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Holy Trinity Twickenham is a Grade II listed [1] Church of England church on Twickenham Green in Twickenham in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, originally built to relieve pressure on the parish church of St Mary following a campaign backed by MP Sir William Clay. Its vicar is Simon Couper. The church building dates from 1841. [2]
Stroud Green (Holy Trinity) Holy Trinity, Stroud Green 1881 (1960s) 13,832 ... St Paul's Mission Church, Twickenham 1937 St John the Evangelist, Uxbridge 1838
Holy Trinity Church, South Kensington ... Holy Trinity Sloane Street; Holy Trinity Twickenham; I. St Giles' Church, Ickenham ... St Mary on Paddington Green Church;
Holy Trinity Twickenham; S. Church of St James, Twickenham; Church of St Margaret of Scotland, Twickenham; St Mary's Church, Twickenham; St Stephen's, Twickenham;
St Augustine's Church, Hammersmith; Holy Trinity Church, Brook Green; St Andrew Bobola Church, Hammersmith; St Francis de Sales, Hampton Hill and Upper Teddington; St Theodore's Church, Hampton; Our Lady Queen of Apostles Church, Heston; St Joseph's Church, Highgate; St John the Evangelist Church, Islington; St Peter's Italian Church, Clerkenwell
St Mary, Green Street Green Green Street Green: Mary [21] 1937 United with All Souls Pratts Bottom St Barnabas, St Paul's Cray St Paul's Cray: Barnabas [37] 1950 Building 1962–1964 St Nicholas, Orpington Orpington: Nicholas [38] 1957–1958 Unity Church Orpington Orpington [39] 1969 Merger of three churches 2012 Christ Church, Orpington ...
"Sesame Street" has been gentrified. After 45 seasons, the brick walls that once fenced in the neighborhood have been razed, giving way to sweeping views of what looks suspiciously like the Brooklyn Bridge (it is in fact a composite of three New York City bridges).
However, housing development in the 19th and 20th centuries led to new parishes being created for several new Church of England churches: Holy Trinity Twickenham (1842), St Philip and St James Church, Whitton (1862), St Stephen's, Twickenham (1875), All Saints Church, Twickenham (1914) and All Hallows, Twickenham (1939). As these came into ...