St Vedast - Foster Lane, London, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Master Mariner
N 51° 30.895 W 000° 05.780
30U E 701466 N 5711085
St Vedast church stands a short distance to the north east of St Paul's Cathedral in Foster Lane, just off Cheapside. St Vedast is a beautiful Wren Church at the heart of the City of London.
Waymark Code: WMEKE9
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/09/2012
Published By:Groundspeak Charter Member BruceS
Views: 7

The Church is open for prayer and contemplation every weekday from 8am to 6pm and there is, adjacent, a wonderful courtyard for peace and relaxation. As the church is in the City of London services are held during the week. The main service, Monday through Friday, is at 1215hrs. There is also a sung mass on Sunday at 1100hrs.

The church's website (visit link) tells us of the history of the church:

"The Parish of St Vedast is known from the 12th century, and the church is traditionally claimed to have been established by 1170.

It has been altered, enlarged and restored many times and probably rebuilt at least twice, the last time by Christopher Wren, after the Great Fire of London in 1666. Having been completely burnt out during the Blitz of World War II, the church was restored under the direction of its Rector, Canon Mortlock, and a very influential Parochial Church Council that included Poet Laureate John Betjeman and master organ builder, Noel Mander.

The church is dedicated to a French saint, little known in Britain, who was Bishop of Arras in northern Gaul around the turn of the 6th century. Vedast, who was called in Latin, Vedastus; in Norman, Vaast; in Walloon, Waast; and in French, Gaston, helped to restore the Christian Church in the region after decades of destruction by invading barbarians during the late Roman empire and to convert Clovis, the Frankish king. Remembered for his charity, meekness and patience, he is buried at Arras cathedral.

His name in England has been corrupted from St Vaast, by way of Vastes, Fastes, Faster, Fauster and Forster to Foster, the name of the lane at the front of the church, and the reason that the official designation of the church is St Vedast-alias-Foster. St Vedast was venerated in particular by the Augustinian priors in the 12th century, and they may be responsible for the foundation of the few churches dedicated to him. Only one other church in England is currently dedicated to St Vedast, in Tathwell, Lincolnshire, a third parish in Norwich now being remembered only in a street name.

Some of the works and legends of St Vedast are celebrated in the stained glass windows of the church.

It has been suggested that the original church of St Vedast may have been founded by the Flemish community in London in the 12th or 13th century, possibly by a Flemish ancestor of Ralph d’Arras, who was the Sheriff of London in 1276.

The first church was probably quite small, but additions were made through the centuries. A chapel dedicated to St Dunstan was added in the 15th century, and other altars were added in the 16th century to Mary and to St Nicholas. By 1603, Stow in his Survey of London described St Vedast as ‘a fair church, lately rebuilt’.

Although no complete or accurate account survives for this early church, evidence of its construction can still be seen in the south wall of the church externally. Evidence of earlier openings for doors and windows, as well as the medieval stonework has been examined by archaeological survey and reported in London Archaeologist.

Reformation, fire and rebuilding

In 1614, St Vedast was enlarged by 20 feet thanks to a gift from the adjacent Saddlers’ company, and ‘beautified’ according to Stow’s Survey.

In 1635 the then Rector, James Batty, petitioned the Archbishop that a rail might be set up around the communion table as there are many “disorders and undecencies” among the parishioners when receiving the Blessed Sacrament. For his loyalty to King Charles I, Batty was “sequestered, plundered, forced to flee, and died” in 1642.

How the church may have suffered during the Civil Wars of the mid 17th century is unrecorded, but given that the Parliamentarian kept horses stabled in the chancel of nearby St Paul’s Cathedral, it is likely to have been badly affected. The current Rectors’ Board lists the years between 1643 and 1661 as under Foulke Bellers, a ‘Commonwealth Intruder’.

The disastrous Great Fire that swept through the City in September 1666 reached St Vedast on the third day. Afterwards, it was thought that although the roof, pews, pulpit and other fittings had been destroyed, the church could be repaired satisfactorily. It was therefore omitted from the original list of 50 churches to be rebuilt by Christopher Wren. By the 1690s, however, structural flaws must have become significant enough that rebuilding was begun. Records of those responsible for the detailed design and construction of the church are somewhat sketchy. Other than Wren, it is possible that Robert Hooke and/or Nicholas Hawksmoor were involved (the steeple is said to be particularly Hawksmoor-like), and master mason Edward Strong had been paid £3106:14:7 by the time the church was completed in 1699. He was responsible for the cherubs that grace the west front and bell tower, and for the dove in glory sculpture now situated at the east end of the south aisle.

18th and 19th centuries

Many of the minor changes that affected the church through the 18th century may not have been recorded, but we know that an organ was installed in 1773, and that heating was first introduced in 1790 – open stoves that were to be replaced in 1807 by a more satisfactory double fronted one.

Thomas Pelham Dale, Rector from 1847 to 1882, fell foul of the Public Worship Regulations Act of 1874 and was prosecuted for “ritualistic practices”. Although he gave up the practices in question for a time, he was brought before a court in 1880 and, for contempt, sent to Holloway prison.

The greatest change to the building in the 19th century was perhaps to the fenestration. A square headed window was removed in 1848 from the east end, along with the Dove in Glory sculpture by Strong above it. Twelve new stained glass windows were introduced in 1884, making the church much darker. Internal adjustments to pews, screens, pulpit and altar rails were made shortly afterwards.

Rebuilding after the Blitz

On 29th December 1940, London was attacked by German air raids that dropped some 24,000 high explosive bombs and 100,000 incendiaries, mostly in the City. Although the Cathedral itself survived thanks to hundreds of volunteer firefighters, much of the area around St Paul’s was utterly destroyed.

As after the Great Fire of 1666, St Vedast was gutted and left a burnt out shell, with roof, pews, pulpit and fittings all ruined. As the structure of the church and its tower were deemed to be safe, plans to restore the church began in 1947. The work itself only began in 1953, under the auspices of its new Rector, Canon Mortlock, and the architect Stephen Dykes Bower. The post war Parochial Church Council that oversaw the work included Poet Laureate and conservation champion John Betjeman and the great organ builder Noel Mander.

To make the church a more appropriate layout for smaller 20th century congregations, Dykes Bower introduced collegiate style seating, and screened off the south aisle. New false walls were constructed within the east and south walls to make the church more rectangular, enabling a strong black and white patterned terrazzo floor to be laid. The ceiling was constructed to a pattern near that of the Wren original and finished with gold leaf and aluminium, donated by the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths.

An adjacent plot along Foster Lane to the north, formerly the location of the Fountain pub, was purchased for the construction of a new Rectory, and a small secluded courtyard built between this Rectory and the former parish school (now the parish hall of St Vedast).

Details of church, courtyard, features and fittings – many of which originally graced other churches in the City in earlier centuries – can be found in the church section of this website where you can take a virtual tour.

The United Parishes

Since the Great Fire of 1666, St Vedast has been accumulating adjacent parishes as churches have disappeared, either through fire, war or development.

The current list of thirteen other parishes now under the auspices of St Vedast is as follows:

  • St Alban Wood Street – dating back to Saxon times, the church was destroyed in the Great Fire and rebuilt by Wren in the Gothic style, only to be bombed in WWII. Only its tower remains.
  • St Anne and St Agnes – a medieval foundation just at the junction of Foster Lane and Gresham Street, the church was rebuilt by Wren after being burnt down in the Great Fire. It was largely rebuilt after WWII to Wren’s original plans.
  • St Lawrence Jewry – possibly founded as early as the 10th century, and now the Guild Church of the City of London Corporation. Wren’s post-Great Fire church was destroyed in the Blitz and restored by Cecil Brown, reopening in 1957.
  • St Mary Aldermanbury – what was left of this Wren church after WWII was demolished and reconstructed at Westminster College in Fulton Missouri. The foundations of the church are planted as a garden.
  • St Michael-le-Querne – the medieval church was destroyed in the Great Fire and not rebuilt. The only evidence of its existence is a boundary marker on the St Paul’s Choir School building.
  • St Matthew Friday Street – the church formerly stood in the lane of Cheapside where fishmongers sold their goods on Fridays. Although rebuilt by Wren after the 1666 fire, it was demolished for redevelopment in the 19th century.
  • St Peter Chepe – the churchyard of St Peter’s is now a garden in Wood Street, just off Cheapside, featuring a fine 200 year old plane tree. The church was not rebuilt after the Great Fire.
  • St Olave Silver Street – both church and street are now gone, the church in the Great Fire and the street in post war redevelopment. An open space has an inscribed stone marking the church’s destruction.
  • St Michael Wood Street – having been rebuilt by Wren after the Great Fire, the church was demolished in 1894 when the parish was united with St Alban Wood Street. Nothing remains of the church.
  • St Mary Staining – burnt down in the Great Fire, the church was not rebuilt. The site of church and churchyard now forms an attractive garden beside the Pewterers’ Company hall.
  • St Mary Magdalene Milk Street – a small church dating back to the 12th century, it was not rebuilt after the Great Fire, and the site was later occupied by the City of London School.
  • St John Zachary – the church, which stood opposite the Goldsmith’s Hall at the junction of Gresham Street and Noble Street where there is now an attractive garden, was not rebuilt after 1666. The parish was united with that of St Anne and St Agnes, and consequently later united with St Vedast.
  • St Michael Bassishaw – the church perished in the Great Fire and was rebuilt by Wren. It was eventually demolished in 1900 as nearby excavations made its foundations unsafe."



The church is a Grade I listed building and the entry, at the English Heritage website (visit link), tells us:

"1670-73 by Wren. Tower 1697. Interior burnt in World War II and rebuilt in near facsimile. Rectangular body with south aisle and clerestory. Integral south-west tower. Plain west front of Portland stone with central doorway, 2 arched windows above and central opening with mullions and transoms. Parapet to roof which is repeated on south side where main wallings is of rubble or red brick. East elevation rendered, with 3 arched windows and circular opening in central attic. Portland stone tower with arched and circular openings and particularly fine stone steeple. Interior has coved ceiling west gallery and south arcade now partly obscured by new fittings. Pulpit, font and cover of apparently late C17 date."

Active Church: Yes

School on property: No

Date Built: 01/01/1697

Service Times: Monday through Friday - 1215hrs / Sunday 1100hrs

Website: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
Take a picture of the Church. Please try to keep your GPSr out of the photo.
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