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The church dates from the 13th century and was restored and enlarged under Napoleon III, to whom we owe the magnificent bell tower.
Its height was designed to serve as a landmark for soldiers of the time, particularly during artillery fire.
Saint-Laurent Church was looking magnificent when the Great War broke out. On Monday, November 30, 1914, a shell hit the north transept, and its explosion also damaged the roofs of the spire and the nave. The stained-glass window, donated by the airmen a few years earlier, was also destroyed. After the 1918 armistice, Mourmelon, like many villages in the combat zone, healed its human and material wounds.
Unfortunately, World War II broke out a few years later, and on Wednesday, June 12, 1940, Saint-Laurent Church was hit again. More severely this time, German missiles set the building ablaze. The roof frame and spire collapsed, while the bells shattered as they fell. Everything burned or melted: priestly vestments, religious objects, and all the furnishings.
Reconstruction work then spread over several years. On December 8, 1956, a new rooster was installed atop the spire, and on October 27, 1957, the bells—recast in Orléans—were placed in their permanent position and chimed once again. But it wasn't until February 1959 that the church finally regained its pre-war appearance.
Since then, the church underwent major renovations in 1993, mainly concerning the roofs of the spire and the nave. That same year, on November 6, a new rooster was installed and remains in place to this day. Its two predecessors have since enjoyed a peaceful and warm retreat in the town hall's main hall."