Parish Church Of St John The Evangelist, Palmer'S Green With Parish Room is a Grade II* listed building in the Enfield local planning authority area, England. First listed on 31 January 1974. A Edwardian Church.

Parish Church Of St John The Evangelist, Palmer'S Green With Parish Room

WRENN ID
half-hinge-holly
Grade
II*
Local Planning Authority
Enfield
Country
England
Date first listed
31 January 1974
Type
Church
Period
Edwardian
Source
Historic England listing

Description

St John the Evangelist was built in two phases: the east end including the eastern part of the nave in 1903–4, completed in 1907–8. The architect was John Oldrid Scott.

Materials and Construction

The church is faced with a striking mixture of red brick and knapped flint with limestone dressings. The roofs are covered with clay tiles.

Plan

The church comprises a nave, chancel, tower over the choir, north and south aisles, north and south transepts, southeast vestry with porch, north chapel, and north and northeast porch. (The church is oriented to the southeast, so all compass directions given here are liturgical rather than actual.)

Exterior

The church occupies a prominent site at the junction of two main roads and forms an imposing, brightly-coloured landmark. The east end faces the junction and is made distinctive by round turrets at the corners of the chancel and the massive tower over the choir. The turrets are of brick up to the level of the springing of the east window, after which they have brick and limestone bands and are topped with chequerwork parapets behind which rise slender copper-clad spirelets. The east window is of seven lights with rich flamboyant tracery. Over the window there is flint, brick and limestone polychromy.

The tower also has a mixing of brick, flint and stone, with large angle buttresses of brick. The lowest stage is largely of brick, followed by a flint stage, after which comes the belfry stage with flint and brick diapering. The belfry windows are of three lights and are square-headed with free Decorated tracery. The tower is crowned by an embattled parapet with chequerwork decoration.

On the south side, the transept has in the centre of its south face a polygonal brick stair-turret terminating with slit windows and an embattled parapet. The aisles are brick below the sills of the windows, followed by a frieze of flint, then a narrower frieze of flint and brick diapering, above which comes a stone and flint parapet with chequerwork. The aisles are lean-tos and their windows are square-headed, of three lights, and have free Decorated tracery. The five-bay nave has two-light clerestory windows also with Decorated tracery.

At the northeast there is a chapel under its own gable. It has a three-light flamboyant east window and a square-headed window with free Decorated tracery on the north. The southeast vestry also has its own, but low, gable and has a small south porch.

Interior

The spacious interior has walls of exposed red brick. The five-bay arcades have brick arches with triple chamfering, and round piers with moulded capitals bearing unusually detailed knots of foliage. The chancel arch is nearly half as wide as the nave and has above it a series of plain, graded, blind arches which follow the profile of the arch-braces of the roof supports above. The central arch has a painting of the risen Christ executed in 1924 by Professor E W Tristram; the side arches bear shields.

The east ends of the aisles terminate in a pair of narrow arches placed under a super-arch with an octagonal pier between them. There is an ornamented roundel in the spandrel between the two arches. At the east end of the chapel there is a single arch beyond which is a short projection housing the altar. The aisle windows, while square-headed externally, have segmental heads internally. The sanctuary has been partitioned off and the reredos brought forward. The nave roof has large tie-beams.

Principal Fixtures

Edwardian church furnishings are restrained in comparison to ones from the mid-Victorian years, and this is true of those at St John's. The most striking item is the five-panel reredos of Christ flanked by Apostles, painted in 1925 in quattrocento style by Professor Tristram.

The nave benches are square-headed and have sunk panels; the benches have been removed from the aisles. The stalls have been moved out of the chancel and relocated at the east end of the south aisle. In the late 20th century a dais has been created and a forward altar installed at the east end of the nave.

The font is an attractive piece with a circular bowl decorated with flowing foliage. It is mounted on an octagonal stem and moulded base. There is a good octagonal font cover, capped by a spirelet. The pulpit is of timber, is polygonal in shape and has openings on each face. It stands on a ribbed, stone base which splays out upwards.

There is a particularly fine east window of 1924 by J H Dearle of Morris and Co. It commemorates the founders of the church and depicts Christ in Glory above eastern and western cities. There is much other early 20th-century glass by Morris and Co. The north aisle (Patmos) window (date of death 1918) is by Frank Salisbury.

Subsidiary Features

Linked to the southeast vestry porch by a timber arch is a choir vestry standing separately from the church, added in 1939. Its use of materials puts it in complete sympathy with the main building.

History

St John's was built to meet the needs of this expanding Edwardian suburb. In the application for a grant to the Incorporated Church Building Society in 1903 it was stated that 967 houses were about to be built in the area where the working population was said to be City clerks and warehousemen. It was part of the parish of Southgate where the Revd John Beardall was vicar, who set about the task of finding a site for a new church. This was given by Vyell E Walker of Arnos Grove, who owned it. He also gave £1,000 towards the building and was to leave £500 in his will for the work (he died in 1906).

The other great benefactor was Walker's sister, Mrs Anna Maria Baird, who had married a former vicar of Southgate. She donated £5,000 on condition that the chancel and tower be built first (which they were, along with the eastern part of the nave). The foundation stone was laid on 17 October 1903 and the first part was consecrated on 12 November 1904 by the Bishop of London. St John's was made a parish on 12 January 1906. The completed church was consecrated on 5 April 1908 by the Bishop of Islington.

The architect, John Oldrid Scott (1841–1913), was the son of the great Victorian architect Sir George Gilbert Scott, and younger brother of George Gilbert Scott junior. He began practice in 1863 in London and specialised in church work. By the time the second phase of the church was built he was in partnership with his son, Charles Marriot Oldrid Scott (1880–1952), who had assisted his father in 1902–3 and G F Bodley in 1903–4.

As at mid-2009 a new parish centre was to be added to the church at the southwest.

Detailed Attributes

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