St. John’s Wood Church School Holiday Half Term Camps for Kids London Near Me

St. John’s Wood Church School Holiday Half Term Camps for Kids in London Near Me

The Best Holiday Clubs for Kids in St. John’s Wood LondonMother Nature Science Camp!

St. John’s Wood Church, Lord’s Roundabout, London, NW8 7NE

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School Holiday Half Term Camps for Kids in Hampstead London near me – Running Every School Holiday!:

o February Half-Term Camps


o Easter Holiday Camps


o May Half Term Holiday Camps


o Summer Holiday Camps


o October Half-Term Holiday Camps


o Christmas December Winter Holiday Camps

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About St. John’s Wood Church School Holiday Camps

“Marylebone Parish Vestry – a distant predecessor of what is now Westminster City Council – bought a plot of land north of the New Road in 1808, to use as a burial ground. They also built a chapel – the present St John’s Wood Church – to serve the burial ground. The architect was Thomas Hardwick, who shortly afterwards was commissioned to build the present St Marylebone church. This happened at the same time that Thomas Lord moved his cricket ground to its present site, and when the Bishop of London came to consecrate St John’s Chapel on 24 May 1814, the congregation were invited to “Mr Lord’s new cricket ground” for refreshments after the service. The first cricket match on the new ground was played a few weeks later.

The church is a simple building in Regency style, with a portico of four unfluted columns with Ionic capitals. The interior is very plainly decorated in white and gold, and reminds some people of churches in New England. The box pews are original. The chancel was extended in the middle of the nineteenth century, when it was dominated by a stained glass window of St John the Baptist. This and other Victorian stained glass in the nave was blown out in the Second World War and was replaced with the present clear glass, which makes the interior exceptionally light, especially on a summer’s day. In 1938 the galleries of the church – which had held the overflow congregation at well-attended funerals – were closed in (they are now used as office space and for meetings). In 1991, the heavy Victorian woodwork was taken out, and the present pavement of Italian marble was installed….”

Courtesy: St. John’s Wood Church

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