Parish Church of Stephen, Bush Hill Park | |
51°38′30″N0°04′43″W / 51.6417°N 0.0786°W Coordinates: 51°38′30″N0°04′43″W / 51.6417°N 0.0786°W | |
Location | Park Avenue, EN1 2ET |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Denomination | Church of England |
Tradition | Modern Catholic |
Website | https://www.london.anglican.org/directory/st-stephen-bush-hill-park/ |
History | |
Founded | 1901 |
Dedicated | 1907 |
Architecture | |
Architect(s) | John Samuel Alder (1847-1919) |
Style | Early English Gothic |
Years built | 1906-16 |
Administration | |
Province | Canterbury |
Diocese | Diocese of London |
Episcopal area | Edmonton |
Archdeaconry | Hampstead |
Deanery | Enfield |
Clergy | |
Vicar(s) | Preb. Dr. Amatu Christian-Iwuagwu |
St Stephen's Church is a Church of England church in Park Avenue, Bush Hill Park in the London Borough of Enfield. [1]
The first St Stephen's was a simple temporary building (’iron church’) put up in 1901 as a chapel of ease to All Saints Church in Edmonton. In 1906 work began on a permanent church to a gothic design by John Samuel Alder (1847-1919) with walls built of Stamford stone, with Welden stone for the corners. Bath stone is used for the windows and pillars and York stone for the steps. The church was lit by electricity. The chancel, lady chapel, organ bay, clergy and choir vestries and three bays of the nave and aisles were completed in 1907 at a cost of £6,000, and consecrated that year by the Bishop of London. In 1909 St Stephen's became a separate parish. Completion of the church, which in 1912 was estimated to cost a further £4,800, was achieved in 1916, but the planned-for tower and spire were never built. [2]
In the 22 August 1917 edition of The Building News and Architectural Journal (p. 144) the completed building was described as follows:
St Stephen's church has a number of twentieth-century decorated windows.
The parish's first pipe organ (1-manual and pedal) was built for the temporary church building by the firm of Henry Jones. It was later moved to the church of St Alphege Edmonton. The present 3-manual instrument was installed in 1908, built by the Norwich-based firm of Norman and Beard. As a mark of the importance of the St Stephen's organ to the nation's heritage, being of special interest and warranting every effort to preserve, it has been awarded an Historic Organ Certificate by the British Institute of Organ Studies, the amenity society for the British organ, which lobbies Government, Historic England and other national bodies. [7]
The original cost of the present instrument was £1,150. The imposing carved organ case is a gift from the first vicar, Edward Forbes (1863-1941), as a memorial to his father. [8]
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Media related to St Stephen's Parish Church, Bush Hill Park at Wikimedia Commons