
(Scroll down this page to see the pictures below)
Below is an Article by the Revd. R. C. Thompson M.A.
(Former Rector and Rural Dean of Woolwich)
Taken from a newsletter of St Mary’s Parish with Holy Trinity and St
Anne’s
May 1959
My
dear friends,
At long last we are comfortably settled in the new Rectory and find
it a very great improvement on the old one. Various alterations have been
carried out; in particular the flat roof of the garage has been used to make
possible the enlargement of a small bedroom to form a suitable bed-sitting room for an unmarried curate, whenever one
can be found.
A few notes on the previous rectories might be of interest. The
earliest rectory of which any record remains was situated on the river bank
more or less where Messrs. Tuff and Hoare’s
premises now stand in Woolwich High St. (Parson’s Hill,
of course, was the pathway leading up from the
rectory to the church). It no doubt had a pleasant view across the river and
the rector could keep his own boat and go in for a little coarse fishing. But
by 1809 the then rector was petitioning Parliament (these things had to go
to Parliament in those days) for permission to build a new rectory on the
grounds that “the said Rectory House is a very small ancient Building which
stands on the Bank of the River Thames in a Situation so low and unhealthy as
to render it necessary for the said Rector to apply for leave of absence, to be
at the Expense of renting a House in a more healthy Situation within the said
Parish.”
The rectory we have just vacated was the result. There is an old
map still extant which shows this rectory standing in an acre of its own
grounds (as indeed it did until 1953) on an eminence amid fields to the east of the church and
The rectory itself was originally a plain square building, not very
handsome, lacking the portico which later ran along the length of the front and
the kitchen and other rooms along side and above built on to the right. These
additions were made at a later date (Does anyone know this date for certain? My
guess is about 1870) and were originally more extensive, as
many will recall, than they are now. It was Canon Leadbitter
who very sensibly had part of them pulled down when he came here in 1932. And
so the rectory has moved again. For the record, the present rectory was built
as Holy Trinity Vicarage in 1934, to replace a very old-fashioned house further down the road, and Fr. Stebbings and those
associated with him are to be congratulated on planning a very convenient
parsonage house. It became available for its present use when the union of St.
Mary’s and Holy Trinity took place in 1953. It was expected at first that
it might have been used to house an industrial chaplain, but that plan fell
through, and in consequence we scrapped our plan of building a new rectory
close to the church and accepted a diocesan suggestion that this should be the
new rectory. This involved some unexpected delay in vacating the old rectory,
and I would like to place on record my appreciation not only of the courtesy
and consideration which we have received throughout
from the Town Clerk, the Borough Engineer and their colleagues, but also of
their forbearance in the rather protracted delays which were inevitable before
the move could finally take place.
From a “small and ancient Building” in a “low and unhealthy
Situation,” the Rectors of Woolwich were transferred to a house modeled on what
was then regarded as a gentleman’s elegant residence but which survived to
become rather a white elephant. But it had in its day been the scene of many
happy gatherings and I am sure that many of you will regret, as I do, the
necessity imposed by changing circumstances which has compelled us to give up
this large, unwieldy, rather ugly but none the less
loveable old house. May this new Rectory in its
turn be, as its predecessor was, not only the home of successive Rectors but
also a centre of life and of friendship for the parish and all who worship with
us.
Yours
sincerely,
R.C. Thompson
Some views of and from the Rectory in Woolwich today




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