Our Patch April 2016 | Page 21

Our Patch APRIL 2016 LOOKING BACK The first place of worship to be built in Hammersmith was St Paul's chapel in 1631 ST PAUL' S CHAPEL A lthough St Paul’s Church has been standing for more 130 years, it was not the first church on the site. Because in the early 17th Century Hammersmith was a hamlet within the parish of Fulham. In 1629 prominent inhabitants, including the Earl of Mulgrave and Nicholas Crispe, successfully petitioned the Bishop of London for a chapel to be built so parishioners could worship without trudging through 1.5miles of muddy lanes to All Saints. H A M M ERS M IT H The chapel of St Paul was consecrated by Bishop Laud, later Archbishop of Canterbury, on 7 June 1631. Built of brick it had a square tower at the west end crowned by a clock turret and cupola. The neatly painted interior had an ornamental ceiling, four stone pillars supporting a gallery and stained glass windows depicting coats of arms. Family pews, of which there were a number, were cushioned, carpeted, and curtained from the intruding gaze of the poorer members of the congregation who inhabited the free seats. In 1821, the churchwardens fitted out a pew with scarlet cloth for the use of Queen Caroline who was living at Brandenburgh House nearby. Hammersmith became a separate parish in 1834 and the chapel of St Paul became the parish church. By the 1860s the building was too small for its congregation and the church was restored and enlarged, but this proved to be a short-term solution. Plans were drawn up in 1882 for a new church to be built in stages on the same site and the first section of the new St Paul’s Church was consecrated in 1883.