12. COLEMAN STREET WARD.
Coleman Street Ward includes the parishes of
St. Stephen Coleman Street and St. Olave Old
Jewry and part of the parish of St. Margaret
Lothbury. The churches of St. Margaret Lothbury and St. Stephen Coleman Street are the
principal monuments.
Ecclesiastical
(1) Parish Church of St. Margaret stands on
the N. side of Lothbury. The walls are faced with
Portland stone except on the N. and W. sides,
where they are partly covered with cement; the
roofs are covered with lead. The older church was
destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666 and was
re-built by Sir Christopher Wren in 1686–95, at a
cost of £5,340 8s. 1d., and probably on the old plan
with Renaissance detail. Part of the old W. wall
with a wide segmental foundation-arch still
remains below the floor-level. There are modern
vestries on the N. side of the church.

Church of St Margaret Lothbury.
The woodwork of the church is noteworthy,
especially the screen, pulpit, etc. The large
number of fittings is accounted for by the fact that
this is the church of several united parishes whose
churches have been pulled down within the last
century and a half.
Architectural Description—The church consists
of a rectangular body with a canted E. end (70 ft.
average by 40½ ft.), south aisle (13¾ ft. wide) with
a vestry at the E. end and a tower (11 ft. by 12 ft.)
at the W. end.
Elevations—The E. Elevation has a moulded
cornice and a plain parapet. At the clearstoreylevel are three round windows, the middle one now
blocked; lower down are three blocked round-headed windows, with architraves and the middle
window with jamb-pilasters in addition. The N.
Elevation has four round-headed windows with four
round clearstorey-windows above them, all with
moulded architraves; the wall is partly hidden
by modern vestries, in one of which is a doorway
with architrave and cornice. The S. Elevation
(Plate 2) is finished with a cornice and a
balustraded parapet; the E. bay has a square
window with a round window above it and both
with moulded architraves; the next three bays
have each a round-headed window with a moulded
and eared architrave. The clearstorey has a
cornice, plain parapet and four round windows
with architraves. The W. bay of this elevation
is occupied by the Tower, which is four stages
divided by bands and surmounted by a spire.
The ground-stage has in the S. wall a square-headed doorway with a moulded architrave;
flanking it are Corinthian columns supporting an
entablature with a panelled soffit and pediment;
above the door-head is a carved cherub-head,
flanked by swags. In the W. wall is a square-headed doorway, with architrave and cornice and
above it is a round window. The second stage has
in the S. and W. walls a round-headed window
with a moulded architrave, the S. window surmounted by carved swags. The third stage has a
round window in the N. wall. The bell-chamber is
surmounted by a heavy cornice and has in each
face a segmental-headed window with an eared
architrave, keystone and plain mullion. The lead-covered spire consists of a high moulded base, a
lantern of quadrant section with a round-headed
opening in each face and a spire proper of obelisk
form surmounted by a ball and vane; the whole
spire is square on plan. The W. Elevation has a
plain parapet and three round-headed windows;
the middle one is blocked and has an architrave and
jamb-pilasters; above the side windows are round
windows.
Interior—The body of the church has three round-headed recesses in the E. wall and is divided into
three bays from N. to S. and five from E. to W.
by Corinthian pilasters, except where their places
are taken by columns of the same order between
the body and the S. aisle; the pilasters and
columns support an architrave-moulding from
which springs a deep plaster cove, groined back
over the clearstorey-windows; an enriched cornicemoulding divides the cove from the flat plaster
ceiling. The soffit of the trabeation between the
body and the S. aisle is panelled and the S. aisle
has a flat plaster ceiling. The S.E. Vestry is of
two storeys and has in the W. wall of the lower
storey a square-headed doorway. The upper
storey has a doorway, with a four-centred head, in
the W. wall. The E. and N. walls of the ground-stage of the tower have each a square-headed arch
with a moulded architrave. In the W. wall
below the floor-level and approached from a coal-cellar is part of the S. jamb of the mediæval W.
doorway.
Fittings—all of late 17th-century date unless
otherwise described. Bells: three; 3rd by James
Bartlett, 1682. Candelabra (Plate 4): three, of
brass with balls and two tiers of scrolled branches,
two in chancel, from All Hallows the Great, the third
beneath the gallery. Chests: In vestibule—
(1) iron-bound, early 17-century, from St. Mildred
Poultry; (2) of wood, plain with three lock-plates, late 17th-century. Communion Tables: In
chancel—(1) with turned and twisted legs and
moulded and inlaid top and carved top rail. In
S. aisle—(2) with turned and twisted legs, carved
and moulded top and moulded rails, from St. Olave
Old Jewry. Communion Rails (Plate 38): In
chancel—with panelled standards, turned and
twisted balusters of two interlacing strands and
moulded rails; in S. aisle—now forming lower part
of screen, with turned and twisted balusters and
carved standards, from St. Olave Old Jewry.
Doors: to vestry, to W. doorway of tower, to S.E.
vestry and in S. doorway, plain panelled doors.
On N. and S. sides of vestibule—two, with elliptical
heads containing carved and pierced panels.
Font (Plate 12): by Grinling Gibbons (?), white
marble bowl of square 'cushion' shape with
cherub-heads at the angles and sides carved
with figure-subjects in relief—(a) the Temptation in Eden, (b) Noah's Ark, (c) the Baptism,
(d) the baptism of Candace's eunuch, baluster-shaped stem, with acanthus-ornament. Cover,
of oak, with enriched base, eight carved trusses
terminating in cherub-heads and meeting in the
middle to support a flaming urn, under trusses
a carved dove; from St. Olave Old Jewry.
Gallery: at W. end for organ, with plain panelled
front, with carved capping; ends brought forward
and carried on Doric columns. Lectern: modern
framing incorporating pierced and carved panels
and brackets. Library: In upper vestry—small
collection of theological works, mainly 18th-century. Monuments and Floor-slabs: Monuments: On S. wall of aisle—(1) to Ephraim Skinner,
1678, marble tablet with Corinthian side columns,
entablature, broken pediment, and two shields-of-arms, from St. Olave; (2) to Sir Nathaniel
Herne, 1679, marble tablet generally similar to
(1) and with two shields-of-arms, from St. Olave;
on S. wall of nave—(3) to Katherine first wife,
1690, and Susanna second wife, 1700, of John
Greene, draped marble cartouche with cherub-head and shield-of-arms, from St. Christopher
le Stocks; in W. vestry—(4) of Sir Peter le Maire,
1631, bronze bust in armour (Plate 46), painted
inscription, from St. Christopher le Stocks. Floor-slabs: In chancel—(1) to George Peryer, 1678, with
shield-of-arms; (2) to Edward Hopegood, 1679, Jane
his wife, 1677, and Lettice, 1709; Elizabeth, 1658,
and Elizabeth, 1665, his daughters; (3) to John
Ebsworth, 1699; (4) to . . ., 1683; (5) to Elizabeth, daughter of William Thomas, 1709. In
nave—(6) to Henry Chapman, 1700, with shield-of-arms; (7) to Anne daughter of Richard Lund,
1687, and to Elizabeth Lund, 1688, and Thomas
Lund, 1690; (8) to Walter Atwood, 1683, with
shield-of-arms; (9) to John Palfryman, 1692. In
S. aisle—(10) to Anthony Haddon, 1688; (11) to
John Sheppard, 1679; (12) name defaced, 169–;
(13) to Peryer Bulwer, 1675; (14) to Rebeccah and
Hannah, died in infancy, and Mary, 1709, daughters
of Joseph Collier. In churchyard—(15) to Edward
Sparke, 1693, with shield-of-arms, from St. Olave;
(16) to Christopher Flower, 1698. Paintings: on
wood panels of Moses and Aaron, now fixed on
either side reredos, from St. Christopher le Stocks.
Panelling: panelled wainscot all round church,
with moulded capping. In W. and N.W. vestries
—large amount of panelling from various destroyed
churches, made up into cupboards, lockers, etc.
In S.E. vestry—original panelling with cornice
and a moulded architrave round fireplace, above
cornice carved achievement of the arms of James
Boddington. Plate: includes cup and cover-paten of 1562; cup and cover-paten of 1567, from
St. Olave; paten of 1593, given 1594; paten of
1593, flagon of 1628 and another of 1635, both
from St. Martin Pomeroy and given in 1635; two
dishes of 1655; two flagons, two cups and two
patens, all of 1714 and from St. Bartholomew
Exchange. Pulpit: hexagonal, each face with
raised panel flanked by carved festoons and surmounted by swags, enriched top and bottom rails,
curved base and hexagonal stem with carved
panels. Sounding-board, from All Hallows the
Great, hexagonal with panelled soffit, enriched cornice, curved pediment in the middle of each side,
one surmounted by an eagle, figures of cherubs at
angles holding carved festoons, panelled support
at back with richly carved scrolls at top. Rainwater Heads, seven in all, of lead, moulded, one on
N. wall dated 1687. Reredos (Plate 137): In three
bays, middle bay with double enriched, round-headed panel with a carved panel below; cartouche
and two cherub-heads above; side bays each with
one enriched and one plain panel and a band of
carved flowers and foliage at top, side bays flanked
by fluted Corinthian columns, supporting entablature, segmental pediment and two urns, cornice
continued over middle bay and sides of reredos
supported by richly carved scrolls. In S. aisle—
reredos from St. Olave Old Jewry, two enriched
round-headed panels in middle surmounted by
cherub-heads and flanked by coupled pilasters,
the inner pair carved with festoons and with
acanthus-capitals and the outer pair fluted and
with Corinthian capitals; they support an entablature, broken segmental pediment and three urns;
in the middle of the frieze is a panel with the
Hebrew word Jehovah. Royal Arms: On front of
W. gallery—Stuart arms, carved. Screen (Plate
138): from All Hallows the Great, between chancel
and nave, of four bays on each side middle doorway, middle doorway flanked by pierced and carved
pilasters, standing on pedestals and with carved
dove and foliage on the head of each, they support
an entablature and broken pediment; the head of
the doorway is filled with a large spread-eagle; the
side bays are divided by slender double-twisted
shafts standing on pedestals and supporting round
arches, two to each bay, with carved and pierced
spandrels and moulded pendants in the middle;
the main cornice has acanthus-enrichment and is
ramped up and scrolled against the middle doorway; the third bay from the middle on each side
has a broken pediment with a carved cartouche;
the screen was given by Theodore Jacobson,
but the base is modern. Under W. gallery—of
two bays, one on either side central opening,
panelled in two heights and divided by panelled
pilasters with carved pendants of fruit and flowers.
Table: In N.W. vestry—large with turned and
twisted legs Miscellanea: There is a considerable
quantity of miscellaneous woodwork stored in
various parts of the church and made up into
modern furniture.

Church of St Stephen, Coleman Street
Condition—Good.
(2) Parish Church of St. Stephen stands on
the W. side of Coleman Street. The walls are
probably of rubble but are rendered in cement;
the dressings are of Portland stone and the roofs
are covered with slates. The older church was
destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666 and re-built by
Sir Christopher Wren in 1674–81, at a cost of
£4,020 16s. 6d. The E. end has been altered in
modern times.
Among the fittings the communion table and
rails, the pulpit and the carving of the Doom are
noteworthy.
Architectural Description—The church is a
Renaissance building of the simple apartment
type, irregularly planned and with a tower within
the N.W. angle and a vestry partitioned off at the
W. end. The main building is 95½ ft. by 34 ft. at
the E. end and 45 ft. at the W. end; the tower is
10 ft. by 11 ft.
Elevations—The E. Elevation has a high panelled
plinth, rusticated quoins and an entablature,
finished over the middle bay, which projects
slightly, with a pediment and a pineapple-ornament. The middle bay has a large round-headed
window with a moulded architrave and a carved
and scrolled keystone. The side bays have each two
raised panels, the upper one finished with a cornice.
The N. Elevation is finished with a cornice and
plain parapet and has four round-headed windows
with architraves; below the westernmost window
is a round-headed doorway with architrave and a
panel above. The tower, at the W. end, is of
four stages divided by moulded bands or cornices.
The ground-stage has in the N. wall a round-headed doorway with an architrave and a modern
inserted window; the second stage has, in the N.
wall, a window similar to those in the church and
with a panelled base; in the E. wall is a round-headed window, now blocked. The third stage
has in the N. wall a round window with an architrave; in the S. wall is a round-headed recess, at
a lower level. The bell-chamber has in each wall
a round-headed window with a plain architrave
and a projecting base; the tower is finished with
a bracketed cornice and a parapet. The timber
lantern rests on a square base with sloping sides and
has a round-headed arch in each face with impost
and key-blocks and a cornice and pediment; above is
a square base with a concave capping and a weather-vane. The S. Elevation is finished with a cornice and
parapet and has six round-headed windows with
architraves; the easternmost window is a sham;
below the fifth window is a doorway with an
elliptical head, eared architrave and a panel above.
Interior (Plate 140)—The body of the church has a
flat ceiling in the middle bounded by a moulded band
with a Greek-key enrichment; the sides are coved
and groined back over the windows and divided
into bays by panelled and scrolled bands; the cove
and bands spring from a cornice projecting under
each band on a cherub-head and scallop-shell.
The E. and S. walls of the ground-stage of the tower
have each a round-headed archway with segmental
rear-arch; in the W. wall is a segmental-headed
recess. The floor of the tower is about 3 ft. below
that of the church, which may indicate that its
structure is partly mediæval.
Fittings—All of late 17th-century date unless
otherwise described. Bells: eight and a clock-bell; 1st to 3rd and 5th and 6th, by James Bartlett,
1693; clock-bell by Anthony Bartlett, 1672.
Communion Table and Rails. Table (Plate 43):
with moulded top carved with acanthus-ornament,
moulded stretchers carved with flowers and raised
in a segmental curve in the middle of the long
sides; the table is supported at the angles by large
carved eagles and in the middle of the front and back
is a seated cherub. Rails (Plate 38): with carved
and panelled standards, turned, twisted and carved
balusters, carved upper and lower rails. Doors:
In E. and S. doorways of tower—of two panelled
leaves. In turret-doorway to second stage—
plain, with strap-hinges. Doorcase to N. doorway—with fluted Corinthian pilasters at sides
supporting enriched entablature, with tablet in
middle, doorway with plain architrave, carved
spandrels and cherub-head; above doorway,
carved swags. Font and Cover (Plate 9). Font:
of white marble, octagonal reeded and fluted bowl of
ovolo-section, baluster-shaped stem with acanthusenrichment. Cover: of oak, octagonal and of
pyramidal form, moulded base, reeded sides and
moulded and carved capping. Monuments and
Floor-slabs. Monuments: On S. wall—(1) to
Henry, son of Sir Thomas Vernon, 1694, large
draped marble tablet above sarcophagus with
gadrooned top and brackets below, supporting
two cherubs; above are pilasters and entablature,
cherub-heads and shield. On N. wall of tower,
outside, (2) to Nathaniel Mathew, 1680–1, plain
tablet with skull and cross-bones. Floor-slabs:
In churchyard—(1) to . . ., 1707; (2) to . . . .,
1685; (3) to John Freeman, 170(5 ?). Panelling:
all round church—panelled wainscot, in three
heights, with moulded capping. Paving: within
communion-rails, of black and white marble
squares. Plate: includes two flagons of 1630,
two cups and patens of 1624, one cup and paten of
1630, two patens of 1705, a dish of 1690 and a spoon
of 1706. Pulpit: of oak, hexagonal with moulded
and carved cornice and base, each face with raised
and carved panel surrounded by scrolled acanthus
and palm-branch carving, stem and stair modern.
Reredos: of oak and of five bays, middle bay with two
round-headed and enriched panels containing the
Decalogue, foliage and cherub-heads in spandrels,
moulded and enriched sill and panel below,
middle bay flanked by fluted Corinthian columns
supporting an enriched entablature continued over
the side bays, side bays panelled and separated
by Corinthian pilasters, panels of inner bays painted
with figures of Moses and Aaron, carved panels
of outer bay with Creed and Lord's Prayer; supporting sides of reredos, two large carved scrolls.
Royal Arms: On gallery-front—Stuart arms
carved and painted. Seating: some pews made up
of old material cut down and altered, upper panels
of front pews filled with pierced carving; churchwardens' pews, at back of church, with pierced and
carved frieze-panels. Staircase: To W. gallery—
with moulded rails and strings and twisted balusters,
now painted. Miscellanea: six pierced and carved
panels incorporated in modern reading-pew.
Enclosing space in vestibule—rails with carved
and twisted balusters, moulded rails and carved
standards.
The S. Churchyard is entered by a gateway
flanked by rusticated stone piers with entablatures
and ball-terminals; between the piers at the level
of the entablature is a deep lintel with a sunk
panel and filled with a carving, in wood, of the
Last Judgment (the original (Plate 140) is now
preserved in the vestry, the one on the gate being a
plaster cast), above the panel is a segmental pediment enclosing a skull and cross-bones; the gateway
has the date 1780 at the back, apparently that of
a repair.
Condition—Good.
(3) Parish Church of St. Olave stands on the
W. side of Old Jewry and between it and Iron
monger Lane. The walls of the W. front and
tower are faced with Portland stone. The old
church was destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666
and re-built by Sir Christopher Wren in 1670–79,
at a cost of £5,580 4s. 10d. The church, with the
exception of part of the W. front and the tower,
was pulled down in 1888 and the remains now form
part of the vicarage of St. Margaret Lothbury.
Architectural Description—The W. Front (Plate
147) forms the W. wall of the modern house and has
three windows on either side of the tower, all modern
except the first-floor window on each side, which
is round-headed and has a moulded architrave.
The W. Tower, placed centrally against the W.
front, is of three stages. The ground-stage has
in the N. and S. walls a modern window; in the
W. wall is a square-headed doorway flanked by
engaged Doric columns with separate entablatures
and a segmental pediment; the soffit of the
pediment is carved with a cherub-head and two
rosettes. Between the first and second stages is
a deep band moulded on the under side. The
second stage has in the W. wall a round-headed
window with a moulded architrave. The N. and
S. walls had each a semi-domed niche corresponding to the W. window and now pierced by modern
windows; between this stage and the bell-chamber
is a deep cornice. The bell-chamber has in each
wall a round-headed window with a moulded
architrave, plain key-block and stone mullion
and transom; the E. and W. windows are
blocked; below the S. window are two segmental-headed windows, probably modern. The tower
is finished with a bracketed cornice and a plain
parapet with pedestals at the angles supporting
obelisks.
Condition—Good.
Secular
(4) Armourers' and Brasiers' Hall stands
on the S. of London Wall and E. of Coleman
Street and is a modern building. In the Hall are
two carved wood cartouches with the arms of St.
George and the Armourers' Company and in the
corridor a carved cartouche of the City arms, all
of late 17th-century date.
(5) House, No. 1, on the S. side of Church Court,
20 yards W. of Old Jewry, is of three storeys with
cellars and attics; the walls are of brick and the
roofs are covered with slates. It was built late in
the 17th century, but has been much altered.
Both the front and back elevations have brick
bands between the upper storeys; the windows
have flush frames and square heads of rubbed
brick. Inside the building, the staircase, from the
first floor upwards, is original and has turned
balusters, square newels with moulded caps and
pendants, straight moulded strings and hand-rails.
Condition—Fairly good.