Friends Brochure

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Friends Brochure APPLICATION FORM The Friends of Please complete both sides of form & return to the Church Name/s St Margaret Pattens Address Church Postcode Telephone Email I wish to become a Friend of St Margaret Pattens Church. Please tick one box: □ £100* or more: * £…………… □ £50 □ £20 CONTACT PAYMENT BY: (please tick):- The Friends of St Margaret Pattens Church □Standing Order (also complete overleaf) □ BACS/Online banking Cheque □ www.stmargaretpattens.org Gift Aid it…I would like tax to be reclaimed on this and any future donation under the Gift Aid Rood Lane, Eastcheap, Scheme. I am a UK tax payer and pay an equal London EC3M 1HS amount of income tax and/or capital gains tax at least equal to the tax that can be reclaimed 020 7623 6630 Charity Number: 1062360 Please tick □ For ease of administration, information about membership of the Friends will be administered and stored by the Church on its An historic Wren Guild church in the systems. If you do not agree to this, tick this box □ City of London Signed: ……………………………Date……………... WELCOME TO OUR WHY BECOME A STANDING ORDER FRIEND? FORM CHURCH To the Manager: - Our aim is to support this distinguished ancient building for future generations, to Name of Bank: St Margaret Pattens has been a place of keep the Church open and continue to make Address: worship and a resource for the it accessible for everyone today. community since 1067. After the Great Postcode: Fire in 1666, Sir Christopher Wren Name of Account Holder: designed the current building, which remains largely unaltered to this day. Sort Code: The Livery Companies of the Account Number: Basketmakers and Pattenmakers established and retain their homes Please pay: - here. And we continue to serve all Barclays Bank plc - Broadgate London Corporate those who have their businesses, Banking livelihoods and homes in this most To the account of – Friends of St. Margaret Pattens Church vibrant part of the City. Sort Code: - 20-20-14 Insurers, baristas and bankers may have replaced basketmakers, As a registered Charity with a Board of Account no: - 80162957 pattenmakers, bakers and Trustees, the Friends do this by providing warehousemen but the human needs of grants for the ongoing life, fabric and The sum of: - reflection, beauty, hope and love contents of the Church continue unchanged. As a Friend you will be contributing to the £20 / £50 / £100/ Other £……. Church’s future, find out what’s being done We invite you to share in our work and (please delete as appropriate) And thereafter annually through our Newsletter and can join in life, and especially to consider joining until further notice and debit my account accordingly special events for the Friends. the Friends of St Margaret Pattens. Experience the ambience of the Church building itself and be part of our community The Revd Andrew Keep Signed………………….Date…………….. Associate Vicar Enjoy meeting other Friends and supporters Please return this form to the Church at interesting events .
Recommended publications
  • St. Margaret's in Eastcheap
    ST. MARGARET'S IN EASTCHEAP NINE HUNDRED YEARS OF HISTORY A Lecture delivered to St. Margaret's Historical Society on January 6th, 1967 by Dr. Gordon Huelin "God that suiteth in Trinity, send us peace and unity". St. Margaret's In Eastcheap : Nine hundred years of History. During the first year of his reign, 1067, William the Conqueror gave to the abbot and church of St. Peter's, Westminster, the newly-built wooden chapel of St. Margaret in Eastcheap. It was, no doubt, with this in mind that someone caused to be set up over the door of St. Margaret Pattens the words “Founded 1067”. Yet, even though it seems to me to be going too far to claim that a church of St. Margaret's has stood upon this actual site for the last nine centuries, we in this place are certainly justified in giving' thanks in 1967 for the fact that for nine hundred years the faith has been preached and worship offered to God in a church in Eastcheap dedicated to St. Margaret of Antioch. In the year immediately following the Norman Conquest much was happening as regards English church life. One wishes that more might be known of that wooden chapel in Eastcheap, However, over a century was to elapse before even a glimpse is given of the London churches-and this only in general terms. In 1174, William Fitzstephen in his description of London wrote that “It is happy in the profession of the Christian religion”. As regards divine worship Fitzstephen speaks of one hundred and thirty-six parochial churches in the City and suburbs.
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  • Nicholas Hawksmoor and the Wren City Church Steeples’, the Georgian Group Journal, Vol
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  • CITY of LONDON P69/MGT4 Page 1
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  • Bibliography
    Bibliography Manuscripts The National Archives, Kew SP 1 State Papers, Henry VIII. SP 12 State Papers, Elizabeth I. SP 46 Johnson Papers, George Stoddard’s petty cash book. PCC Prob. 11 Prerogative Court of Canterbury, will registers. London Metropolitan Archives (LMA) Manuscript Records of the City of London Journal of the Court of Common Council COL/CC/01/01/001 – 027 1507–1605 Repertories of the Court of Aldermen COL/CA/01/01/002 – 027 1506–1604 Parochial Records (Listed Using Guildhall Library, London, References) 819/1 All Hallows the Great, Vestry Minutes, 1574–1655 5090/1 All Hallows London Wall, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1455–1536 5090/2 All Hallows London Wall, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1566–1681 4956/1 All Hallows Staining, Vestry Minutes, 1574–1655 4956/2 All Hallows Staining, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1534–1628 9163 Christ Church Newgate, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1593–5 4835/1 Holy Trinity the Less, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1582–1662 1264/1 St Alban Wood Street, Vestry Minutes, 1583–1676 7673/1 St Alban Wood Street, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1584–1639 1431/1 St Alphage London Wall, Vestry Minutes, 1593–1608 1432/1 St Alphage London Wall, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1527–53 1432/2 St Alphage London Wall, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1553–80 1432/3 St Alphage London Wall, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1580–1621 2088/1 St Andrew by the Wardrobe, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1570–1668 1046/1 St Antholin Budge Row, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1574–1708 1568 St Benet Gracechurch, Churchwardens’ Accounts, 1578–1674 877/1 St Benets Paul’s Wharf, Vestry Minutes,
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  • The Tony Dyson Archive Project Archaeology Service
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  • 1 Guild Church of St Margaret Pattens & St Gabriel Fenchurch
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