Deptford Deanery
Deptford, St Paul with St Mark
Parish Contacts
Fr Paul D Butler (Rector)
St Paul's Rectory
Mary Ann Gardens
Deptford
London SE8 3DP
Tel: 020 8692 7449
(not
available Friday)
E-mail: rector@paulsdeptford.org.uk
Sunday Services
8.30am
Low
Mass
(English Missal, 1st Sunday of month)
9.45am
Morning Prayer
10.30am
High Mass
5.00pm Evening
Prayer
(Evensong & Benediction on 1st
Sunday of month)
Weekday Services
Mass:
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, 6pm;
Wednesday, 7.30pm;
Saturday, 10am.
Morning Prayer:
Mon-Thu, 9am
Sat, 9.30am
Evening Prayer:
Mon, Tue, Thu, Sat 5.30pm.
Wed, 7pm
Please come to Sunday Parish Mass if you would like to arrange a Baptism, Wedding or to make any other general enquiry
Information
Patron: Bishop of Southwark
Population (2001
census): 5,138
Urban Priority Area: Yes
Deanery: Deptford
Archdeaconry: Lewisham & Greenwich
Episcopal Area: Woolwich
Diocesan Record Office: London Metropolitan Archives
Details of Church
Built: 1712 - 30
Architect: Thomas Archer
Listing:
grade A
St Paul's Church, one of the fifty Commissioners' Churches, was designed by Thomas Archer (c.1668-1743), a Commissioner himself, and was constructed between the years 1712-1730 when it was consecrated. The triangular Rectory, also by Archer was demolished c.1885.
The church was described by Basil Clarke as follows:
"It is a most imposing church, and is made more so by the stone platform on which it stands. It is almost square though it is, in fact, planned as a nave and aisles. At the four corners are the usual vestibules and vestries, two-storied, with canted walls within the church. The two sides have slight projections of three bays, with pediments; the walls are adorned by pilasters with intermittent rustications.
The tower is circular, with windows, like those of the towers of St John's, Smith Square, and a spire: the basement is surrounded by a semi-circular portico. At the east is an apse, with a Venetian window which follows the curve. The order inside is Corinthian. The ceiling has admirable plaster work.
There were Victorian repairs in 1856 (John Whichcord) and 1883 (Thomas Dinwiddy), and a sympathetic restoration in the 1930s by Eden and Marchant. The Victorian Norman font came from Rochester Cathedral: the original font was sent to a mission church abroad."
The brick vaulted basement was refurbished and provided with improved sanitation and a new kitchen in 1993.
St Mark's Church has been declared redundant and sold.
