This
history was first compiled for the Golden Jubilee of the Church
in 1958. This was celebrated by the placing of the Tester (a kind
of hanging ceiling) over the High Altar. The hangings and carpeting
of the Sanctuary were also renewed. In the last five years, coloured
hangings which change with the mood of the Church's seasons have
been made to augment the red and gold hangings of 1958.
Although existing as a separate parish for only just over one
hundred years, St. Hilda is closely linked to over a thousand
years of Lewisham Church History.
The church of St. Mary, Lewisham, out of whose parish that of
St. Hilda was formed, has a history dating back to the year AD
918, when Elfrida, daughter of King Alfred the Great, bequeathed
the Manor of Lewisham, inherited by her from her father, to the
Abbot of Ghent who, it is assumed, built the first Church of St.
Mary in Lewisham.
Originally
Lewisham parish shared the same boundaries as the present Borough,
except for the ancient parish of Lee, and so it remained for many
centuries, with St. Mary's the only church to serve that whole
area. But the 19th century brought rapid and great changes here
as elsewhere, and by the late 1880's we find the ancient parish
of Lewisham subdivided into sixteen separate constituted parishes,
to meet the needs of the evergrowing population.
Even so, St. Mary's parish was still very extensive, although
a large proportion of its acreage consisted of farmlands and private
residences each with its own fairly large grounds. Such was all
the area of Hither Green, Southend, Bellingham and Downham. Such,
too, in the main, was Brockley, of which Crofton Park is a part
- for it was not until the railway station had been built and
called Crofton Park that the district became known by that name.
But now this part, too, of Lewisham parish was fast becoming thickly
populated; new houses were rising rapidly, and the whole character
of the district was changing. In the early 1890's it became evident
that provision must be made for the spiritual needs of these new
residents, and The Reverend Mr.Samuel Bickersteth who had become
Vicar of Lewisham in 1891 embarked with characteristic energy
on the task of providing the district with a church of its own.
That
this was no light task is evident from the voluminous correspondence
still existing which carries the story through the years 1898-1900:
a story of hopes and disappointments, of promise and frustration,
of cheering progress and tantalising delays.
The
first business was to secure a site on which at once to build
the Mission Church, and ultimtely the permanent church and parsonage.
This was not easy. Some resident land-owners opposed the scheme
on the ground that it would encourage the further urbanisation
of the district, and when at length a site was settled on, troublesome
boundary difficulties arose; but eventually through the good offices
of the Morley Trustees, the land was secured at the very reasonable
cost of one thousand pounds.
But
that one thousand pounds had to be collected, and this was the
next step. It was achieved; the site was paid for by the middle
of 1899, the building of the temporary church was begun, and on
May 22nd, 1900, it was opened for public worship by Dr. Talbot,
then Bishop of Rochester. The Reverend Samuel Bickersteth having
effected an endowment of £150 per annum out of the benefice of
the Mother Church, the new parish of St. Hilda, Crofton Park,
was duly consituted by Order in Council on September 17th 1900,
with The Reverend Mr. John Hartforth Jacques as its first Vicar.
The
"district of St. Hilda, Crofton Park" comprises (in the words
of the Order in Council) an area "taken partly out of the parish
of Lewisham, partly out of the new parish of St. Saviour, Brockley
Hill, and partly out of the new parish of St. George, Perry Hill.
On
June 15th 1907, an agreement was made between the St. Hilda's
Church Building Committee and Joseph Dorey & Co. Ltd., of Brentford
for "the erecting and completing the permanent church of St. Hilda
at Crofton Park ... to the drawings and specification prepared
by Messrs. F.H. Greenaway and J.F. Newberry ... for the sum of
£7,814 19s 2d," and on June 3rd 1908, the church was consecrated
by The Right Reverend Edward Stuart Talbot, by that time Lord
Bishop of the new Diocese of Southwark.
And so, after ten years of strenous endeavour, the church was
built. The building of the church was only the beginning. The
church had to be furnished. Six hundred chairs had to be bought
at 3s 6d each. A Chair Fund was started and money raised by among
other things a 'Parsons v Laymen' football match which raised
£5 or £6, a lady made and sold marmalade which raised £5 and just
after Easter all the chairs were paid for. The Sunday School children
provided the font and various groups within the church raised
the money to buy all the other necessities.
Once
the church was built and furnished there was still more work to
be done. At the time of the consecration, there was still a considerable
debt to be paid off. But with the efforts of the parish and with
help from the Deanery Fund, this was paid off by the end of 1909.
However, St. Hilda's was still without a vicarage or an organ.
By
April 1909, the Vicar was able to report that substantial grants
from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners and the Bishop made it probable
that the Vicarage house could be built by the end of 1910. In
September 1910, negotiations were opened for the building of the
organ. An estimate for £800 by Conacher & Co., of Huddersfield
was accepted and the work was finished in August 1911.
St. Hilda's parish, like every other parish, suffered grievous
loss in the 1939-1945 war. In September 1944, both the Vicarage
and the Assistant Priest's house were destroyed by enemy action
and the Parish Hall was badly damaged. Luckily, the church suffered
less severely. Church and Parish hall were restored and the vicarage
was rebuilt in 1951 by a willing band of workers from the parish.
The Assistant Priest's house was also once again made fit for
occupation.
St. Hilda's celebrated its Golden Jubilee in June 1958 and and
will soon be celebrating its centenary. It's fortunes have gone
up and down over the years but recent times new life have been
apparent. In response to a feeling that Church and community need
to work together to improve the quality of life in Crofton Park,
plans are afoot to develop the Crypt area as a community project.
List
of major additions to St. Hilda's Church
1933
Electric Lighting
1934
Pulpit
1943
Aumbry in the Lady Chapel
An Aumbry is a special kind of cupboard/safe set in the wall in
which is kept the Sacrament of Christ's body and blood. This is
a focus of the living spiritual presence of Christ here in Earth.
It is used for prayer and to be taken to the sick who have been
unable to attend Holy Communion)
1950
Whitening of the interior
1953
Children's Corner. Installed in memory of those who died in the
Second World War). This was removed when parish rooms were built
in the 1990s. However, the Statue of the infant Lord has been
refurbished and placed in the new entrance lobby
1954
Installation of oil-fired boilers.
1957
Chapel of the Good Shepherd refurbished as St Cyprian's chapel.
Now the site of the proposed community facilities.
1994
New parish rooms and lobby build inside the church.
1996
A serious burglary saw the loss of the eagle lecturn, statues
of St Mary and St John (former part of St Cyprian's rood beam
- see St Cyprian's), one of the large
standard candle sticks which stood before the High altar and various
other items. The processional cross was subsequently discovered
snapped in two and thrown on the railway bank at Crofton Park
station. The new furnishing scheme can be seen inthe photos of
the church in the main web site.
1998
New statue of St Hilda
Folding lecturn with hangings for lecturn
Pulpit current rewiring and a new heating scheme for the church
are under discussion.
New statue of St Mary placed in shrine in North aisle - a gift
from our Lady and St. George Walthamstow.
2000
New banner of St Hilda
Refurbishing of old porch (built of the lower part of wood work
rescued from St. Cyprians Church, installed as a bookshop to the
south of the font).