Corpus Christi Catholic Church - Maiden Lane, London, UK
N 51° 30.652 W 000° 07.359
30U E 699658 N 5710563
This 1874 Roman Catholic church, that seems out of place in this street, is on the south east side of Maiden Lane near its junction with Southampton Street.
Waymark Code: WMHQ9M
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 08/04/2013
Views: 5
The
church's website
tells of its history:
Situated between the Covent Garden
Market and the Strand, Maiden Lane was originally a path running along the
southern edge of the ‘Covent Garden’: that is, the Convent Garden, belonging
to the Benedictine monks of Westminster Abbey, and providing produce for
their table. The lane was blocked at the eastern end by a great statue of
Our Lady (some say this is how the Lane got its name) but unblocked in 1857
by Royal Decree of Queen Victoria. Queen Victoria didn’t take kindly to her
carriage having to negotiate a three-point turn on her way from a favourite
haunt of the Adelphi Theatre.
A less pleasant explanation for the name of the Lane is that it is a
corruption of the Middle-English word ‘Midden’, meaning a place where beasts
of burden would relieve themselves. In the past, Maiden Lane had a
bewitching quality which attracted the great and the good: Louis Napoleon,
Benjamin Disraeli and Voltaire all lived here, the artist J.M.W. Turner was
born here, Edward VII and Lily Langtry dined here, and the celebrated actor
of his day, William Terriss was murdered here by a crazed understudy in
1897.
Woven in to the social and socialite story of the area is the story of a
continuous Catholic presence in and around Covent Garden. Open and closet
Catholics abounded, including such names as St Philip Howard, the Earl of
Arundel; the Jesuit missioner St Robert Southwell; Mary Ward, foundress of
the ISBVM’s; St Claude la Colombiere (who introduced devotion to the Sacred
Heart to England; Charles I’s architect Inigo Jones; the poet John Dryden
and the composer of ‘Rule Britannia’, Thomas Arne. Side by side with the
great and the good were vast numbers of poor Catholics, many of them working
in Covent Garden and living mainly in Drury Lane or the slums of St Giles’,
Holborn and Saffron Hill. Longstanding Irish colonies existed in all these
places, and the rate of immigration accelerated strongly during the Irish
Potato Famine.
Before Catholic worship was made legal in 1791, Mass was celebrated for the
fashionable and well-to-do in the chapels of foreign embassies, Sardinian,
Bavarian, Spanish, Venetian: and for the poor, in taverns and private homes.
Catholic Emancipation, when it came, was a wonderful opportunity but an
almighty challenge. In 1849 the future Cardinal Newman sent Fr Faber to
found the London Oratory in King William St, Charing Cross. He bought what
had been a dance hall and converted it into a church, also opening a school.
In 1854 the Oratorians left for the then village of Brompton in West London,
leaving a gap which was not filled until 1872, when Archbishop Manning sent
Fr Cornelius Keens to lease a piece of land from the Bedford Estates to
build a church.
A lease was granted on condition that the building would cost at least
£6,000. Before building commenced Fr Keens celebrated Mass in the church
school, then as now in Macklin Street off Drury Lane. People flocked in,
large numbers were brought back to the Sacraments after years of neglect,
and a survey listed over 2000 Catholics in the district allocated for the
new parish, covering Covent Garden, the Strand, Trafalger Square and
Whitehall.
The foundation stone of Corpus Christi was laid on 5th August 1873. It would
be the first church in England since the Reformation to be given the
dedication of Corpus Christi, and Fr Keens appealed widely for contributions
towards the £8,000 cost, calling it an act of reparation ‘for the sacrileges
committed at that sad time against the Divine Sacrament’. He chose the same
architect, Frederick Hyde Pownall, who he had used for another of his
building projects, Sacred Heart, Holloway. Pownall created Corpus Christi in
the same style as the Sacred Heart, Early English. Pownall had to struggle
with a cramped and awkward-shaped site, and to mollify local concerns about
the proposed height of the church, he sank it three feet below the level of
the pavement.
The church was finally opened with a fanfare on 20th October 1874 by the
Cardinal Archbishop. In his sermon Cardinal Manning said: “A sanctuary has
been opened to be specifically devoted to the adoration of the Blessed
Sacrament.” The choice of dedication was a re-affirmation of the teaching of
the Church on the Real Presence of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament.
Fr Francis Stanfield was parish priest here in the early 1880′s, and wrote
two very famous hymns which have a great bearing on life here and are well
known throughout the Catholic Church: Sweet Sacrament Divine and Oh Sacred
Heart. Those hymns are quite a legacy, and not just for their devotional
nature. They also make a connection between Corpus Christ and most of the
Catholic churches in the English-speaking world.
A visitor of particular note came in 1908, the year of the Eucharistic
Congress in London. Monsignor Ronald Knox preached at the Patronal Feast
that year and the invitation extended to 26 times altogether. His sermons
were published in book form under the titles ‘Between Heaven and Charing
Cross’ and ‘Window in the Wall’.
From the official opening in 1874 it took another 82 years before the
original debt could be paid off and, as a result, the church was consecrated
on 18th October 1956.
What immediately strikes visitors to Corpus Christi is that everything and
every one of the saints points to the Real Presence of Christ in the
Tabernacle, Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity; the unique little statue of
St Tarcisius, the boy-martyr of the third century killed by a Roman mob
while carrying Holy Communion to the sick; the statue of St Genesius, a
professional actor who was martyred for the faith and is now patron saint of
actors everywhere. The great east window shows four 13th-century saints of
the Blessed Sacrament: St Clare of Assisi, whose prayer before the Blessed
Sacrament on the walls of her convent drove off an attacking army; Blessed
Juliana of Mount Cornillon, whose visions led to the institution of the
Feast of Corpus Christi; and St Thomas Aquinas and St Bonaventure, who
composed the first hymns for the Feast.
And so it remains, almost 140 years later, having been the home and place of
worship for countless parishioners and pilgrims. Much has changed over the
years. Corpus Christi was dreamt of and built to serve the market workers of
Covent Garden, yet within a few years slum clearance drove out many of the
coster families, making a significant dent in parishioner numbers. But at
the same time grand hotels began to go up along the Strand, bringing in
wealthy foreign tourists to swell the congregations at Mass.
From the start Corpus Christi had a special outreach to theatre-land,
becoming known as the Actor’s Church – a role it still serves. Huge
demographic change means that very few of those who claim Corpus Christi as
their church actually live locally. In what is now a largely working and
leisure district, although local characters and parishioners remain. The
church today has a wonderfully varied ministry of welcome, hospitality and
service. From being a parish church for the resident and visitors of Covent
Garden, it is also the spiritual home of the Catholic Stage Guild {CaAPA},
the Latin Mass Society, the London home of the Guild of St Genesius and the
Youth 2000 prayer group. Hundreds of people pass through our open doors each
week to celebrate the Sacraments of Reconciliation and Holy Mass or simply
to light a candle, soak up the stillness and find a little peace.
Corpus Christi still fulfils the role for which it was built: to provide a
holy place where we can meet with God and He with us.
The church is a Grade II listed building with the entry at
the
English Heritage website telling us:
Church with presbytery. 1873-74 by
Frederick Hyde Pownall. Stock brick with stone dressings, slate roofs. Early
English style. Rectangular plan with ritual west narthex at north end to
street where it is surmounted by a massive square tower, its upper stage
with clasping buttresses and corbel table, 3 tall lights stone dressed with
gabled arches on colonettes; short pyramidal slate spire with small lucarnes.
The church entrance, a moulded and chamfered pointed arch opening to a
vaulted passage, is set in the ground floor of the adjoining presbytery to
left. This has a 4 storey, 4 window wide front of plain design. Flat stone
heads to narrow sash windows beneath relieving arches. 3rd floor windows as
stone gabled half dormers. Church interior has 4 bay nave beyond narthex,
with aisles and 2 bay sanctuary with flanking chapels. Lancet lights and
plate tracery. Open arched collar braced king post timber roof. Brick walls
and stone dressings have been painted. Elaborate reredos and altar of Caen
stone by Earp. Medieval octagonal stone font, Early English in style.
The
church's
website also tells us about opening and service times:
The Church is usually open from
8.00am until 7.00pm during the week and from 9.00am until 6.00pm on Sundays.
Sunday Mass Times
Saturdays: 6.00pm
Sundays: 9.30am and 11.30am
Weekday Mass Times
Monday to Friday: 1.05pm
Bank Holidays: 10.00am
Holy Days of Obligation: 12.05pm and 1.05pm
Sacrament of Reconciliation {Confession}
30 minutes preceding each Mass, other times on request.
Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament
Weekdays, except Tuesdays, from 12 noon to 1.00pm.
Mass in the Extraordinary Form {Tridentine Rite}
Mondays, Bank Holidays and Holiday Days of Obligation: 6.30pm
Second Fridays of the Month: 6.30pm
Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament with Youth 2000
Wednesdays: 7.00pm
Young Adults Prayer Group with Eucharistic Adoration and Rosary
Mass on the first Wednesday of the month
Type of Church: Church
Status of Building: Actively in use for worship
Date of organization: 10/18/1956
Date of building construction: 08/05/1873
Diocese: Westminster
Address/Location: 1 Maiden Lane London, United Kingdom WC2E 7NB
Relvant Web Site: [Web Link]
Dominant Architectural Style: Not listed
Associated Shrines, Art, etc.: Not listed
Archdiocese: Not listed
|
Visit Instructions: To log a visit to this waymark, you must post at least one original photo of the site, give the date and a brief description of your visit.
|