St. Andrew, Holborn
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__NOTOC__ St Andrew Holborn was an ancient English parish that until 1767 was partly in the City of London and mainly in the county of Middlesex. Its City, thus southern, part retained its former name or was sometimes officially referred to as St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars.


History


Ecclesiastical origins

Thavie's original property, which was left for his endowment of the church, Thavie's Inn became a lawyers inn and may have been the original home of Lincoln's Inn before it relocated to its present site. Lincoln's sold Thavies Inn for redevelopment in 1785. Earlier that century the small east stained-glass window was put up, representing the arms of John Thavie, Esq., who in the year 1348 "left a considerable estate towards the support of this fabric for ever" as its caption reads. Four other new smaller parishes took over the largest green area depicted and most of Grey's Inn: *St John the Evangelist Red Lion Square took on the south-west, eating equally into St Giles in the Fields *St Alban, Brooke Street was rectangular parish (less small Furnivals Inn) spread from tiny Brooke Street Street to the south side of Clerkenwell Road: Reids Brewery, a Crown Court and
Holborn Town Hall Holborn Town hall is a municipal building on High Holborn, Holborn, London. It is a Grade II listed building. History The first town hall was a substantial structure on the corner of Gray's Inn Road and Clerkenwell Road which had been designed ...
. *Holy Trinity, Grays Inn Road occupied Bedford Row and the north-to-northeast quarter which thus ran from Lambs Conduit to Back Hill at the start of Hatton Garden * Saffron Hill, Hatton Garden, Ely Rents and Ely Place, extra-parochial liberties covering the east were covered by a new church to St Peter. Newcourt informs us that a public grammar school was among the adjuncts of the church. It was one of those erected by Act of Parliament in the reign of Henry VI. and, according to Maitland, stood on the right side of the church, and was taken down in 1737.


Civil parishes (as regards secular matters)

In 1723 the Middlesex bulk of the ecclesiastical parish was first split: its north-west corner became St George the Martyr, Queen Square (not to be confused with St George, Bloomsbury to the immediate west) and the rest remained St Andrew, Holborn. The two however recombined for civic, secular purposes in 1767 to create St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars with St George the Martyr; the latter at approximately the same time shed its part in the City of London to become its own parish as to lay purposes: St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars and over time under the auspices of the Farringdon Without City Ward. Both parishes bore quasi-civil parish (CP) areas separate from their parochial church councils. By comparison and not to be confused St Giles in the Fields and St George Bloomsbury Ancient Parish-turned Civil Parish existed 1774-1930. St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars existed abolished as a civil parish 1767-1907.F. Youngs, Local Administrative Units: Southern England (London: Royal Historical Society, 1979), p. 298.


Geography

The ancient parish included most of the Holborn area to the west, bordering onto
St Giles in the Fields St Giles in the Fields is the Anglican parish church of the St Giles district of London. It stands within the London Borough of Camden and belongs to the Diocese of London. The church, named for St Giles the Hermit, began as a monastery and ...
. As such it included both
Lincoln's Inn The Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn is one of the four Inns of Court in London to which barristers of England and Wales belong and where they are called to the Bar. (The other three are Middle Temple, Inner Temple and Gray's Inn.) Lincoln ...
and Gray's Inn which rented pews in the church of St Andrew, Holborn, first mentioned according to Thornbury's ''Old and New London'' (1878) "given by one Gladerinus to the Dean and Chapter of St. Paul's";Walter Thornbury, 'Farringdon Street, Holborn Viaduct and St. Andrew's church', in Old and New London: Volume 2 (London, 1878), pp. 496-513. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/old-new-london/vol2/pp496-513 ccessed 20 August 2017 rebuilt to Wren's designs in 1686.


Population

;St Andrew Holborn, City of London


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Saint Andrew Holborn (parish) History of the City of London History of the London Borough of Camden Bills of mortality parishes