Events at St. Sepulchre-without-Newgate
this week
Tuesday 1st July at 6.15pm: Choral
Evensong (Willan in E flat, Geistliches Lied - Brahms)
Wednesday 2nd July at 1.00pm: Friends of the Musicians' Chapel Recital Series -
oboe, bassoon and piano trio
Thursday 3rd July at 1.00pm: Holy Communion (said)
Click
here for the February to September 2008
programme.
St. Sepulchre-without-Newgate is the largest church in the City
of London. The tower and outer walls were built around 1450. Badly damaged in
the Great Fire of 1666, the church was rebuilt by Wren's masons in 1670-71. The
ashes of Sir Henry Wood, founder of the Promenade Concerts - the longest running
continuous series of orchestral concerts in the world - are interred in the
Musicians' Chapel where now can be found the Musicians' Book of Remembrance
containing the names of over two thousand professional musicians.
On the south wall there is a stained glass window
commemorating Captain John Smith, the first Governor of the state of Virginia,
USA, whose exploits included sailing to America in "the little ships" in 1607,
where he was captured by Indians and freed by Princess Pocahontas. Smith died in
1631 and is buried in the south aisle. St. Sepulchre's was the first London home
of the School of English Church Music - now the RSCM - and the historic tower holds the twelve bells of the
Old Bailey made famous by the nursery rhyme 'Oranges and Lemons'.
|