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Latitude: 51.436 / 51°26'9"N
Longitude: -0.1985 / 0°11'54"W
OS Eastings: 525320
OS Northings: 172321
OS Grid: TQ253723
Mapcode National: GBR CF.8N5
Mapcode Global: VHGRB.H5YG
Plus Code: 9C3XCRP2+CJ
Entry Name: Church of St Luke
Listing Date: 11 August 1998
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1376060
English Heritage Legacy ID: 470046
ID on this website: 101376060
Location: Summerstown, Merton, London, SW19
County: London
District: Merton
Electoral Ward/Division: Wimbledon Park
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Merton
Traditional County: Surrey
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Greater London
Church of England Parish: Wimbledon Park St Luke
Church of England Diocese: Southwark
Tagged with: Church building
TQ 27 SE RYFOLD ROAD
(Southside), Wimbledon Park
1329/2/10028 CHURCH OF ST LUKE
II
Church, 1909 by T.G. Jackson. Red brick, stone dressings, slate roofs, timber-framed porch. Nave, almost continuous chancel, north and south aisles, south transept, north-west tower, western narthex. Nave in four and a half bays, almost continuous chancel in two unequal bays, aisle of five bays, demarcated by stepped buttresses, angle buttresses at corners. Paired rectangular aisle windows with stone mullions, cills and moulded arches, moulded brick reveals, beneath segmental brick arches. Plain rectangular leaded lights, some with iron hoppers. Dog-tooth cornice.
Timber- framed porch on brick plinth, shaped bargeboards, slate roof. Later C20 inserted partition and outer doors. Inner pair of pine doors with iron door furniture, in chamfered brick reveals, under segmental moulded brick arch. East nave window of three lights with stone tracery and moulded stone hood. Clerestorey of simple three -light windows with stone cills and mullions, moulded brick arches. Chancel more elaborately treated with pair of two-light windows with stone Perpendicular tracery; tall easternmost window with stone mullions, transoms and tracery; stepped corner buttresses just set back. East window , derivative of the work of Seddon, seven lights, Decorated tracery but with pair of strongly defined super- mullions. Chequer work brickwork below. Stone gable cross. Pair of tablets: the stained glass in memory of those who died in the Great War, 1914-1919; memorial stone laid May 1st 1909 on behalf of Emanuel Church, Wimbledon. West front dominated by tower at north -west angle, rising from narthex, which continues from the aisles wrapping the corners, with hipped slate roofs. Three identical entrances, detailed as porch entrance, and with chamfered brick fillet rising from the reveal to the dog-tooth cornice; stepped buttresses at corners and defining west front, as for aisles. Octagonal tower rises from square base, with stone offsets; simple rectangular lights at lower three stages, diminishing as they rise, louvred ringing chamber openings with foiled heads, small rectangular openings above moulded stone band, leaded spire. Simple two- light mullion and transom west window with stone dressings, stone gable cross.
INTERIOR. Lofty interior with four and a half bay arcade of lozenge plan stone piers with brick moulded arches; slender canted brick shaft rising from each pier carries alternate roof truss on stone corbel, continuing in stone at springing of shallow brick blind clerestorey arcade . Slim horizontal moulded brick band at clerestorey level. Continuous nave and chancel barrel vaulted roof with curved ribs above king post trusses, the chancel arch defined by slender braces; West end gallery in timber on square timber piers on stone bases. Chancel slightly stepped in, panelling with organ loft 1909, organ installed c1930, reredos and sanctuary panelling completed 1925. Seating of 1909. Pulpit with tester, a truncated octagonal moulded stone base with steps to timber superstructure with traceried panels, timber tester embellished with floral emblems and drop finials. North aisle terminates in 2 bay arcade leading to St Margaret chapel; to south pair of unequal door openings under segmental brick arch. Brass eagle lectern. Octagonal stone font with foliated upper panels, timber cover, plain stone base. Nave seating post World War Two, none previously installed.
Cherry and Pevsner, Buildings of England: London 2: South (1994)
Featherstone,W., Sharing Faith. St. Luke's and Wimbledon Park 1909-1989
Listing NGR: TQ2532072321
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