St Nicholas Acons | |
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Current photograph of site
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Location | Nicholas Lane, off Lombard Street, London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Denomination | Anglican |
Previous denomination | Roman Catholic |
Great Fire of London of 1666 and not rebuilt.
St Nicholas Acons was a parish church in the City of London. In existence by the late 11th century, it was destroyed during theThe church was situated on the west side of Nicholas Lane in Langbourn ward of the City of London. The name 'Acons' was derived from that of a mediaeval benefactor. The church is recorded as early as 1084, when Godwinus and his wife Turund gave its patronage to Malmesbury Abbey. It passed to the Crown on the dissolution of the monasteries.
St Nicholas' was destroyed during the Great Fire of London of 1666 and not rebuilt. Instead the parish was united with that of St Edmund the King and Martyr, Lombard Street in 1670. The name retained as a precinct title in the south-western part of Langbourn Ward.
In the 1860s a proposed unification of the benefice of St Edmunds with St Nicholas and that of St Mary Woolnoth with St Mary Woolchurch Haw was vigorously defended by St Nicholas Acons' discrete churchwardens. In 1964 the churchyard was excavated and important Saxon remains found, but in the last decade of the 20th century Gordon Huelin noted that only a City Corporation commemoration at the site of the old parsonage remained to indicate a church had ever been there.