St Luke the Physician’s Church exterior, Richmond, Tasmania
Anglican, John Lee Archer, Bishop Broughton, buttress, convict, Gothic, Gothic Revival, pointed arch, porch, Richmond, Romanesque, St Luke the Physician’s Church, Tas, Tasmania, tower, tracery.
<p>St Luke the Physician’s Anglican Church is in the town of Richmond, Tasmania. The sandstone building was designed by architect John Lee Archer and built by convict labour. It was completed in 1836 and consecrated by Bishop Broughton in 1838. The clock came from St David’s Church in Hobart and was added to the tower in 1922. The building is primarily in the Romanesque style with semi-circular windows and entrance doorway, although the pointed arch stained glass window with tracery in the chancel is Gothic in style. Other medieval inspired features are the central tower and the two small solid towers at the rear, all with crenellation.</p>
<p>For the interior see <a href="http://ausmed.arts.uwa.edu.au/items/show/1124" target="_self">http://ausmed.arts.uwa.edu.au/items/show/1124</a></p>
McLeod, Shane
October 5, 2012
No Copyright
<a href="http://ausmed.arts.uwa.edu.au/items/show/1124" target="_self">http://ausmed.arts.uwa.edu.au/items/show/1124</a>
3xDigital Photograph
Christ Church St Laurence Anglican Church interior, Haymarket, Sydney, New South Wales
Anglican, Edmund Thomas Blacket, William Grant Broughton, Bishop Broughton, Christ Church St Laurence, John Burcham Clamp, Gothic, Gothic Revival, Haymarket, lancet windows, New South Wales, NSW, pointed arch, Henry Robertson, stained glass, Sydney, tracery
<p>Christ Church St Laurence Anglican Church is at 812 George Street in the inner-city suburb of Haymarket in Sydney, New South Wales. The foundation stone of the church was laid by William Grant Broughton (1788-1853), Australia’s first Bishop, on New Year’s Day 1840, and he consecrated the church on September 10, 1845. The original architect was Henry Robertson, who completed the walls of the nave and the base of the tower. Edmund Thomas Blacket (1817-1883) was responsible for much of the interior, including the stone window tracery and ceiling. Following a fire in 1905 the architect John Burcham Clamp (1869-1931) restored much of the interior. Christ Church St Lawrence is in the Gothic Revival style and the interior features pointed arch windows lancet windows with stone window mouldings, tracery, and stained glass, a timber ceiling with trusses, and a painted wall around the east window. Painted interiors of churches was common during the medieval period before the Reformation, after which many were white-washed in countries which turned from Catholicism.</p>
<p>For their very informative website of the church see <a href="http://www.ccsl.org.au/">http://www.ccsl.org.au/</a></p>
McLeod, Shane
17 December 2012
No Copyright
Digital Photograph; JPEG
Christ Church St Laurence Anglican Church, Sydney, New South Wales
Anglican, Edmund Thomas Blacket, William Grant Broughton, Bishop Broughton, buttress, Christ Church St Laurence, crenel, Gothic, Gothic Revival, New South Wales, NSW, parapet, pointed arch, Henry Robertson, spire, Sydney, tower, tracery.
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<p>Christ Church St Laurence Anglican Church is at 812 George Street in the inner-city suburb of Haymarket in Sydney, New South Wales. The foundation stone of the church was laid by William Grant Broughton (1788-1853), Australia’s first Bishop, on New Year’s Day 1840, and he consecrated the church on September 10, 1845. The original architect was Henry Robertson, who completed the walls of the nave and the base of the tower. Edmund Thomas Blacket (1817-1883) was responsible for much of the interior, including the stone window tracery and ceiling. Following a fire in 1905 the architect John Burcham Clamp (1869-1931) restored much of the interior. Christ Church St Lawrence is in the Gothic Revival style and the interior features pointed arch windows lancet windows with stone window mouldings, tracery, and stained glass, a timber ceiling with trusses, and a painted wall around the east window. Painted interiors of churches was common during the medieval period before the Reformation, after which many were white-washed in countries which turned from Catholicism.</p>
<p>For their very informative website of the church see <a href="http://www.ccsl.org.au/">http://www.ccsl.org.au/</a></p>
</div>
McLeod, Shane
17 December 2012
No Copyright
2 x Digital Photograph/JPEGs