Open House Festival

St Mary the Virgin

religious

Unknown, 1190

Church Road, Manor Park, Little Ilford, E12 6HA

Small Grade I listed 12C chapel in lovely churchyard setting, it retains original architectural features and has interesting brasses, monuments and stained glass windows. The grounds are also recognised as a site of commonwealth Wargrave with a official plaque on its gate,it also has outside seating were you can relax. The church itself offers a place for quiet prayer and reflection.

Getting there

Tube

East Ham

Train

Ilford, Manor Park, Woodgrange Park

Bus

425, 25, 86, 101, 104, 147, 474

Additional travel info

147 is a direct bus passing the church in both directions with stops at little llford school and St Stephens, 25,86 and 425 require a short

Access

Facilities

Accessibility notes

Wheelchair access ramp into the church. Some parts of the building may be inaccessible due to architecture and safety.

What you can expect

The chapel is a quiet place of prayer and reflection away from any traffic noise outside

Create a free visitor account to book festival tickets

Drop in activities

Sat 20 Sep

10:00–17:00

Drop in: 12th Cent church in London

Date on Sunday 21st due to Sunday Worship at the sister church will be 12:30 to 18:00

16:00–17:00

Drop in: Music from Church Organ

Selection of music

Sun 21 Sep

13:00–17:00

Drop in: Open

Open to look around

About

History of the Building

St Mary’s today consists of the nave, chancel, Lethieullier chapel, south porch and a small western bell turret.

The nave is built largely of ragstone rubble, flint, chalk and some reused Roman tile. The walls are up to 3 feet thick and there are three Norman windows still remaining at the west end. A small slit window (the least altered) can still be seen opening from the organ loft into the Lethieullier chapel. Two round-headed doorways remain to the south and north.

A date of 1150 has been suggested for the present building, but the nave could well be far earlier, there being no carved detail for accurate dating. Archaeological evidence suggests there was a Saxon church on the same site before this building.

The Lethieullier Chapel is a fine 18th century addition, with monuments to this family and a circular window containing rescued pieces of Tudor glass. The church itself contains many brasses, memorials and hatchments of historical interest. The Rectors board is illustrated by C D Bedford and a large wooden coat of arms for George I bears witness to the then Rector’s vocal support of the king against the Jacobite rebellion.

The churchyard gives rest to many dated tombs of interest, including two war grave memorials.

St Mary’s stands now hemmed in by houses in a noisy urban area, surrounded by the trees and grass of the churchyard. But surely it retains some of the peace and stillness it had when first built among the alders and birches of Epping Forest within the sound, if not the sight, of the great Benedictine Abbey of Barking.

Online presence

twitter.com/coelittleilford

www.achurchnearyou.com/church/6483

www.facebook.com/parishoflittleilford

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