Penguin Books |location=London |isbn= |page= }}</ref> The galleries were removed, reducing the seating by more than half. Over the years, various stained glass windows have also been added.


In 1872-3 the building was extensively altered by [[George Edmund Street|G E Street]], who dramatically rearranged the interior, creating a conventional chancel at the end opposite the entrance, and dividing up the nave with [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]] arcades supporting a plaster [[barrel vault]].<ref name=BoESouth>{{cite book |last1=Cherry |first1= Bridget |last2=Pevsner |first2=Nikolaus |title=London 2: South |series=The Buildings of England |year=1990 |orig-year=1983 |publisher=Penguin Books |location=London }}</ref> The galleries were removed, reducing the seating by more than half. Over the years, various stained glass windows have also been added.
In 1976 the chancel was divided into an upper and lower hall with toilet and kitchen facilities. The kitchen has since been repositioned to occupy the south western area of the building, which had previously been used as a Lady Chapel. In 2005 the pews were replaced by red chairs that are usually arranged to face south.

In 1976 the chancel was divided into an upper and lower hall with toilet and kitchen facilities. The kitchen has since been repositioned to occupy the southwestern area of the building, which had previously been used as a Lady Chapel. In 2005 the pews were replaced by red chairs that are usually arranged to face south.


== Churchyard ==
== Churchyard ==
[[File:Gate Piers around the Churchyard of Saint Luke, West Norwood (West Side of Church - 01).jpg|thumb|right|Some of the Grade II listed gate piers around the church]]
A total of 1,383 people were buried at St Luke's between 1825 and 1894, either in the churchyard or on the vaults under the building. The churchyard has been legally closed, so no further burials may take place there apart from cremated remains.<ref>[http://www.howcutt.org/church/burials.htm Burials at St Luke's church and churchyard]</ref>
A total of 1,383 people were buried at St Luke's between 1825 and 1894, either in the churchyard or on the vaults under the building. The churchyard has been legally closed, so no further burials may take place there apart from cremated remains.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.howcutt.org/church/burials.htm |title=Burials at St Luke's church and churchyard |access-date=15 July 2013 |archive-date=2 February 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202161733/http://www.howcutt.org/church/burials.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>


The northern (i.e. lower level) part of the Churchyard was given to Lambeth Council soon after the Second World War and converted into a memorial garden to remember those who died in that conflict. Lambeth Council has used money from a [[Town and Country Planning Act 1990#Section 106|Section 106]] agreement to refurbish these gardens.<ref>[http://www.lambeth.gov.uk/moderngov/Published/C00000122/M00000385/AI00000998/$08StLukesReport.docA.ps.pdf Findings of St Luke’s Memorial Garden working group] Norwood Area Committee, 21 September 2006</ref><ref>[http://www.norwoodaction.org.uk/2006/06/minutes-13th-june-2006.shtml Minutes of Norwood Action Group] 13 June 2006</ref><ref>[http://www.virtualnorwood.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=5570&hl=luke's Thread on VirtualNorwood.com Community Forum]</ref> This section of the churchyard is used on the first Sunday of most months of the year for selling refreshments in connection with the Norwood Feast.<ref>[http://westnorwoodfeast.com/ Norwood Feast]</ref>
The northern (i.e. lower level) part of the Churchyard was given to Lambeth Council soon after the Second World War and converted into a memorial garden to remember those who died in that conflict. Lambeth Council has used money from a [[Town and Country Planning Act 1990#Section 106|Section 106]] agreement to refurbish these gardens.<ref>[http://www.lambeth.gov.uk/moderngov/Published/C00000122/M00000385/AI00000998/$08StLukesReport.docA.ps.pdf Findings of St Luke’s Memorial Garden working group]{{Dead link|date=October 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Norwood Area Committee, 21 September 2006</ref><ref>[http://www.norwoodaction.org.uk/2006/06/minutes-13th-june-2006.shtml Minutes of Norwood Action Group] 13 June 2006</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.virtualnorwood.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=5570&hl=luke's|title=Thread on VirtualNorwood.com Community Forum}}</ref> This section of the churchyard is used on the first Sunday of most months of the year for selling refreshments in connection with the Norwood Feast.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://westnorwoodfeast.com/|title=A volunteer powered street market festival|website=West Norwood Feast}}</ref>


The original ornate railings around the churchyard were removed as wartime "salvage" and only restored in 2009. The elaborate entrance gates from Knights Hill are still missing. The southern (i.e. upper level) part of the churchyard is still owned by the Church but maintained by Lambeth Council.
The original ornate railings around the churchyard were removed as wartime "salvage" and only restored in 2009. The elaborate entrance gates from Knights Hill are still missing. The southern (i.e. upper level) part of the churchyard is still owned by the Church but maintained by Lambeth Council.


== Clock ==
== Clock ==
The clock is nationally significant. It was installed by [[Benjamin Lewis Vulliamy]] in 1827, costing £357, or 3 per cent of the budget for the whole church. In 1825, Vulliamy had travelled on the Continent, observing developments in technology, and returned to England having established a new way to lay out the mechanism of his turret clocks, putting it into practice at St Luke’s, which therefore has the first ‘flat-bed’ [[turret clock]] in England.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Holdaway|first = K.R.|year = 1974|title = St Luke, West Norwood |location= Lambeth}}</ref>
The clock is nationally significant. It was installed by [[Benjamin Lewis Vulliamy]] in 1827, costing £357, or 3 per cent of the budget for the whole church. In 1825, Vulliamy had travelled on the Continent, observing developments in technology, and returned to England having established a new way to layout the mechanism of his turret clocks, putting it into practice at St Luke's, which therefore has the first ‘flat-bed’ [[turret clock]] in England.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Holdaway|first = K.R.|year = 1974|title = St Luke, West Norwood |location= Lambeth}}</ref>


The clock has Vulliamy's design of self-levelling pallets and a 2-second pendulum with a heavy bob. In 1928, the original slate dials were replaced with opal glazed versions, allowing for backlighting. The clock did not work for a number of years but was the subject of a major conservation and repair program, completed in May 2017. The dials were reglazed, and automatic winding fitted. The project was undertaken by the Cumbria Clock Company.
The clock has Vulliamy's design of self-levelling pallets and a 2-second pendulum with a heavy bob. In 1928, the original slate dials were replaced with opal glazed versions, allowing for backlighting. The clock did not work for a number of years but was the subject of a major conservation and repair program, completed in May 2017. The dials were reglazed, and automatic winding fitted. The project was undertaken by the Cumbria Clock Company.
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== External links ==
== External links ==
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=49793 British History Online]
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=49793 British History Online]
* [http://www.howcutt.org/church/burials.htm Burials at St Luke's church and churchyard]
* [http://www.howcutt.org/church/burials.htm Burials at St Luke's church and churchyard] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202161733/http://www.howcutt.org/church/burials.htm |date=2 February 2014 }}
* [http://www.achurchnearyou.com/parishmap.php?pcode=37/76 Map of the Parish of West Norwood]
* [http://www.achurchnearyou.com/parishmap.php?pcode=37/76 Map of the Parish of West Norwood] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110524145908/http://www.achurchnearyou.com/parishmap.php?pcode=37%2F76 |date=24 May 2011 }}
* [http://www.stlukeswestnorwood.org/ Official Church Website]
* [http://www.stlukeswestnorwood.org/ Official Church Website]
{{coord |51|25|57|N|0|6|13|W|type:landmark_region:GB|display=title}}
{{coord |51|25|57|N|0|6|13|W|type:landmark_region:GB|display=title}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Saint Luke's Church, West Norwood}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Saint Luke's Church, West Norwood}}
[[Category:Church of England church buildings in the London Borough of Lambeth|West Norwood]]
[[Category:Church of England church buildings in the London Borough of Lambeth|West Norwood]]
[[Category:Grade II listed churches in London]]
[[Category:Grade II* listed churches in London]]
[[Category:Churches completed in 1825]]
[[Category:Churches completed in 1825]]
[[Category:19th-century Church of England church buildings]]
[[Category:19th-century Church of England church buildings]]
[[Category:Anglican congregations established in the 19th century]]
[[Category:Anglican Diocese of Southwark|West Norwood]]
[[Category:Anglican Diocese of Southwark]]
[[Category:Commissioners' church buildings|London, Saint Lukes Church West Norwood]]
[[Category:Commissioners' church buildings|London, Saint Lukes Church West Norwood]]
[[Category:Georgian architecture in London]]
[[Category:Georgian architecture in London]]
[[Category:Greek Revival church buildings in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Greek Revival church buildings in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Neoclassical architecture in London]]
[[Category:Neoclassical architecture in London]]
[[Category:Neoclassical church buildings in England]]

Latest revision as of 22:01, 26 March 2024

St Luke's, West Norwood
Map
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipEvangelical
Websitestlukeswestnorwood.wordpress.com
Architecture
Architect(s)Francis Octavius Bedford
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseDiocese of Southwark
ArchdeaconryLambeth
DeaneryLambeth South
Clergy
Vicar(s)Rev'd Donald Davis

St Luke's Church in West Norwood is an Anglican church that worships in a Grade II* listed building.[1] It stands on a prominent triangular site at the south end of Norwood Road, where the highway forks to become Knights Hill and Norwood High Street.

Parish

[edit]

When St Luke's church was first built, the area was sparsely populated and mainly comprised meadows cleared from woodland. The relatively few houses included a mixture of modest cottages and villas for the rich. The only significant public buildings at that stage were the Independent (later Congregationalist) chapel in Chapel Road, which was completed in 1821, and a House of Industry for the Infant Poor in Elder Road. An outline of the vast subsequent changes to the locality appears in the article about West Norwood.

During the nineteenth century, a number of new parishes were created that took in parts of the original parish of St Luke's. These were Holy Trinity Tulse Hill, Christ Church Gipsy Hill, Emmanuel West Dulwich, St Peter Streatham and All Saints West Dulwich.

In 1886, the population of St Luke's parish amounted to 10,377 and was served by four clergy. The total (morning and evening) attendance as a proportion of the parochial population at that time stood at 9.1%.[2] In 1901, the population of the parish stood at 16,180, but in the following year, only one clergyman was in post at St Luke's and attendance at services there represented 6.0% of the parochial population.[3]

Based on statistics from the UK census, the Diocese of Southwark estimates the population of St Luke's parish was 15,400 in 2001 and 16,500 in 2011.[4]

Building

[edit]

St Luke's Church was designed by Francis Octavius Bedford in 1822, as a result of the Church Building Act of 1818, which had been passed in response to the end of the Napoleonic wars and the growing urban population.[5] It is known as a "Commissioners' church" because it received a grant from the Church Building Commission towards the cost of its construction; the church cost £12,947 to build, and the grant was £6,447.[6] It was constructed along with St. Matthew's, Brixton, St. Mark's, Kennington and St. John's, Waterloo Road. These four "Waterloo churches", each dedicated to one of the four authors of gospels of the New Testament, were specified to have 1800-2000 sittings, vaults for burials, be constructed of brick with stone dressing and cost no more than £13,000 each.[7][8]

The west face of the Church of Saint Luke

Unusually for a church, it is oriented north–south instead of east–west. This is due to a stipulation in the original planning permission 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. An objection from the owner of the Horn's Tavern meant St Luke's had to be built in a north–south orientation to avoid falling within 100 feet of the tavern.[9]

The builder was Mrs Elizabeth Broomfield of Walworth and the foundation stone was laid by the Archbishop of Canterbury on 14 April 1823. The church was consecrated by the Bishop of Winchester on 25 July 1825.[10] The main front, in a rather simplified version of the Corinthian order, has a stone portico with six fluted columns. A tower rises in three stages from the roof just behind the portico.[10] The church is very similar in appearance to St John's, Waterloo, and to two other churches by the same architect: St George, Wells Way, Camberwell, and Holy Trinity, Trinity Square, Southwark.[11]

At first the building was furnished with box pews, galleries and a triple-decker pulpit,[citation needed] with seating for a total congregation of 1,412.[10] The original design had only provided one gallery, above the entrance, facing the altar. This made it possible to have one row of large windows on each of the long sides of the church rather than two storeys of smaller ones Bedford used in churches with side galleries. However, before the church opened, a decision was made to increase its capacity by installing an extra gallery. To avoid blocking the windows, this was put at the end opposite the entrance, and the altar was placed against one of the long walls, with the pulpit and reading desk against the other.[10][12] Thomas Allen in his History and Antiquities of the Parish of Lambeth (1827) wrote:

Whoever looks at the exterior of this edifice will be greatly disappointed on entering it to find the church has been turned on one side; where he expects to meet with the altar he will find a gallery; if he looks for the pulpit, it meets his eye in an unusual and awkward situation, rendered still more apparent by its relative situation to the altar.[10]

In 1872-3 the building was extensively altered by G E Street, who dramatically rearranged the interior, creating a conventional chancel at the end opposite the entrance, and dividing up the nave with Romanesque arcades supporting a plaster barrel vault.[13] The galleries were removed, reducing the seating by more than half. Over the years, various stained glass windows have also been added.

In 1976 the chancel was divided into an upper and lower hall with toilet and kitchen facilities. The kitchen has since been repositioned to occupy the southwestern area of the building, which had previously been used as a Lady Chapel. In 2005 the pews were replaced by red chairs that are usually arranged to face south.

Churchyard

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Some of the Grade II listed gate piers around the church

A total of 1,383 people were buried at St Luke's between 1825 and 1894, either in the churchyard or on the vaults under the building. The churchyard has been legally closed, so no further burials may take place there apart from cremated remains.[14]

The northern (i.e. lower level) part of the Churchyard was given to Lambeth Council soon after the Second World War and converted into a memorial garden to remember those who died in that conflict. Lambeth Council has used money from a Section 106 agreement to refurbish these gardens.[15][16][17] This section of the churchyard is used on the first Sunday of most months of the year for selling refreshments in connection with the Norwood Feast.[18]

The original ornate railings around the churchyard were removed as wartime "salvage" and only restored in 2009. The elaborate entrance gates from Knights Hill are still missing. The southern (i.e. upper level) part of the churchyard is still owned by the Church but maintained by Lambeth Council.

Clock

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The clock is nationally significant. It was installed by Benjamin Lewis Vulliamy in 1827, costing £357, or 3 per cent of the budget for the whole church. In 1825, Vulliamy had travelled on the Continent, observing developments in technology, and returned to England having established a new way to layout the mechanism of his turret clocks, putting it into practice at St Luke's, which therefore has the first ‘flat-bed’ turret clock in England.[19]

The clock has Vulliamy's design of self-levelling pallets and a 2-second pendulum with a heavy bob. In 1928, the original slate dials were replaced with opal glazed versions, allowing for backlighting. The clock did not work for a number of years but was the subject of a major conservation and repair program, completed in May 2017. The dials were reglazed, and automatic winding fitted. The project was undertaken by the Cumbria Clock Company.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1116506)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 9 May 2010.
  2. ^ Cox, Jeffrey (1982). The English Churches in a Secular Society - Lambeth, 1870-1930. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 294. ISBN 0195030192.
  3. ^ Cox, Jeffrey (1982). The English Churches in a Secular Society - Lambeth, 1870-1930. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 286. ISBN 0195030192.
  4. ^ "Getting to know your parish". Church of England. Archived from the original on 24 December 2013.
  5. ^ Gilley, S. Stanley, B., The Cambridge History of Christianity World Christianities c1815-1914, p106, Cambridge University Press, 2007
  6. ^ Port, M. H (2006). 600 New Churches: The Church Building Commission 1818-1856 (2nd ed.). Reading: Spire Books. p. 327. ISBN 978-1-904965-08-4.
  7. ^ Revd F Lambert & K HoldawaySt Luke West Norwood 1825-1975
  8. ^ Series of architectural plans of the Lambeth Waterloo churches Survey of London: volume 26 London County Council, 1956
  9. ^ London County Council, The Survey of London: Volume 26, Lambeth: Southern Area (London: London County Council, 1956) pp.173-80
  10. ^ a b c d e Allen, Thomas (1827). The History and Antiquities of the Parish of Lambeth. London: J. Allen. pp. 430–3.
  11. ^ E.I.C. [Edward John Carlos] (1825). "Architecture of the New Churches". The Every-Day Book.
  12. ^ The axis of the church runs north-south, with the entrance at the north end; in both Bedford's original plans and Street's rearrangement the altar is at the north end, while the initial arrangement had it against the east side See Cherry and Pevsner 1990, pp.335-6.
  13. ^ Cherry, Bridget; Pevsner, Nikolaus (1990) [1983]. London 2: South. The Buildings of England. London: Penguin Books.
  14. ^ "Burials at St Luke's church and churchyard". Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  15. ^ Findings of St Luke’s Memorial Garden working group[permanent dead link] Norwood Area Committee, 21 September 2006
  16. ^ Minutes of Norwood Action Group 13 June 2006
  17. ^ "Thread on VirtualNorwood.com Community Forum".
  18. ^ "A volunteer powered street market festival". West Norwood Feast.
  19. ^ Holdaway, K.R. (1974). St Luke, West Norwood. Lambeth.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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51°25′57″N 0°6′13″W / 51.43250°N 0.10361°W / 51.43250; -0.10361