St Thomas's Church, Oakwood

St Thomas's Church, Oakwood
St Thomas's Church, Oakwood
51°38′44″N 0°07′36″W / 51.64556°N 0.12675°W / 51.64556; -0.12675Coordinates: 51°38′44″N 0°07′36″W / 51.64556°N 0.12675°W / 51.64556; -0.12675
Location Prince George Avenue, Oakwood, London, N14 4SN
Country England
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Conservative Evangelical
Website st-toms.org.uk
Architecture
Status Active
Functional status Parish church
Administration
Parish St. Thomas, Oakwood
Deanery Enfield
Archdeaconry Archdeaconry of Hampstead
Episcopal area Area Bishopric of Edmonton
Diocese Diocese of London
Clergy
Bishop(s) The Rt Revd Jonathan Baker (AEO)
Vicar(s) The Revd Christopher Hobbs
Honorary priest(s) The Revd Mark Pickles
Curate(s) The Revd Ben Vane
Laity
Reader(s) John Coekin

St Thomas's Church, Oakwood, London N14, is an Anglican church in the Enfield Deanery of the Diocese of London. It is located in Prince George Avenue in the Oakwood area of the London Borough of Enfield, England.

History

St Thomas's is a modern Anglican church established in the 1930s as the suburb of Oakwood grew with the extension of the Piccadilly underground line to Cockfosters. Building stopped with the outbreak of the Second World War, and the church was not finished until the 1950s.[1] The architect was Romilly Craze.[2] Later a parish hall was added, and a distinctive tall green spire. There is a guide hut on the grounds across the car park from the main building.

Late in 2010 the spire was found to be unsafe and removed,[3] however this was replaced at the beginning of 2012.

St Thomas's is within the Conservative Evangelical tradition of the Church of England. As a parish that rejects the ordination of women, it receives alternative episcopal oversight from the Bishop of Fulham (currently Jonathan Baker).[4]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Thomas's Church, Oakwood.

References

  1. , Geograph Britain.
  2. "London Borough of Enfield Information Sheets Church Architecture". London Borough of Enfield. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
  3. "G'day from the Vicarage - Dec2010". St Toms Oakwood. Retrieved 22 September 2011..
  4. "St Thomas, Oakwood". bishopoffulham.org.uk. The See of Fulham. Retrieved 22 November 2016.


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