The ruins of this church can, apparently, be seen in the basement ruins of Number One Poultry.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
St Benet Sherehog Church
Commemorated ati
St Benet Sherehog Church - blue
Site of St Benet Sherehog Church, destroyed in the Great Fire 1666. Corporat...
St Benet Sherehog Church - stone
The lettering on this inscribed stone is delightful: in "THE" the "H" is just...
Other Subjects
Charterhouse church
A chapel was first built here soon after 1348 by Walter de Manny, alongside a burial ground for victims of the Black Death. In 1371 when the Charterhouse Priory was built here the chapel was inco...
Samuel Stennett, DD
Baptist minister and hymnwriter. Born Exeter. His father was appointed minister at Little Wild Street chapel from 1737 so the family moved to London. See Andrew Gifford for the rather unsavoury ...
Pimlico Wesleyan chapel / Holy Apostles, Claverton Street
Built in 1852 as a Methodist Wesleyan chapel with seats for 1,000. In 1917 the building was acquired and adapted for Catholic use as the Holy Apostles church, a chapel of ease, served by clergy fro...
St Alphage Church
Escaped the Great Fire. Demolished and rebuilt in 1774-7. Unused it was demolished in 1923 leaving part of the tower and the porch but then that was badly burnt in WW2. There is a related ruin jus...
Canon Michael Richards
Catholic priest. Born Wales. Served as a second lieutenant in the 12th Royal Lancers in WW2. Whilst a student at Oxford he became a Catholic and his fiancee died suddenly. Ordained in 1960 by Bi...
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