St Benet Fink Church, Tottenham

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St Benet Fink
Parish Church of St Benet Fink
St Benet Fink is located in Greater London
St Benet Fink
St Benet Fink
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OS grid reference TQ3290
Country  United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Traditional Catholic
Website www.stbenetfink.org.uk
History
Founded June 3, 1911 (1911-06-03) - but see note below
Dedication Saint Benedict
Consecrated 1912-05-15
Architecture
Status Church
Functional status Active
Architectural type Mini-Cathedral
Groundbreaking 1911-06-03
Specifications
Length 41 metres (135 ft)
Width 18 metres (59 ft)
Nave width 11 metres (36 ft)
Number of spires One
Materials Red brick walls, slate roof.
Administration
Parish St. Benet Fink, Tottenham
Deanery East Haringey
Archdeaconry Hampstead
Episcopal area Edmonton
Diocese London
Province Canterbury
Clergy
Vicar(s) Fr James Hill SSC CMP
Laity
Organist(s) Ian Bednall
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St Benet Fink, Tottenham, is an Anglican church in Tottenham, London.[1]

History

Early history

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The original St Benet Fink church was in Threadneedle Street in the City of London and is first mentioned in 1216.[1] At an unknown prior date a Saint Benedict's Church had been rebuilt with a gift from one Robert Finke.[1]

Name

Benet is short for Benedict from Saint Benedict. Historically, if there was more than one church in an area dedicated to a particular Saint then the benefactor's name was added to the churches name, hence Benet Fink.[1]

20th century

In 1904, a mission to this district was established and a Tin Tabernacle opened in Granger Road, dedicated to St Luke, in 1905, while funds were raised to build a permanent building. The current church was built during 1911 and 1912, and at its consecration on 15 May 1912, the Bishop of London referred to it as ‘the little Cathedral’; given its light and airy interior, reminiscent of Gothic cathedral architecture, it is easy to see why. The architect was J. S. Alder, and St Benet’s is said[by whom?] to be his most complete and unaltered church. The spire houses a single bell, as was common architectural practice at the beginning of the last century; the building has a grade II listing. The symbols in the windows are the symbols of the saints and martyrs of Christian antiquity.[2]

Architecture

The church is of red brick with a slate roof and has a small spire that accommodates a single bell. It is the style that was common in north London at the beginning of the twentieth century. The site includes a matching vicarage and church hall.

Incumbents

Vicar
1912-1917 Fr Harold Van Cooten
1917-1927 Fr Marcus Donavon
1927-1927 Fr Charles Waton
1962-1969 Fr William Stephenson
1969-2009 Fr Michael Davenport
Priest in Charge
2010-2011 Fr Mark Elliott Smith
2011-2016 Fr James Hill
Vicar
2016 Fr James Hill

Reference:.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Leaflet published by the church for its annual open day 2010-07-10
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External links