St. Jamess Church, Croydon: Kings Messengers Attendance Register
- AR158/1
- Item
- 1922 - 1931
Part of Miscellaneous Records Relating to St. James' Church, Croydon
Attendance register; includes home addresses and ages of children
St. Jamess Church, Croydon: Kings Messengers Attendance Register
Part of Miscellaneous Records Relating to St. James' Church, Croydon
Attendance register; includes home addresses and ages of children
St. Jamess Church, Croydon: Estimate for the Erection and Completion of the Church Hall
Part of Miscellaneous Records Relating to St. James' Church, Croydon
Estimate provided by P.W.Dawney Carpenter, Chartered Architects.
St. Jamess Church, Croydon: Correspondence Concerning the New Vicarage
Part of Miscellaneous Records Relating to St. James' Church, Croydon
File containing correspondence and other items concerning the unsuitability of the existing vicarage in Tavistock Road (it was subsequently demolished in 1959), the acquisition of 23a Mulgrave Road as temporary accommodation and the proposal to acquire 239 Sydenham Road. This was one of the eight houses built in the area by W.H.Lascelles to his unusual design of using composite building materials. A report by a local surveyor cautioned against the acquisition of the property and the plan was not proceeded with. A new vicarage was eventually acquired on Oakfield Road.
Miscellaneous Records Relating to St. James' Church, Croydon
1) Attendance register, Kings Messengers (children), 1923-31 - gives home addresses and ages.
2) Church choir attendance register, 1938-53.
3) Correspondence relating to rebuilding of Church c Hall, 1944-60.
4) Estimate for building of Church Hall, May 1953.
5) Correspondence relating to Vicarage, 1957-63.
St. James' Church
St. Jamess Church, Croydon: Church Choir Attendance Register
Part of Miscellaneous Records Relating to St. James' Church, Croydon
St. Jamess Church, Croydon: Correspondence Relating to the Rebuilding of the Church Hall
Part of Miscellaneous Records Relating to St. James' Church, Croydon
File containing correspondence concerning the rebuilding of the Church Hall which had been destroyed by a V1 on 17 June 1944; the Vicarage on Tavistock Road was also badly damaged. The Church Hall was eventually rebuilt on the same location.