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Saturday, September 27, 2014
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Visitors from Letchworth
Monday, September 15, 2014
Open House 20 and 21 September
Welcome to Open House 2014
Your opportunity to get out and get under the skin of the amazing architecture in every London neighbourhood. On the 20th and 21st September there will be over 800 buildings, neighbourhood walks, architects' talks, and much more - enjoy your weekend!
Meet:
Sun 2pm and 4.30pm,
St Jude-on-the-Hill
Eccentric
and magnificent Edwardian church by Sir Edwin Lutyens, Grade I listed.
Described in Simon Jenkins' Thousand Best Churches as 'one of Lutyens' most
distinctive creations'. England's most extensive 20C wall-painting scheme by
Walter Starmer. Memorial to horses killed in WWI.
Saturday
10am - 5pm
Sunday
12pm - 5pm
Guided
talk on the Starmer murals each day at 3pm
Teas !
Hampstead
Garden Suburb Artisans' Quarter Walk
Register
inside St Jude-on-the-Hill
Guided
walks of 'the most nearly perfect example of the 20C Garden Suburb' (Pevsner).
Informally laid out terraces and picturesque Arts and Crafts vernacular
cottages.
Additionally,
material for self-guided walks will be available at all the Hampstead Garden
Suburb Open House sites throughout the weekend.
Tuesday, September 02, 2014
75th Anniversary of the Beginning of the Second World War
The Vicar of St Jude's and the Mayor of Hendon take the salute in South Square in 1939 |
On 2 September 1939 the United Kingdom issued an ultimatum to Germany requiring an immediate withdrawal of military forces from Poland. The ultimatum expired the following day at 11:00am without response, and so the Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, announced consequently this nation is at war with Germany.
This year the Bishop of London preached in the Berliner
Dom (Berlin Cathedral) on Sunday 31 August to mark the 75th anniversary
of the start of the Second World War.
As he recalled the two great wars of the
twentieth century he said:
We cannot change the past but we do have to
accept responsibility for how we remember it – the future depends on how we
remember the past…. We should recognise how new Europe is in its present
form . . . Thomas Masaryk described the Europe of these years
as 'a laboratory atop a vast graveyard.' Our present situation is not the
result of any historical inevitabilities but just one of the possible
outcomes of the protracted 20th century European civil war.
The Diocese of London formed a partnership
with the Diocese of
Berlin-Brandenburg in 1999 and the Bishop spoke of the
importance of developing that partnership in the context of the new
challenges facing Europe today.
The Bishop of London’s full sermon can be read here.
The Bishop of London’s full sermon can be read here.
The beginning of the War missed both the
August and September issues of the St Jude's Gazette. The October 1939
edition opened starkly with a list of WARTIME ARRANGEMENTS.
The boiler house has been converted into an extremely
strong and effective shelter, and has been commended as one of the best
so far inspected in the district. It has been fitted
up as a chapel in the case of need. The two west lobbies
have also been fortified and are open day and night. These lobbies are
not effective for anti-gas however. If the warning should sound before Mass the
Celebrant will say Mass in the basement chapel at the proper time. If the warning
should sound during Mass the Celebrant will complete the Mass, giving Communion to such as
remain. At High Mass, in such a case, any music which prolongs the
service will be omitted.
People living more than 10
minutes away from the church should preferably make use of our
shelters when the service is over or when they feel obliged to leave the body
of the church, Those living close to the church should return
home if they have adequate shelter there if the church shelters are
full. The Vicarage will always be open for the purposes of
shelter.
St Jude's has no Second World War Memorial, although a drawing exists of a proposal for one by Walter Starmer who had painted the murals in the church. The Church Council thought the money would be better spent on a Memorial Hall in the newer part of the Suburb beyond the Market Place. The hall was never built.
St Jude's has no Second World War Memorial, although a drawing exists of a proposal for one by Walter Starmer who had painted the murals in the church. The Church Council thought the money would be better spent on a Memorial Hall in the newer part of the Suburb beyond the Market Place. The hall was never built.
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