Christ Church, Spitalfields, is an Anglican church…
1728 CE
Christ Church, Spitalfields, is an Anglican church built between 1714 and 1729 to a design by Nicholas Hawksmoor.
Situated on Commercial Street, in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, on the eastern border and facing the City of London, it is one of the first (and arguably one of the finest) of the so-called "Commissioners' Churches" built for the Commission for Building Fifty New Churches, which had been established by an Act of Parliament in 1711.
The purpose of the Commission was to acquire sites and build fifty new churches to serve London’s new settlements.
This parish has been carved out of the huge medieval Stepney parish for an area dominated by Huguenots (French Protestants and other 'dissenters' who owe no allegiance to the Church of England and thus to the King) as a show of Anglican authority.
Some Huguenots use it for baptisms, marriages and burials but not for everyday worship, preferring their own chapels (their chapels are severely plain compared with the bombastic English Baroque style of Christ Church) though increasingly they assimilate into English life and Anglican worship—which is in the eighteenth century relatively plain.
The Commissioners for the new churches included Christopher Wren, Thomas Archer and John Vanbrugh, had appointed two surveyors, one of whom was Nicholas Hawksmoor.
Only twelve of the planned fifty churches are built, of which six are designed by Hawksmoor.