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All Saints [a] is an Anglo-Catholic church on Margaret Street in Westminster, Greater London, England. Founded in the late 18th century as Margaret Street Chapel , the church became one aligned with the Oxford Movement in the 1830s and 1840s.
The Society was established in 1851 in the parish of All Saints, Margaret Street in London by Harriet Brownlow Byron. The sisters were employed in parish work, particularly among the poor and underprivileged. The convent in Margaret Street, Westminster, still stands; [1] the convent chapel by G. E. Street (1860) is Grade II listed. [2]
All Saints Church, a Victorian Grade I listed Anglo-Catholic church, designed by the architect William Butterfield and built between 1850 and 1859, is located on the north side of the street. [5] Audley House is a grade II listed block of flats built in 1907, at 9–12 Margaret Street on the corner with Great Titchfield Street . [ 6 ]
All Saints', East Finchley: East Finchley, London Traditional Catholic Yes (Bishop of Fulham) [121] [122] All Saints, Margaret Street: Marylebone, London Anglo-Catholic Yes (Bishop of Fulham) [123] [124] All Saints Notting Hill: Notting Hill, Kensington and Chelsea, London Anglo-Catholic Yes (Bishop of Fulham) [113] [125] All Saints', Twickenham
For parish churches, the 19th-century Tractarians tended, however, to prefer an arrangement whereby the chancel was distinguished from the nave only by steps and a low-gated screen wall or septum (as at All Saints, Margaret Street), so as not to obscure the congregation's view of the altar. This arrangement was adopted for almost all new ...
The Grade I listed All Saints' Church, Sanderstead. There is evidence of prehistoric human activity in and around Sanderstead. In 1958–60 the Sanderstead Archaeological Group excavated in the vicinity of Sanderstead pond and revealed the presence of man as far back as the Mesolithic Period nearly 12,000 years ago, as well as pottery fragments dated between 100 AD and 1300 AD and a bronze ...
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The Missa Princeps Pacis (Mass Prince of Peace) is a mass composed by William Lloyd Webber in 1962 for a four-part choir and organ. [1]Lloyd Webber, who was the father of the composer Andrew Lloyd Webber and the cellist Julian Lloyd Webber, [2] was the organist and choirmaster of All Saints, Margaret Street, London between 1939 and 1948.