Church of St George Bloomsbury London, England

Listed Building Data

Church of St George Bloomsbury has been designated a Grade I listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1272341
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
I
Date Listed
24 October 1951
Name
CHURCH OF ST GEORGE AND ATTACHED RAILINGS, GATES AND LAMPS
Location
CHURCH OF ST GEORGE AND ATTACHED RAILINGS, GATES AND LAMPS, BLOOMSBURY WAY
District
Camden
County
Greater London Authority
Grid Reference
TQ 30209 81536
Easting
530208.9320
Northing
181535.7760

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

CAMDEN

TQ3081NW BLOOMSBURY WAY 798-1/100/113 (North side) 24/10/51 Church of St George and attached railings, gates and lamps

GV I

Church. 1716-1731. By Nicholas Hawksmoor. Re-ordered 1781, restored 1870 by GE Street and 1972-4 by Lawrence King. Stone faced brick. Rectangular plan of 6 bays. EXTERIOR: principal south facade with hexastyle Roman Corinthian portico on a podium approached by a broad flight of steps. Arched ground floor openings with segmental-headed openings above. To the west a tower (originally providing a conventional west entrance) with recessed arches on 3 sides, clock, tetrastyle portico to each facade of the belfry, surmounted by a stepped steeple terminating in a sculptured statue of George I in Roman attire. North facade, facing Little Russell Street, pedimented, 2 storeys of partly blind arcading on a podium with steps to entrances either side. Podium with 5 square-headed openings with massive keystones. 1st floor with Corinthian pilasters supporting entablature, 2nd with Corinthian half-columns. Lunette in pediment. INTERIOR: now north-south orientated. Paired Corinthian columns supporting an entablature and elliptical arch at the south end, behind which a panelled timber gallery and organ. Vestibule below. East wall with small apse (originally for the altar), the moulded and gilded ceiling decoration of pelican and scallop shell flanked by mitres and croziers with winged cherubs in clouds above by Isaac Mansfield. West wall with round-headed entrance to vestibule in the base of the tower and staircase to small round-headed gallery with wrought-iron balcony (originally for the gentry's servants). Current north chancel emphasised by double elliptical arches on entablatures with paired Corinthian columns. (Hawksmoor's design had galleries between these columns to emphasise the east-west orientation.) Original reredos - an aedicule with Corinthian columns and broken pediment. 5-sided, panelled and carved mahogany pulpit also original. SUBSIDIARY FEATURES: attached cast-iron railings and gates to frontage. Flanking the steps, attached C19 lamps with Windsor lanterns surmounted by cast-iron models of the stepped steeple original design which included lions and unicorns at the base. HISTORICAL NOTE: St George's was sanctioned by the Fifty New

Churches Act of 1711 to relieve parishioners of the northern part of St Giles-in-the-Fields parish from having to cross the notorious Rookery district. The stepped steeple was inspired by Pliny's description of the Tomb of Mausolus at Halicarnassus.

Listing NGR: TQ3021081533