• The patched-up structure proved unsafe, however, and had to be demolished in 1711. Hawksmoor[edit]. St Mary Woolnoth pictured in 1959.
  • Located in the very epicenter of the City of London by the Bank of England, St Mary Woolnoth is architecturally and historically one of the most significant...
  • The bodies from the crypt were removed and predominantly reburied at Ilford Cemetery. St Mary Woolnoth remarkably managed to survive World War Two unscathed.
  • St Mary Woolnoth (1727) is on a site were Roman, Pagan and Christian worship has occurred for 2000 years.
  • St Mary Woolnoth is serving the Lombard Street community and engaging and encouraging others through a life-changing journey in Lombard Street...
  • John Newton Rector of St Mary Woolnoth died 21 December 1807. We thank God for his life and work.
  • On Easter Day 1727 St Mary Woolnoth of the nativity was reopened after it's rebuilding by Nicholas Hawksmoor. It is the only church he built in the City of London.
  • St Mary Woolnoth is an unusual church. A short distance from the Bank, the church can be found at the junction of Lombard Street and King William Street.
  • On Easter Day 1727 St Mary Woolnoth of the nativity was reopened after it’s rebuilding by Nicholas Hawksmoor, which took 12 years and was paid for from the...
  • The site played a significant role during the abolition of slavery. The Brooke Slave Ship Diagram was printed in the same street as St Mary Woolnoth.