Christ Church St Laurence
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Christ Church St Laurence is an Anglican
church Church may refer to: Religion * Church (building), a building for Christian religious activities * Church (congregation), a local congregation of a Christian denomination * Church service, a formalized period of Christian communal worship * C ...
located at 814 George Street, near Central railway station and Haymarket, in Sydney,
New South Wales ) , nickname = , image_map = New South Wales in Australia.svg , map_caption = Location of New South Wales in AustraliaCoordinates: , subdivision_type = Country , subdivision_name = Australia , established_title = Before federation , es ...
, Australia. It is the principal centre of
Anglo-Catholic Anglo-Catholicism comprises beliefs and practices that emphasise the Catholic heritage and identity of the various Anglican churches. The term was coined in the early 19th century, although movements emphasising the Catholic nature of Anglica ...
worship in the city and Diocese of Sydney, where the Anglicanism is predominantly
Evangelical Evangelicalism (), also called evangelical Christianity or evangelical Protestantism, is a worldwide interdenominational movement within Protestant Christianity that affirms the centrality of being " born again", in which an individual expe ...
in character. Anglo-Catholicism is manifested at Christ Church St Laurence by an emphasis on the sacraments, ritual, music and social action, all of which have been prominent features of Anglo-Catholicism since the 19th century. The parish dates from 1838 and the church building from 1845. It was the first Anglican church in the city to be consecrated by a bishop and is the second-oldest of the city's Anglican church buildings still in use. The first architect was Henry Robertson, who was soon succeeded by
Edmund Blacket Edmund Thomas Blacket (25 August 1817 – 9 February 1883) was an Australian architect, best known for his designs for the University of Sydney, St. Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney and St. Saviour's Cathedral, Goulburn. Arriving in Sydney from Engl ...
, a major figure in Australian architectural history and a parishioner of Christ Church St Laurence, to whom the church owes many of its notable features. The church was added to the
New South Wales State Heritage Register The New South Wales State Heritage Register, also known as NSW State Heritage Register, is a heritage list of places in the state of New South Wales, Australia, that are protected by New South Wales legislation, generally covered by the Heritag ...
on 2 April 1999. The choir of Christ Church St Laurence has a high reputation among Anglican parish choirs. It performs a repertoire ranging from Gregorian chant to 21st-century works. In existence for the consecration of the church in 1845, and possibly earlier, it is one of the oldest choral groups in Australia. The church's pipe organ was built by William Hill & Son, of London, in 1891 and installed in 1906. It is also listed on the NSW State Heritage Register. The church has an active program of support for people who are socially marginalised, including the homeless and asylum seekers. This work originates in the social character of the parish's neighbourhood, which has a history of poverty, immigration, and transience. Social action will increase in future years, following the creation of the separately administered Christ Church St Laurence Charitable Trust.


Early history

In 1838, fifty years after the foundation of New South Wales, Sydney possessed only two permanent Anglican churches, St Philip's Church Hill (1810; present building 1856) to the north, and St James', King Street (1822), near the centre. The Bishop of Australia,
William Grant Broughton William Grant Broughton (22 May 178820 February 1853) was an Anglican bishop. He was the first (and only) Bishop of Australia of the Church of England. The then Diocese of Australia, has become the Anglican Church of Australia and is divided ...
, saw the need for another church for the settlement at the city's southern boundary, then becoming a poorer industrialised quarter. This part of Sydney was in the "civil" or "cadastral" Parish of St Lawrence, an administrative division used to identify the location of properties for land transactions. At the bishop's expense, a temporary church was set up in the Albion Brewery on the corner of Elizabeth Street and Albion Street. This temporary "Saint Lawrence Church" operated from 1838 to 1845. In the first years, two priests were appointed as ministers of the Parish of St Lawrence, Thomas Steele (who was also responsible for the Parish of Cook's River) in 1838 and Edmund Ashton Dicken (who had arrived in the colony in December 1838, with a fairly obvious alcohol problem) for the first three months of 1839.
William Horatio Walsh William Horatio Walsh (12 September 1812 – 17 December 1882) was a High Church Anglican priest in Australia and England. Early life Walsh was born in London, the son of Isaac Richard and Sarah Walsh. He was educated at the Grammar School at Bu ...
, a newly arrived deacon, was appointed in April 1839. Bishop Broughton ordained him in September 1839 and Walsh held the position of incumbent of the parish until 1867. Walsh is considered the first rector of Christ Church St Laurence. The incumbent's responsibilities extended beyond the Parish of St Lawrence to the surrounding suburbs, each of which eventually became independent parishes: Redfern and Waterloo ( St Paul's, 1855), Surry Hills ( St Michael's, 1852), and the Glebe (St John's, Bishopthorpe, 1856). Bishop Broughton laid the foundation stone of the present church on 1 January 1840. The site, at the apex of Pitt and George Streets, was set amidst institutions from the convict era. Across Pitt Street (now the site of Central railway station) were the Carters' Barracks (where convicts still underwent punishment on treadmills), the police superintendent's residence and the Benevolent Asylum (1821, operated by the
Benevolent Society of New South Wales The Benevolent Society, founded by Edward Smith Hall in 1813, is Australia's first and oldest charity. The society is an independent, not-for-profit organization whose main goals include helping families, older Australians and people with disabili ...
). Beyond the eastern boundaries of these institutions lay the
Devonshire Street Cemetery The Devonshire Street Cemetery (also known as the Brickfield Cemetery or Sandhills Cemetery) was located between Eddy Avenue and Elizabeth Street, and between Chalmers and Devonshire Streets, at Brickfield Hill, in Sydney, Australia. It was con ...
(1820). To the south of the church were the toll gates and toll house designed in "gothick" style by convict architect
Francis Greenway Francis Howard Greenway (20 November 1777 – September 1837) was an English-born architect who was transported to Australia as a convict for the crime of forgery. In New South Wales he worked for the Governor, Lachlan Macquarie, as Australia' ...
. Economic recession halted construction of Christ Church between 1841 and 1843, when Edmund Thomas Blacket took over as architect. Bishop Broughton consecrated the church on 10 September 1845 with the title of Christ Church. In common usage it became known as Christ Church, Saint Lawrence, originally a reference to the cadastral parish. The parish adopted Saint Laurence (with that spelling) as patron saint in 1884, giving rise to the unusual double dedication which has survived.


Churchmanship

The first rector, W. H. Walsh, like Bishop Broughton, was associated with the
High Church The term ''high church'' refers to beliefs and practices of Christian ecclesiology, liturgy, and theology that emphasize formality and resistance to modernisation. Although used in connection with various Christian traditions, the term originate ...
group in England which was led by
Joshua Watson Joshua Watson (1771–1855) was an English wine merchant, philanthropist, a prominent member of the high church party and of several charitable organisations, who became known as "the best layman in England". Life Joshua Watson was born on To ...
and which also included Edward Coleridge. Walsh was also associated with High Church organisations – the
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel United Society Partners in the Gospel (USPG) is a United Kingdom-based charitable organization (registered charity no. 234518). It was first incorporated under Royal Charter in 1701 as the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Part ...
, which initially funded Walsh's stipend, and the
Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge The Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK) is a UK-based Christian charity. Founded in 1698 by Thomas Bray, it has worked for over 300 years to increase awareness of the Christian faith in the UK and across the world. The SPCK is t ...
. Walsh also corresponded regularly with the Society for Promoting Church Music and the
Ecclesiological Society The Cambridge Camden Society, known from 1845 (when it moved to London) as the Ecclesiological Society,Histor ...
which he addressed in London in 1851. Walsh was the foremost proponent in Sydney of the early writings of the Oxford Movement (or “Tractarians”). He was on at least one occasion referred to as "the chief Puseyite" (a usually pejorative term derived from the name of E. B. Pusey, a leader of the Oxford Movement). The result was a gothic church interior, with an ordered liturgy – Sung Matins and Evensong supported by a robed choir, and frequent Communion services with an offertory of sacramental alms and a surpliced preacher. Bishop Broughton wrote of the worship at Christ Church: "I have heard objections stated to some of the arrangements in the celebration of divine service, as savouring of novelty and innovation; but I am bound to say that there is no contrariety in any part of the practice to the most approved usages of the Church of England, with which I have been familiar from my earliest years; and everything is marked by such a degree of order and solemnity, that I could wish the observances of this church to be taken, if it were possible, as a model for the imitation of every church in my diocese." This High Church position was maintained under Walsh's successors, George Vidal and Charles Garnsey. Ritual advances towards Anglo-Catholicism were suppressed by the Evangelical diocesan, Bishop
Frederic Barker Frederic Barker (17 March 1808 – 6 April 1882) was the second Anglican bishop of Sydney. Early life Barker was born at Baslow, Derbyshire, England, fifth son of the Rev. John Barker and his wife Jane, née Whyte. He was educated at The ...
(Bishop of Sydney, 1854-1882). The most significant dispute with Christ Church occurred in 1868 when Barker ordered the removal of an image of the cross above the altar from the newly installed tiled reredos. Following Bishop Barker's death, the parish, under Charles Garnsey, began to adopt Anglo-Catholic practises, which had appeared in England in the 1860s and gathered strength (while also generating opposition) in the 1870s. In 1884–5, the parish introduced a cross and candles on the altar, a credence table, festal processions with cross and banners, daily services of Holy Communion, eucharistic vestments and choral Communion services. A correspondent to the London ''Church Times'' in late 1884 said of Christ Church "It is, indeed, an oasis in a desert." However, some aspects of Anglo-Catholic practise were not introduced until relatively late, with the "high celebration" involving three sacred ministers (priest, deacon and subdeacon) introduced in 1913, ''
The English Hymnal ''The English Hymnal'' is a hymn book which was published in 1906 for the Church of England by Oxford University Press. It was edited by the clergyman and writer Percy Dearmer and the composer and music historian Ralph Vaughan Williams, and wa ...
'' in 1916 and incense in 1921. In 1910, in an attempt to discourage Catholic-minded clergy seeking appointment in Sydney, Archbishop John Wright imposed the requirement that all clergy, upon appointment, undertake not to wear the eucharistic vestment (the chasuble) in any church in the diocese. The parish complied under protest in order to secure appointment of a new rector. The chasuble was worn for the last time inside Christ Church on 19 April 1911. Since that date, priests have worn a cope instead of a chasuble when celebrating the Eucharist at Christ Church. In 1911 the Revd Charles William Coles was offered the incumbency, but he declined, due to the archbishop's restrictions. (Coles would go on to be vicar of the English Anglo-Catholic "shrine church" of
St Agatha's, Landport St Agatha’s Church is a parish church in the Landport district of Portsmouth. It is now affiliated to the Roman Catholic Church through the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. It is situated on the Marketway next to the Cascades Sh ...
in Portsmouth for 40 years.) A very visible part of Christ Church's commitment to Anglo-Catholicism was the outdoor "procession of witness" held as part of the annual dedication festival from 1927 until 1967. Sometimes led by as many as three thurifers, the processions featured parish organisations and guilds, clergy from around the Anglican Communion (in copes), the occasional mitred bishop (mitres being a rarity in Sydney), clergy from Orthodox churches, and representatives from sympathetic Sydney parishes and St Gabriel's, a girls’ school run by the Community of the Sisters of the Church in the nearby suburb of Waverley.


Architectural history


Principal architects

The building and interior of Christ Church are mostly the work of three architects, covering the period 1840–1927. Henry Robertson (1802-1881) designed Christ Church in a transitional style incorporating Old Colonial Gothick Picturesque and Victorian Free Gothic. The builders were Taylor and Robb, who used Sydney sandstone, possibly from Pyrmont quarries. Walsh criticised Robertson's work, in the light of later principles of Gothic Revival style. Edmund Thomas Blacket (1817-1883) started work on Christ Church when construction revived in 1843. He completed the tower and steeple and the timber ceiling, and redesigned the windows. Interior design features by Blacket include the font, pulpit, carved pew-ends, and panelling at the west end (originally part of a choir gallery). In 1873 a memorial to
John Coleridge Patteson John Coleridge Patteson (1 April 1827 – 20 September 1871) was an English Anglican bishop, missionary to the South Sea Islands, and an accomplished linguist, learning 23 of the islands' more than 1,000 languages. In 1861, Patteson was s ...
(1827-1871), the martyred Bishop of Melanesia, designed by Blacket, was installed in the church. It incorporates an effigy executed by Henry Apperley (1824-1887). Patteson had visited Christ Church on several occasions. Blacket was a parishioner of Christ Church from 1848, serving as churchwarden for 22 years (1851-1873). Blacket's sons were responsible for remodelling the sanctuary and chancel in 1884–5 to reflect the parish's adoption of Anglo-Catholic liturgy. John Burcham Clamp (1869-1931), a former pupil of the parish school (Christ Church School), was parish architect from 1899 and was responsible for the restoration of the interior of Christ Church after a fire in August 1905. His work includes the reredos (1905), a font cover (1904), the St Laurence Chapel (1912) and screening under the organ (1914). Clamp also designed a chancel screen, installed in 1922 but removed in 1942. The screen, like the chapel and Clamp's organ-case, had a crown of thorns motif carved in its woodwork. After a land exchange with the New South Wales government when Central railway station was built, Clamp designed a new rectory and vestries (1904) and a new school building, now the parish hall (1905). These brick and stone buildings use a mix of Federation styles: Elizabethan, Arts and Crafts, and Free Style.


Later work

After Clamp, little further building or decoration was undertaken for several decades. In 1938, a large mural on the east wall was painted by Vergilio Lo Schiavo (1909-1971), one of the few artists to have employed fresco technique in Australia. In 1963, Morton Earle Herman (1907-1983) did remedial work on the church's interior. He published a pioneering book on the Blackets in the same year that he worked at Christ Church. Herman removed decorative elements, some of them Blacket's own, with the aim of recovering what he saw as Blacket's purity of design.


2019 restoration

In 2019, Paul Davies and Jean Wahl of Paul Davies Pty Ltd undertook the first full interior restoration since 1906. The work included cleaning and repointing the stonework, restoring the cedar pews and repainting the timber ceiling, pillars and sanctuary panelling. The repainting restored colours and decorative elements covered over by Herman. The lighting system was entirely replaced, the sound system upgraded and environmentally responsible heating and cooling installed.


Stained glass

When Edmund Blacket was appointed architect he redesigned the windows, introducing the present stone tracery. The windows were at first glazed in simple decorative patterns. As parishioners donated memorial windows, figural stained glass was introduced. Ten windows were imported from England between 1855 and 1864. They include work by leading stained-glass companies of the mid-19th century: James Powell & Sons,
Charles Clutterbuck Charles Clutterbuck (1806–1861) was a stained glass artist of Maryland Point, Stratford, London. Personal Life He was born in London on 3 September 1806, the son of Edmund and Susannah Clutterbuck, and baptised at Christ Church, Newgate ...
and
Clayton & Bell Clayton and Bell was one of the most prolific and proficient British workshops of stained-glass windows during the latter half of the 19th century and early 20th century. The partners were John Richard Clayton (1827–1913) and Alfred Bell (1832 ...
, all of London, and
William Wailes William Wailes (1808–1881) was the proprietor of one of England's largest and most prolific stained glass workshops. Life and career Wailes was born and grew up in Newcastle on Tyne, England's centre of domestic glass and bottle manufacturing. ...
, of Newcastle upon Tyne. Some of the windows designed by Clayton & Bell were manufactured at Mells, Somerset, and are early work by the brothers Edwin, Harry and Mark Horwood. Harry Horwood later became a prominent stained-glass maker in Ontario, Canada. Of historical interest is Clutterbuck's memorial window for the family of Sir Alfred Stephen, Chief Justice of New South Wales (1845–1873). Four windows were manufactured in Australia and installed between 1894 and 1912. They are the work of Lyon & Cottier, F Ashwin & Co and John Ashwin & Co, Sydney's premier stained-glass firms in that period. One of the Australian productions is the great east window, the third to occupy this position. Installed in 1906, it depicts the crucified and glorified Christ, worshipped by over fifty human figures and twenty angels. It is the work of
John Radecki John Radecki (also known as Johann and Jan Radecki) (2 August 186510 May 1955) was a master stained glass artist working in Australia, considered to be the finest such artist of his time. Born 2 August 1865 at Łódź, Poland, son of Pavel Ra ...
(1865-1955). This window is his first major independent work. In 2020, the church's repertoire of stained glass was completed when two lights were added to the north window of the sanctuary. Depicting St Peter and St James the Great, they were made in the 1960s by Martin van der Toorn, the then proprietor of John Ashwin & Co. They were originally located in St Paul's Pro-Cathedral, Hay, in the Diocese of Riverina, New South Wales.


Other art works

Over the course of the first half of the twentieth century, Christ Church displayed a variety of framed art prints by Renaissance and later artists. Apart from the Stations of the Cross by Piedmontese painter
Luigi Morgari Luigi Morgari (1 January(?) 1857 in Turin – 1 January(?) 1935 in Turin) was an Italian painter, primarily of frescoes on religious themes. Biography He was born to a family of artists. His first studies were with his father Paolo Emilio ...
(1857-1935), these have been superseded, from the late 1960s, by original art works. Many of these works were produced by parishioners of Christ Church. The works include: The most recent major commission is the ''Orthodox Icon Series'' (2005) by Earle Backen. The set of 14 icons depicts scenes from the life of Jesus and the Church and carries on the sequence commenced in the ''Triptych of the Incarnation''. They are displayed throughout the year, except in Lent and Holy Week, when the Stations of the Cross are displayed in their place.


Worship

All the activities of Christ Church St Laurence have their origin in the worship of God. That worship takes the form of at least 25 public services every week. Mass is celebrated three times on Sunday, twice on Wednesday and once on other days, with additional celebrations on major feast days. On Sundays and feast days High Mass or Solemn Mass is celebrated. Three Sunday services are accompanied by music. Sermons are preached at all Sunday Masses as well as on feast days. Each year a visiting priest preaches daily over Holy Week and Easter. The devotion of the Stations of the Cross is observed on Fridays in Lent. Clergy and a group of trained parishioners take communion to people who are in hospital or housebound. Other sacraments are administered as requested. The offices of Morning and Evening Prayer are read daily, in accordance with the prescription of the ''
Book of Common Prayer The ''Book of Common Prayer'' (BCP) is the name given to a number of related prayer books used in the Anglican Communion and by other Christian churches historically related to Anglicanism. The original book, published in 1549 in the reign ...
''. These offices follow ''A Prayer Book for Australia'', except Evening Prayer or Evensong on Sunday which follows the ''Book of Common Prayer'' of 1662. A congregation linked to the parish worships monthly at Mittagong, New South Wales. A Christian meditation group meets weekly. Outside of formal services, the church is open for long hours on weekdays, when it is visited by many people from its busy neighbourhood who use it for personal devotion or meditation. Sunday school operates during school term in conjunction with the 9:00 am Sung Eucharist.


Music

The High Mass choir sings on Sunday mornings and major feast days and the Evensong choir on Sunday evenings. Additional choir events include carol services for Advent and Epiphany, and an orchestral Mass on the anniversary of the church's dedication in September. Though the choirs are mainly voluntary, between four and eight choral scholars, who are students or early-career musicians, are paid a stipend. At the Sung Eucharist on Sundays the congregation sings the ordinary, using a variety of musical settings, including some written specially for this service. At all services, hymns are taken from the ''New English Hymnal''. The director of music is Sam Allchurch, who studied at the University of Cambridge with Geoffrey Webber and Stephen Layton as a Gates Cambridge Scholar, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Sam Allchurch is also music director of the Sydney Chamber Choir and associate artistic director of the Gondwana Choirs. The choir's assistant conductor is Amber Johnson. The organist is David Tagg. The choir is committed to new music by Australian composers and has commissioned liturgical works from Brooke Shelley (Viri Galilaei, 2021), Fiona Loader (Angelus ad virginem, 2020), Joseph Twist (Missa brevis, 2020), Oscar Smith (St Laurence Service, 2020) and William Yaxley (Mass for St Laurence, 2019). Apart from its role in liturgy, the choir regularly gives concerts. In recent years, performances have included Bach's St John Passion (2022), Handel's Messiah (2021), Charpentier's Te Deum and Vivaldi's Gloria (2019), Buxtehude's Membra Jesu nostri (2018) and Bach's Mass in B minor (2017). Concerts and the orchestral Mass are accompanied by the church's ensemble-in-residence, the Muffat Collective, a period instrument quartet, augmented by other professional musicians. The Collective also gives several concerts annually at the church. Other instrumental and vocal concerts are occasionally held in the church. The choir has released several recordings, including a project to record music for the whole liturgical year. It has toured extensively in New Zealand, the UK and continental Europe, and the United States, with residencies in Westminster Abbey and St Paul's Cathedral, London, and services at Notre-Dame, Paris. The choir's first known performance was for the consecration of Christ Church in September 1845, when it was augmented by members of the Sydney Choral Society. The choir was the first in New South Wales to wear surplices. The choir stalls were originally on each side of the aisle in the nave. In 1885 the choir moved into the expanded chancel. Since the 1940s it has sung in the St Laurence chapel. The church's first organ, built by George Holdich of London in 1844, was destroyed by fire in 1905. The present organ, built by William Hill & Sons of London in 1891, was privately owned in Sydney before it was bought by the parish in 1905. It was restored by Orgues Létourneau of Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, in 1979. As well as its liturgical function, the organ is heard in a monthly recital before Evensong, and appears on a number of recordings. The Hill organ is supplemented by a 2011 continuo organ by Henk Klop of Garderen, Netherlands. An independent entity, St Laurence Music Incorporated, was established in 2001 to promote the appreciation of choral, organ and orchestral music through performances, recordings, tours and scholarships at or in association with the church.


Bells

The first rector, W. H. Walsh, commissioned the original six bells from John Taylor & Sons of Loughborough in 1852. They were installed when the spire was completed in 1855. They were retuned and matched with four new bells by Whitechapel Foundry of London in 1982 and reinstalled on a new steel frame in 1984. In accordance with tradition, the 10 bells are named in honour of saints or benefactors.


Social action

The social action of the parish has a long history that stretches back before the creation of government welfare agencies and the state school system. For almost a century until 1934, the parish, initially with the support of the St Laurence Parochial Association, provided education through the parish schools. In the 1880s, the need to care for the sick and poor of the parish was met by the Guild of St Laurence Mission. In the war of 1914–18, the parish offered a "cheero" in the hall, feeding and entertaining servicemen passing through Central Railway Station. In the depression of the 1930s, a soup kitchen served as many as 300 meals a night. A free dispensary gave treatment and supplied medicine to people who could not afford a doctor. In 1936, the parish, in co-operation with the NSW Child Welfare Department, founded a boys' welfare bureau to provide employment and welfare services. In 1957, Father John Hope donated a house in Glebe,
Tranby Tranby is a village in Lier municipality in Viken, Norway. The village consists mainly of three residential areas located in a semi-circle around a small forest area. Tranby is a part of a greater urban area which also encompasses the village o ...
, to a co-operative that established what is now the Tranby Aboriginal College. In the 1980s-90s, the parish pioneered HIV/AIDS ministry in Australia. In 1984, Christ Church hosted the funeral of Bobby Goldsmith and, in 1991, initiated an annual AIDS
Requiem Mass A Requiem or Requiem Mass, also known as Mass for the dead ( la, Missa pro defunctis) or Mass of the dead ( la, Missa defunctorum), is a Mass of the Catholic Church offered for the repose of the soul or souls of one or more deceased persons, ...
dedicated to the memory of those who had died from AIDS. This was at a time when people with HIV/AIDS were widely ostracised. The parish continues to welcome people whose sexual orientation is condemned by some religious organisations.


Present

Christ Church St Laurence aims to be diverse and inclusive. It emphasises a ministry to the underprivileged, the persecuted and the socially marginalised. Until the outbreak of COVID-19, the parish operated an overnight shelter for homeless men on Saturday nights in conjunction with Cana Communities. The shelter was staffed by parishioners of Christ Church and the neighbouring church of St Barnabas, Broadway, and by students from St Paul's College and Wesley College, University of Sydney. The future of the shelter is under review in light of changing conditions in the locality. The church is open every weekday and is frequently visited by people in need or distress. Volunteer vergers are present to offer simple food and drink to all comers. The parish gives substantial financial support to Australian and overseas charities. This support is provided by an annual Lenten appeal, a monthly retiring collection and social events such as the annual parish lunch and a trivia night. One organisation supported is St Laurence House, an agency dedicated to disadvantaged, homeless, and at-risk youth. The parish was an original founder of St Laurence House, though it is no longer directly involved in its management. Another organisation supported is the Asylum Seekers Centre in Sydney. Gifts of food and toiletries are regularly delivered from the church to the centre. A number of parishioners are involved in visiting people in immigration detention centres and in prison. A monthly retiring collection supports the work of Anglican churches in the South Pacific. Other groups or projects funded through the
Anglican Board of Mission - Australia The Anglican Board of Mission - Australia (ABM), formerly Australasian Board of Missions and Australian Board of Missions, is the national mission agency of the Anglican Church of Australia. In its earliest form, it was established in 1850. ...
include: Mudgin-Gal, Aboriginal women's organisation, Redfern; Wontulp Bi-Buya Theological College, providing adult education for Aborigines, Cairns; literacy in Vanuatu; disaster risk reduction and emergency support in South Sudan; an integrated gender project in Zambia. These activities of the parish are being expanded under the auspices of the Christ Church St Laurence Charitable Trust. The trust, which is not under the control of the parish, was created and endowed under the will of a late medical practitioner to provide financial assistance in the achievement of the parish's charitable objectives. The trust is supporting the establishment in the basement of the hall building of a medical centre specifically directed to the needs of the homeless, to be operated by the Haymarket Foundation.


Parish schools

A Church of England school operated in the southern district of Sydney long before the ecclesiastical parish was formed. The school commenced in 1830 and originally operated in rented accommodation. In 1845, Blacket constructed a building for this school at what is now the south-west corner of Pitt Street and Rawson Place. A second school building, financed by the businessman and philanthropist
Thomas Sutcliffe Mort Thomas Sutcliffe Mort (23 December 18169 May 1878) was an Australian industrialist who improved the refrigeration of meat. He was renowned for speculation in the local pastoral industry as well as industrial activities such as his Ice-Works in ...
, was opened in 1860. The 1860 building became the primary school while the 1845 building operated as the infants school. Headmasters during this period included Samuel Hopkinson Turton (headmaster 1847-1870) and Seth Frank Ward (headmaster 1870-1880). The school's site was resumed by the government in 1901 as part of the redevelopment required by the construction of Central Railway Station. As a result of these resumptions, John Burcham Clamp built a new school building, now the church hall, north of the church in 1905. Headmasters in this period included William Warner (headmaster 1895-1905) and Ernest Godfried Jacobs (headmaster 1907-1924) In 1924 the elementary day school closed and the St Laurence College, a secondary school for boys, was opened instead. Headmasters of the college were the Revd Alan Whitehorn (headmaster, 1924-1926), the Revd John Henry Allen Chauvel (headmaster, 1926-1927) and the Revd Kenneth Douglas Roach (headmaster, 1928-1932). The college moved its premises to Dolls Point (Primrose House, 190 Russell Avenue) in 1930 and closed in 1934 after a brief return to its old location. The parish's right to continue to use the money received as compensation for the railway resumptions for educational purposes became the subject of a rancorous dispute between the parish and the diocese. The Supreme Court of New South Wales settled the dispute in favour of the diocese in 1933.


List of rectors

*1839–1867:
William Horatio Walsh William Horatio Walsh (12 September 1812 – 17 December 1882) was a High Church Anglican priest in Australia and England. Early life Walsh was born in London, the son of Isaac Richard and Sarah Walsh. He was educated at the Grammar School at Bu ...
*1867–1878: George Vidal *1878–1894: Charles Frederick Garnsey *1895–1900: Gerard Trower *1901–1910: Frederick John Albery *1911–1925: Clive Meillon Statham *1926–1964: John Hope *1964–1996: Patrick Austin Day *1996–2000: Michael Nicholas Roderick Bowie *2001–2012: Adrian Maxwell Stephens *2013–present: Daniel Michael Dries


List of organists and choirmasters (partial)

*
William Jonathan Johnson William Johnson (1811–1866) was an English-born organist, conductor, composer, organ builder and music publisher based in Sydney. Early life Johnson was born in London, the son of a watchmaker, Richard Johnson (1774–1844) and Elizabeth Philli ...
: 1845–1866 *William Henry Nash: 1867–1869, 1883–1884 * William Stanley: 1870–1882 *Edward John Massey: 1886-1890 * Ernest Edwin Philip Truman: 1893-1896"Ernest Edwin Philip Truman"
/ref> * John Matthew Ennis: 1900-1902 *William Biggs: 1902–1914 *Richard Henry Kay: 1914–1918 *Edwin John Robinson: 1918–1927 * Gorjes Christian Crawford-Hellemann: 1927–1931, 1933–1934 *Colin Henry Sapsford: 1936–1980 *Neil Anderson McEwan: 1980–2018 (director of music) *Sam Allchurch: 2018–present (director of music)


Gallery

Image:Christ Church St Laurence Rectory 001.jpg, Rectory Image:1_Christ_Church_organ.jpg, Organ Image:1_Christ_Church5.jpg, Interior Image:1_Christ_Church6.jpg, Interior


Awards and nominations


ARIA Music Awards

The ARIA Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony that recognises excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of Australian music. They commenced in 1987. ! , - ,
1991 File:1991 Events Collage.png, From left, clockwise: Boris Yeltsin, elected as Russia's first president, waves the new flag of Russia after the 1991 Soviet coup d'état attempt, orchestrated by Soviet hardliners; Mount Pinatubo erupts in the Phi ...
, ''Victoria: Missa Surge Propera'' ,
Best Classical Album The Grammy Award for Best Classical Album was awarded from 1962 to 2011. The award had several minor name changes: *From 1962 to 1963, 1965 to 1972 and 1974 to 1976 the award was known as Album of the Year – Classical *In 1964 and 1977 it wa ...
, , ARIA Award previous winners. , -


See also

* Australian non-residential architectural styles *
List of Anglican churches in the Diocese of Sydney This is a list of churches in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney. This includes physical church buildings even if they do not currently have congregations meeting. If a congregation meets in a shared space such as a school hall, it should only b ...


References


Further reading


External links


Official websiteEntry in the ANZAB Tower Directory
{{Authority control Anglo-Catholic churches in Australia Anglican church buildings in Sydney Anglican Diocese of Sydney 1845 establishments in Australia Edmund Blacket buildings in Sydney Edmund Blacket church buildings Sydney central business district Articles incorporating text from the New South Wales State Heritage Register George Street, Sydney Churches completed in 1845