St Paul's Church, Tottenham

St Paul the Apostle is a church in the Church of England Diocese of London in Tottenham, London, England.

St Paul's, Tottenham
Parish Church of St Paul the Apostle
Location60 Park Lane, Tottenham, London, N17 0JR
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationChurch of England
TraditionAnglo-Catholic
Websitewww.stpaulstottenham.org.uk
History
Dedicated1976 (new church)
Consecrated1859 (original church)
Architecture
Architect(s)Biscoe & Stanton
Administration
ParishSt. Paul, Tottenham
DeaneryEast Haringey
ArchdeaconryHampstead
Episcopal areaEdmonton
DioceseLondon
Clergy
Vicar(s)Fr Staffan Dawkins

History

The community of St Paul's began around 1855[1] in an iron building in Northumberland Park (what is now 125 Northumberland Park). Ms Jemima Holt bequeathed some land in Park Lane and William Mumford, architect, was appointed. Construction work began in 1858 and the church, built from Kentish stone, was consecrated in 1859 as one of the "Commissioners churches".[2]

In 1973 the building was demolished and whilst the new church and flats were being built the church community worshipped in the school hall across the road. The current building was dedicated on 20 November 1976 by the Rt Rev'd Bishop Bill Westwood, Bishop of Edmonton.[3]

St Paul's is in the Anglo-Catholic tradition of the Church of England,[4] celebrating Mass daily.

Clergy

Incumbents

Parish Priest
1873 -Fr D. J. Harrison (First Incumbent)
c.1873 -Fr Hugh M’Sorley, MA [5]
1893–1896Fr Benjamin White Clinch
1932-1945Revd Joseph Oscar De Vile
1945–1947Fr Jack Plumley
1957-1967Fr Desmond Curzon
1978–1994Fr Alan Hopes
1996–2006Canon Andrew Dangerfield
2007–2011Fr Mark Elliott-Smith
Vicar
2011- Fr Robert Wilkinson

Curates

Curate
1953–1955Fr Eric John Cooper
1976–1983Fr Lamont Wellington Sanderson Phillips (NSM)
Fr Stuart Wilson
1973–1976Fr Stephen Taylor
1978–1982Canon John Salter
1982–1985Fr Tony Robinson
1983–1986Fr John Hassell
1985–1989Fr Nigel Orchard
1986–1988Fr Christopher Darvill
1988–1991Fr Jeffrey Vaughan (NSM)
1988–1991Fr Paul Waters
1991–1994Fr Nigel Massey
1989Fr Nigel Asbridge
1991–1993Fr Chris Eydon
1994 - 1996Fr Peter Wilson
1996–2001Fr Mark Elliott-Smith
1999–2004Fr Jeremy Fox
2000–2005Fr Tony Haynes (NSM)
2002–2005Fr Colin Dickson
2007–2011Fr James Hill
2010–2012Fr Christopher Trundle
2012-2013Fr Adrian Teare

References and sources

  • 'Tottenham: Churches', A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 5: Hendon, Kingsbury, Great Stanmore, Little Stanmore, Edmonton Enfield, Monken Hadley, South Mimms, Tottenham (1976), pp. 348–355.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.