St Margaret's, Westminster

{{Short description|12th-century church in London, England}}

{{For|the civil parish of Westminster St Margaret|Westminster St Margaret and St John}}

{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2022}}

{{Infobox historic site

| name = St Margaret's, Westminster Abbey

| image = St-Margaret's- Westminster.P1130954-PS (cropped).jpg

| caption = St Margaret's Church, Westminster Abbey, with the Elizabeth Tower ('Big Ben') of the Palace of Westminster in the background

| locmapin = United Kingdom Central London

| map_width =

| map_caption = Location of St. Margaret, Westminster Abbey in central London

| coordinates = {{coord|51|30|00|N|00|07|37|W|region:GB-WSM_type:landmark|display=inline,title}}

| location = City of Westminster, London, UK

| area =

| founded = 12th Century

| built =

| demolished =

| rebuilt = 1486 to 1523

| architect =

| architecture =

| governing_body =

| designation1 = WHS

| designation1_offname = Palace of Westminster, Westminster Abbey and Saint Margaret's Church

| designation1_date = 1987 (11th session)

| designation1_type = Cultural

| designation1_criteria = i, ii, iv

| designation1_number = [https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/426 426]

| designation1_free1name = Country

| designation1_free1value = United Kingdom

| designation1_free2name = Region

| designation1_free2value = Europe and North America

}}

The Church of St Margaret, Westminster Abbey is in the grounds of Westminster Abbey on Parliament Square, London, England.{{cite web

| url = http://www.westminster-abbey.org/st-margarets/history/

| title = St. Margaret's, Westminster Parish details

| author = Westminster Abbey

| access-date = 3 May 2008

|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080305183607/http://www.westminster-abbey.org/st-margarets/history/ |archive-date = 5 March 2008}} It is dedicated to Margaret of Antioch,{{cite book

| last = Pevsner

| first = N.

| author-link = Nikolaus Pevsner

|author2=Bradley, Simon

| title = The Buildings of England: London 6 – Westminster

| year = 2003

| publisher = Penguin

| location = Uxbridge

| isbn = 0-300-09595-3

}} and forms part of a single World Heritage Site with the Palace of Westminster and Westminster Abbey.

History and description

The church was founded in the twelfth century by Benedictine monks, so that local people who lived in the area around the Abbey{{cite web

|url = http://www.ourpasthistory.com/England/st-margaret-westminster

|title = St. Margaret's, Westminster

|author = McManus, Mark

|access-date = 3 May 2008

|url-status = dead

|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080611105551/http://www.ourpasthistory.com/England/st-margaret-westminster

|archive-date = 11 June 2008}} could worship separately at their own simpler parish church, and historically it was within the hundred of Ossulstone in the county of Middlesex.{{cite web

|url = http://homepages.gold.ac.uk/genuki/MDX/WestminsterStMargaret/index.html

|title = St. Margaret's, Westminster

|author = Hawgood, David

|access-date = 3 May 2008

|work = Genuki (Genealogy UK & Ireland)

|archive-date = 30 September 2007

|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070930222509/http://homepages.gold.ac.uk/genuki/MDX/WestminsterStMargaret/index.html

|url-status = dead}} In 1914, in a preface to Memorials of St. Margaret's Church, Westminster, a former Rector of St Margaret's, Hensley Henson, reported a mediaeval tradition that the church was as old as Westminster Abbey, owing its origins to the same royal saint, and that "The two churches, conventual and parochial, have stood side by side for more than eight centuries – not, of course, the existing fabrics, but older churches of which the existing fabrics are successors on the same site."From "Memorials of St. Margaret's church, Westminister, comprising the parish registers, 1539-1660, and other churchwardens' accounts, 1460-1603", reported in Notes and Queries (1914), p. 518.

St Margaret's was rebuilt from 1486 to 1523, at the instigation of King Henry VII, and the new church, which largely still stands today, was consecrated on 9 April 1523. It has been called "the last church in London decorated in the Catholic tradition before the Reformation", and on each side of a large rood cross there stood richly painted statues of St Mary and St John, while the building had several internal chapels. In the 1540s, the new church came near to demolition, when Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset, planned to take it down to provide good-quality materials for Somerset House, his own new palace in the Strand. He was only kept from carrying out his plan by the resistance of armed parishioners.Richardson, John, [https://archive.org/details/annalsoflondonye00rich/page/81 The Annals of London: a Year-by-year Record of a Thousand Years of History] (University of California Press, 2000), p. 81.

In 1614, St Margaret's became the parish church of the Palace of Westminster, when the Puritans of the seventeenth century, unhappy with the highly liturgical Abbey, chose to hold their Parliamentary services in a church they found more suitable:{{cite book

| last = Wright

| first = A.

|author2=Smith, P.

| title = Parliament Past and Present

| year = 1868

| publisher = Hutchinson & Co.

| location = London

}} a practice that has continued since that time. An additional detached burial ground was added in 1625 at what is now Christchurch Gardens.

Between 1734 and 1738, the north-west tower was rebuilt to designs by John James; at the same time, the whole structure was encased in Portland stone. Both the eastern and the western porch were added later, with J. L. Pearson as architect. In 1878, the church's interior was greatly restored and altered to its current appearance by Sir George Gilbert Scott, although many Tudor features were retained.{{cite book

| last = Scott

| first = George Gilbert

| author-link = George Gilbert Scott

| editor = Stamp, Gavin

| title = Personal and Professional Recollections

| orig-year = 1879

| year = 1995

| publisher = Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington] Stamford: Paul Watkins Publishing

| location = [London

| isbn = 1-871615-26-7

}}

In 1863, during preliminary explorations preparing for this restoration, Scott found several doors overlaid with what was believed to be human skin. After doctors had examined this skin, Victorian historians theorized that the skin might have been that of William the Sacrist, who organized a gang that, in 1303, robbed the King of the equivalent of, in modern currency, $100 million (see Richard of Pudlicott). It was a complex scheme, involving several gang members disguised as monks planting bushes on the palace. After the stealthy burglary six months later, the loot was concealed in these bushes. The historians believed that William the Sacrist was flayed alive as punishment and his skin was used to make these royal doors, perhaps situated initially at nearby Westminster Palace.Arnold, Catharine, [https://books.google.com/books?id=88whCwAAQBAJ&dq=%22king%27s+treasury+appeared+to+be+covered+inside+and+out+with+skin%22&pg=PA15 Underworld London, Crime and Punishment in the Capital City], Simon & Schuster, 2012, p. 15. Subsequent study revealed that the skins were bovine in origin, not human.

By the 1970s, the number of people living nearby was in the hundreds. Ecclesiastical responsibility for the parish was reallocated to neighbouring parishes by the Westminster Abbey and Saint Margaret Westminster Act 1972, and the church was brought under the authority of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster Abbey.

An annual new year service for the Coptic Orthodox Church in Britain takes place in the church in October, and in 2016 Bishop Angaelos gave the sermon.[https://www.indcatholicnews.com/news/31195 Messages from Prince of Wales, politicians, church leaders at Coptic New Year Service, Westminster Abbey] dated 24 October 2016, at indcatholicnews.com. Retrieved 12 January 2018.

The Rector of St Margaret's is often a canon of Westminster Abbey.{{cite web|url=https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2009/29-may/features/interview-robert-wright-sub-dean-of-west-minster-abbey-rector-of-st-margaret-s-church|title=Interview: Robert Wright, Sub-dean of Westminster Abbey, Rector of St Margaret's|date=26 May 2009|work=Church Times|access-date=28 July 2018}}

=Commemorative windows=

File:St Margaret's, Westminster interior, 2016.jpg

Notable windows include the east window of 1509 of Flemish stained glass, created to commemorate the betrothal of Catherine of Aragon to Henry VIII.{{cite web

| url = http://www.westminster-abbey.org/st-margarets/visit-us/the-east-end3

| title = St Margaret's Church – The east window

| author = Dean and Chapter, Westminster Abbey

| access-date = 21 October 2010

| work = St Margaret's Church}} This has had a chequered history. It was given by Henry VII to Waltham Abbey in Essex, and at the Dissolution of the Monasteries the last Abbot sent it to a private chapel at New Hall, Essex. That came into the possession of Thomas Boleyn, 1st Earl of Wiltshire, the father of Anne Boleyn, then Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex, next George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, after him Oliver Cromwell, from whom it reverted to the second Duke of Buckingham, next General Monk, Duke of Albemarle, and after him John Olmius, then Mr Conyers of Copt Hall, Essex, whose son sold the window to the parish of St Margaret's in 1758, for 400 guineas. The money came from a grant of £4,000, which parliament had made to the parish that year for the renovation of the church and the rebuilding of the chancel.Wheatley, H. B., and Peter Cunningham, London Past and Present: Its History, Associations, and Traditions, p. 467.

Other windows commemorate William Caxton, England's first printer, who was buried at the church in 1491, Sir Walter Raleigh, executed in Old Palace Yard{{cite web

| url = http://www.britannia.com/bios/raleigh/executio.html

| title = Sir Walter Raleigh – Execution

| author = Smith, Christopher

| access-date = 3 May 2008

| work = Britannia Biographies}} and then also buried in the church in 1618, the poet John Milton, a parishioner of the church, and Admiral Robert Blake.

The Victorian glass that once filled the eight bays of the south aisle was destroyed by enemy action during the Second World War. In 1966, all eight windows were provided with new glass designed by John Piper and made by his longtime collaborator Patrick Reyntiens. Piper's unified scheme filled each window with an uncompromisingly modern abstract design, intended to create a "total impression of living radiance, in shades of silvery grey predominantly with splashes of pale greens, yellows and blues in varied density, to filter the daylight." The new windows were dedicated on 15 January 1967 in memory of Canon Carnegie and his wife, Peter Kemp-Welch, Clarence Fletcher and Richard Costain.{{cite web|url= https://www.westminster-abbey.org/abbey-commemorations/commemorations/john-piper/|title=Westminster Abbey: John Piper|access-date=1 January 2025}}

Weddings

As well as marrying its own parishioners, the church has long been a popular venue for society weddings, as Members of Parliament, peers, and officers of the House of Lords and House of Commons can choose to be married in it. Notable weddings include:

  • 5 July 1631: Edmund Waller and Anne Banks, who was an heiress and a ward of the Court of Aldermen, were married at the church in defiance of orders of the Court and the Privy Council of England. Waller had previously carried the bride off and been forced to return her. On a complaint being made to the Star Chamber, Waller was pardoned by King Charles I.R. E. C. Waters, Genealogical memoirs of the extinct family of Chester of Chicheley p. 91
  • 13 May 1654: Lady Mary Springett (William Penn's mother-in-law) and Isaac Pennington{{cite book |last1=Hodgkin |first1=Lucy Violet |title=Gulielma: Wife of William Penn |date=1947 |publisher=Longmans, Green and Co. |location=London |page=28 |edition=1st}}
  • 1 December 1655: Samuel Pepys and Elisabeth Marchant de St. Michel{{cite book

| last = Pepys

| first = Samuel

| editor = Samuel Pepys

| title = The Illustrated Pepys: extracts from the Diary

| year = 1987

| publisher = Penguin

| location = Harmondsworth

| isbn = 0-14-139016-6

}}

| last = Gilbert

| first = Martin

| title = Churchill: a life

| year = 1991

| publisher = Heinemann

| location = London

| isbn = 0-434-29183-8

}}

Other notable weddings include some of the Bright Young People.{{cite book

| last = Taylor

| first = D. J.

| title = Bright Young Things: the lost generation of London's Jazz Age

| year = 2007

| publisher = Chatto & Windus

|location=London

| isbn = 978-0-7011-7754-6

}} (American ed.: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, New York, 2009)

Baptisms

Burials

Funerals and memorial services

Other notable events

On Easter day 1555 in the reign of Mary I a Protestant ex-Benedictine monk, William Flower inflicted wounds to the administerer of the sacrament. He repented for the injuries but would not repent his motive which was rejection of the doctrine of transubstantiation. He was thus sentenced for heresy and a week later severed of his hand and burned at the stake outside the church.

During the First World War, Edward Lyttelton, headmaster of Eton, gave a sermon in the church on the theme of "loving your enemies", promoting the view that any post-war treaty with Germany should be a just one and not vindictive. He had to leave the church after the service by a back door, while a number of demonstrators sang "Rule, Britannia!" in protest at his attitude.Alan Wilkinson, The Church of England and the First World War (London, SCM Press, 1996), p. 221

Choirs

Until 2019, the treble choristers for St Margaret's were supplied by Westminster Under School. In September 2023, a new choir for girls aged 11 to 17 was formed, to sing for regular liturgical services alongside the professional singers of the St Margaret's Consort.

The church also hosted the first performance by the UK Parliament Choir under Simon Over in 2000.

Organ

An organ was installed in 1806 by John Avery. The current organ is largely built by J. W. Walker & Sons Ltd. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.{{National Pipe Organ Register|id=D01260|access-date=7 July 2020}}

Rectors

Mackenzie Walcott lists the following as officiating clergymen:{{cite book|last=Walcott|first=Mackenzie Edward Charles|year=1847|title=The History of the Parish Church of Saint Margaret, in Westminster|page=84|place=Westminster|publisher=W. Blanchard & Sons|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IKJdAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA84|access-date=11 September 2019}}

{{div col|colwidth=33em}}

  • {{circa|1503}} Sir John Conyers, curate
  • {{circa|1509}} Sir John Symes, curate
  • {{circa|1519}} Mr. Hall, curate
  • {{circa|1521}} Sir Robert Danby, curate
  • {{circa|1530}} William Tenant, curate
  • 1594 William Drap
  • {{circa|1610}} William Murrey
  • {{circa|1621}} Prosper Styles, curate
  • {{circa|1622}} Isaac Bargrave, minister
  • {{circa|1638}} Gilbert Wymberly, minister
  • 1640 Stephen Marshall, lecturer
  • 1642 Samuel Gibson
  • 1644 Mr. Eaton, minister
  • 1649 John Binns
  • 1657 Mr. Wyner / Mr. Warmstree, lecturer
  • 1661 William Tucker, curate
  • {{circa|1670}} William Owtram (also minister in 1664J. L. Chester, The Marriage, Baptismal, and Burial Registers of the Collegiate Church or Abbey of St. Peter, Westminster, Volume 10 (Harleian Society, 1876), p. 197)
  • 1679–1683 Thomas Sprat
  • 1683–1724† Nicholas Onley{{acad|id=ONLY671N|name=Onley, Nicholas}}
  • 1724–1730† Edward Gee
  • 1730–1734 James Hargrave
  • 1734–1753† Scawen Kenrick
  • 1753–1784† Thomas Wilson
  • 1784–1788† John Taylor{{cite DNB|wstitle=Taylor, John (1711-1788)|last=Courtney|first=William Prideaux|volume=55}}
  • 1788–1796† Charles Wake
  • 1796–1827† Charles Fynes-Clinton
  • 1828–1835 James Webber

{{div col end}}

Under the Ecclesiastical Commissioners Act 1840, this rectory was annexed to the canonry of Westminster Abbey then held by Henry Hart Milman, such that he and his successors as Canon would be Rector ex officio.{{Cite legislation UK

| type = act

| year = 1840

| chapter = 113

| act = Ecclesiastical Commissioners Act 1840

| section = 29

}} This arrangement continued until 1978. The Rector was often (and continuously from 1972 to 2010) also the Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons.{{cite web|title=Speaker's Chaplain|url=https://www.churchofengland.org/our-views/the-church-in-parliament/speaker%27s-chaplain.aspx|website=The Church in Parliament|publisher=Church of England|access-date=5 September 2014}}

{{div col|colwidth=33em}}

  • 1835–1849 Henry Hart Milman
  • 1849–1864† William Cureton
  • 1864–1876† William Conway
  • 1876–1895 Frederic Farrar (also Speaker's Chaplain from 1890){{acad|id=FRR849FW|name=Farrar, Frederic William}}
  • 1895–1899 Robert Eyton{{London Gazette |issue=26686 |date=6 December 1895 |page=7063 }}
  • 1899–1900 Joseph Armitage Robinson{{Cite newspaper The Times |title=The Deanery of Westminster|date=13 October 1902 |page=9 |issue=36897}}
  • 1900–1912 Hensley Henson"Bishop Hensley Henson – Master of Dialectic", obituary in The Times, 29 September 1947, p. 27
  • 1912–1936† William Hartley Carnegie{{cite web |url=http://www.westminster-abbey.org/our-history/people/william-and-mary-carnegie |title=William and Mary Carnegie |access-date=8 August 2014 |quote=William Hartley Carnegie Canon of Westminster and Rector of St Margaret's 1913–1936. Sub Dean 1919–1936. Born 27 February 1859. Died 18 October 1936. ... |publisher=Westminster Abbey }} (also Speaker's Chaplain from 1916)
  • 1936–1940† Vernon Storr
  • 1941–1946 Alan Don (also Speaker's Chaplain since 1936)
  • 1946–1956 Charles Smyth
  • 1957–1969 Michael Stancliffe (also Speaker's Chaplain from 1961)
  • 1970–1978 David Edwards (also Speaker's Chaplain from 1972)
  • 1978–1982 John Baker (also Speaker's Chaplain)
  • 1982–1987 Trevor Beeson (also Speaker's Chaplain)
  • 1987–1998 Donald Gray (also Speaker's Chaplain)
  • 1998–2010 Robert Wright (also Speaker's Chaplain)
  • 2010–2016 Andrew Tremlett
  • 2016–2020 Jane Sinclair[http://www.westminster-abbey.org/press/news/2016/january/the-reverend-jane-sinclair-appointed-rector-of-st-margarets-church Westminster Abbey – Sinclair appointed Rector of St Margaret's] (Accessed 23 February 2016)
  • 2020 – date Anthony Ball

{{div col end}}

Rector died in post

Organists and Directors of Music

Organists who have played at St Margaret's include:

{{div col|colwidth=33em}}

{{div col end}}

Directors of Music at St Margaret's have included Richard Hickox, Simon Over, Aidan Oliver and (currently) Greg Morris.

Gallery

Image:StMargeretsChurch-London-February2016.jpg|Explanatory plaque

Image:saint.margarets.overall.london.arp.jpg|St Margaret's Church. To the left is the Elizabeth Tower of the Palace of Westminster; to the right is the Abbey.

Image:st.margarets.church.westminster.arp.750pix.jpg|St Margaret's, seen from the London Eye Ferris wheel

Image:saint.margarets.interior.london.arp.jpg|The nave of St Margaret's

Image:Flag of the Church of St Margaret Westminster Abbey.svg|Flag of St Margaret's, flown from the bell tower

See also

References

{{Reflist}}