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Architects & Places

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Dietrich Bonhoeffer Church, Dacres Road, Forest Hill (German Evangelical)

The church backs on to a railway line and was designed by G.S. Agar in 1958-59 replacing a WW2 damaged church

Our Lady of the Assumption, Deptford High Street, Deptford (Roman Catholic)

Slightly set back from the high street this is a church of 1844 with a chancel added in 1859 designed by Canon Richard North.

St Stephen, Lewisham High Street, Lewisham

The town centre church for Lewisham.  It dates from 1863-1865 and was designed by George Gilbert Scott. The tower never got higher than its base. Much glass was lost in WW2 but some medallions remain as does chancel wall decoration. The east windows are by Joseph Nuttgens from 1954.

St Augustine, Baring Road, Grove Park

Close to Grove Park station. The originally apsed chancel dates from 1885-86 and was designed by Charles Bell. The nave and aisles were added by Percy Leeds in 1912. However, the west end was unfinished until 1967 when the present non-matching extension by E.F. Starling was built. The apse suffered from subsidence and was demolished in 1993 with a straight wall substituted in 2007 by Thomas F Ford and Partners. The windows of the apse were kept and refitted around the church.

St Catherine, Pepys Road, Hatcham (New Cross)

On a hilltop south of New Cross Gate, it is a church of 1893-1894 by H. Stock. Following war damage, it received a new roof and had an extension added and reordering to form a community centre and church. The west end of the church is now a hall space called the Narthex

St John the Baptist, Bromley Road, Southend, Catford

Southend is at the southern end of Catford and this church is on a spacious corner site.  In fact, there are two buildings, the older is a former proprietary chapel of 1824 now used as a hall, and the newer the built part of what would have been a huge building by Sir Charles Nicholson dating from 1928. The nave was only partly built and is finished by a permanent “temporary” wall.  In 1977 a corona was installed in the centre of the church and the chancel screened off as vestries. However, this change has now been reversed and a high altar restored with a traditional eastward alignment. The north chapel is a memorial chapel to the Forster family who owned the land on which the church is built. This includes a very late recumbent effigy tomb to a son killed at the end of the first world war.

St Margaret, Lee Terrace, Lee

This church replaces the ancient parish church which was sited over the road and of which the tower base survives. The rest of that church had been rebuilt in 1813 but was structurally unsound and replaced by the current church by John Brown of Norwich in 1839-1841. From outside it is a rather typical design of its time but inside a complex decorative scheme of the late 19th century has been restored. James Brooks lengthened the chancel, added chancel aisles and a wooden vault between 1875 and 1888.

St Mary, Lewisham High Street, Lewisham

Lewisham’s historic parish church, now at the southern, Ladywell end of the town centre. The tower is late 15th/early 16th century but the tower top and church are by George Gibson Junior and date from 1774-1777. The chancel was rebuilt by Arthur Blomfield in 1881-1882.

St George, Vancouver Road/Woolstone Road, Perry Hill

An impressive building of 2004-2005 by Thomas F Ford and Partners. It replaced a badly subsided church of 1878. The Henry Holiday glass from the old church has been reused at the east end. The nave is divided by moveable partitions and can be opened out into the hall area when needed.

St Bartholomew, Westwood Hill, Sydenham

Famously shown in a painting by Pissarro. The church was designed by Lewis Vulliamy and built in 1827-32. In 1852 Edwin Nash added the chancel and in 1883 he widened the north aisle, most of which is now partitioned off as a hall area. The reredos was added by Henry Wilson in 1905.