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St Peter's Church (also known as St Peter's by the Waterfront) is one of the twelve medieval churches in the ancient borough of Ipswich, England. [1] An Augustinian priory dedicated to St Peter and Paul occupied a six-acre site to the north and east of the church.
The Waterfront Action (previously known as the Ipswich Waterfront Community Group) was established in 2007 as a community initiative with the purpose of working towards a friendly, thriving and vibrant community on the Ipswich Waterfront. The organisation was set up by the Ipswich Waterfront Churches. [33]
River Church Ipswich is an Anglican church in Ipswich, Suffolk, England. It is part of the network of HTB church plants . River Church is based at St Mary-at-the-Quay in the Waterfront area of central Ipswich.
The present-day redundant church of St Peter is south of central Ipswich and a short distance above the docks on the river Orwell, but that was wider in medieval times and so would have flowed close by the Priory (hence the church was known also as St Peter by the Waterfront [3]).
St Mary-at-the-Quay Church is a former Anglican church in Ipswich, Suffolk, England.The medieval building is under the care of the Churches Conservation Trust. [1] and since September 2021 it has been used by River Church to implement an approach to evangelicism developed by Holy Trinity Brompton as part of the network of HTB church plants.
The early waterfront of Ipswich ran from approximately St Peter's Church, near the present Stoke Bridge, eastward behind the present quay or marina embankment and past the present Custom House. It lay originally nearer to the line of College Street and Salthouse Street, with new revetments being built successively further out into the river in ...
Ipswich Historic Churches Trust; L. Leighton Road Evangelical Church, Ipswich This page was last edited on 27 March 2019, at 11:48 (UTC). Text is available under ...
An interlaced "S" and "P" from an original front pew from the 1860s. The construction of St Pancras was largely financed from the estate of L'Abbé Louis Simon. Abbé Simon was a French émigré priest who came to Ipswich in 1793, during the French Revolution, and became the first Catholic priest to celebrate Mass regularly in Ipswich since the Reformation. [2]