GreaterLondonUPPERNORWOODStJohnEvangelist(christinemcintoshCC-BY-ND2.0)1 ChristineMcIntosh

St John the Evangelist

There has been a church on the site of St John’s for over 140 years, witnessing to God’s love among the people of Upper Norwood.

Upper Norwood, Greater London

Opening times

Open everyday.

Address

Sylvan Road
Upper Norwood
Greater London
SE19 2RX

The history of St John’s began in the 1870s, when a large temporary iron church was built to serve the newly developed area of Upper Norwood. In October 1875 this church was moved to the current site on the corner of Sylvan Road and Auckland Road. The priests-in-charge were Philip Kingswood and Thomas Helmore, the latter an important figure in the Anglican choral revival.

Early in 1876 it became a parish church, and the first vicar was William Fairbairn La Trobe-Bateman, who began an initiative to clear the church’s debts and raise funds to build a permanent church to replace the iron structure. Never a man to do things by halves, Bateman commissioned John Loughborough Pearson, one of the finest architects of the age, to design a building of cathedral-like proportions. Funded largely by the donations of parishioners, it was completed (except for the spire, never to be built) by 1887.

In the last days of the Second World War the building was hit by several doodlebugs, resulting in extensive damage to the roof. Ever resourceful, the parishioners bricked up the north aisle to serve as a temporary church and set about raising the funds to restore the building to its former glory under the guidance of the formidable priest Eric Bailey. It is to him that we owe both its recovery and much of the financial legacy that remains today.

Early this century the south side of the building started to show signs of movement, which got worse and worse, creating large cracks in the tower and south aisle. Wooden buttresses have stabilised the structure temporarily, and underpinning has recently been undertaken to solve the problem permanently.

  • Spectacular stained glass

  • Magnificent memorials

  • Glorious furnishings

  • Enchanting atmosphere

  • Captivating architecture

  • Walkers & cyclists welcome

  • Space to secure your bike

  • Parking within 250m

  • On street parking at church

  • Level access to the main areas

  • Dog friendly

  • Accessible toilets nearby

  • Church of England

  • Cornerstone Grant, £40,000, 2015

  • Our Cornerstone Grants fund urgent repairs and essential community facilities such as toilets and kitchens to help keep churches open.

Contact information

Other nearby churches

St Mark

South Norwood, Greater London

Holy Trinity

Beckenham, Greater London

Holy Trinity was built in the Gothic style from Kentish rag with white stone dressings and was consecrated in 1878.