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St Michael and All Angels, Bedford Park

St Michael and All Angels
The spire of St Michael and All Angels, Bedford Park, W4 - geograph.org.uk - 899072.jpg
51°29′46″N 0°15′17″W / 51.4961°N 0.2548°W / 51.4961; -0.2548Coordinates: 51°29′46″N 0°15′17″W / 51.4961°N 0.2548°W / 51.4961; -0.2548
Location Bath Road
Chiswick, London
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Anglo-Catholic
Website www.smaaa.org.uk
Architecture
Status Parish church
Functional status Active
Architect(s) Norman Shaw
Style Queen Anne revival
Perpendicular Gothic
Administration
Parish St Michael and All Angels Bedford Park
Deanery Hounslow
Archdeaconry Middlesex
Diocese London
Clergy
Vicar(s) Fr Kevin Morris
Laity
Reader(s) Anne Mower
Jane Trigle
Director of music Jonathan Dods
Churchwarden(s) Nicola Chater and Dinah Garrett
Listed Building – Grade II*
Designated 11 July 1951
Reference no. 1079622

St Michael and All Angels is a Grade II* listed Church of England parish church in Bedford Park, Chiswick. It was designed by the architect Norman Shaw, who built some of the houses in that area. The church was consecrated in 1880. It is constructed in what has been described both as Queen Anne revival style and as Perpendicular Gothic style modified with English domestic features. Its services are Anglo-Catholic.

St Michael and All Angels began as a temporary building on Chiswick High Road opposite Chiswick Lane, some distance from its present site, in 1876. The present church at the corner of Turnham Green Terrace and Bath Road, near Turnham Green tube station, was designed by the architect Norman Shaw. He was the Estate Architect for Bedford Park, designing some of its earliest houses in red brick and white-painted woodwork, known as Queen Anne revival style. Although this style was considered novel but not particularly ecclesiastical by the architect G. E. Street at the time, Shaw decided to use a similar style for the church. The red bricks, as used for Bedford Park houses, were made locally.

The architectural writer James Stevens Curl describes the style as "Perpendicular Gothic with seventeenth- and eighteenth-century domestic features". He also notes that the wooden features of the church were originally painted pale green. The foundation stone was laid on 31 May 1879. The church was consecrated on 17 April 1880. A churchwarden of St Nicholas Church, Chiswick, the brewer Henry Smith of Chiswick's Fuller Smith & Turner objected in writing to the Bishop of London, raising controversy about the high Anglo-Catholic form of service used in the church. The poet and writer on English architecture John Betjeman called it "a very lovely church and a fine example of Norman Shaw's work." In 1887 Shaw's vision for an additional North aisle was realised.


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