History
It was built in 1845 for the French congregation who had previously worshipped in the Savoy, Strand, established by Charles II (Survey of London, vols 33–34, 1966)
The site had been purchased from the Commissioner of Woods and Forests for £2600 (The Times, 27 December 1845)
The Church’s architect was Ambrose Poynter (Oxford Dictionary of National Biography)
In 1875 it closed briefly to allow repairs to be made (The Times, 6 October 1875)
In 1885 Rev. Alphonse Auguste Dupont was appointed its Chaplain (The Times, 21 May 1885)
Both institutions survived major rebuilding of streets in the surrounding area, which saw their address change to Shaftesbury Avenue
However, the number of French-born Protestants was steadily declining, most Huguenots having been absorbed into the Church of England, and the congregation became mainly “people who wished to improve their knowledge of French” (The Times, 20 November 1924)
After its last priest died, the trustees allowed services to be taken by a layman, and applied for Parliamentary sanction to demolish the Church, “because the original purposes for which the church came into being are no longer likely to be served” (The Times, 20 November 1894)
The Act of Parliament was passed, the School and Church closed in 1924, and the Church was demolished in 1925
The organisation became the French Huguenot Church of London Charitable Trust after the closure of the Church in 1924
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What was reforming about it?
Confusingly, it was conformist rather than Presbyterian or otherwise non-conformist (The Times, 4 January, 1845)
Where in Bloomsbury
Website of current institution
The successor institution is the French Huguenot Church of London Charitable Trust, which does not have a website
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Books about it
None found
Archives
Some records may be held as part of the Huguenot Library collections in Special Collections at University College London; details are available online via (opens in new window)
There is a finding aid: Raymond Smith, Records of the Royal Bounty and Connected Funds, the Burn Donation, and the Savoy Church in the Huguenot Library, University College, London: A Handlist (1974)
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