St James' Church, Sydney




Church in New South Wales, Australia





















































St James' Church, Sydney
St James, King Street

Black and white photo of the church showing the eastern and northern faces.
St James' Church in about 1890, by Henry King



St James' Church, Sydney is located in Sydney

St James' Church, Sydney

St James' Church, Sydney



Location in the Sydney central business district

33°52′10″S 151°12′40″E / 33.8694°S 151.2111°E / -33.8694; 151.2111
Location173 King Street, Sydney central business district, City of Sydney, New South Wales
CountryAustralia
DenominationAnglican Church of Australia
ChurchmanshipAnglo-Catholic
Websitesjks.org.au
History
StatusParish church
Founder(s)Governor Macquarie
DedicationSt James
Consecrated11 February 1824 (1824-02-11) by Reverend Samuel Marsden
Architecture
Architect(s)
  • Francis Greenway

  • John Verge

  • Varney Parkes

StyleGeorgian
Groundbreaking7 October 1819 (1819-10-07)
Administration
ParishSt James', King Street
DioceseSydney
Clergy
RectorAndrew Sempell
AssistantJohn Stewart
Laity
Director of musicWarren Trevelyan Jones
Organist(s)Alistair Nelson

New South Wales Heritage Register
Official nameSt. James' Anglican Church; St James' Church
TypeState heritage (built)
Criteriaa., b., c., d., e., f.
Designated3 September 2004[1]
Reference no.1703
TypeChurch
CategoryReligion
BuildersConvict labour


St James' Church, commonly known as St James', King Street, is a heritage-listed active Anglican parish church located at 173 King Street, in the Sydney central business district in the City of Sydney local government area of New South Wales, Australia. Consecrated in February 1824 and named in honour of St James the Great, it became a parish church in 1835. Designed in the style of a Georgian town church by the transported convict architect Francis Greenway during the governorship of Lachlan Macquarie, St James' is part of the historical precinct of Macquarie Street which includes other early colonial era buildings such as the World Heritage listed Hyde Park Barracks.


The church remains historically, socially and architecturally significant. The building is the oldest one extant in Sydney's inner city region. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 3 September 2004;[1] and was listed on the (now defunct) Register of the National Estate, and has been described as one of the world's 80 greatest man-made treasures.


The church has maintained its special role in the city's religious, civic and musical life as well as its close associations with the city's legal and medical professions through its proximity to the law courts and Sydney Hospital. Its original ministry was to the convict population of Sydney and it has continued to serve the city's poor and needy in succeeding centuries.


Worship at St James' is in a style commonly found in the High Church and moderate Anglo-Catholic traditions of Anglicanism. It maintains the traditions of Anglican church music, with a robed choir singing psalms, anthems and responses in contrast to the great majority of churches in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney where services are generally celebrated in styles associated with Low Church and Evangelical Christian practices. The teaching at St James' has a more liberal perspective than most churches in the diocese on issues of gender and the ordination of women.




Contents





  • 1 Location


  • 2 History

    • 2.1 Foundation and consecration


    • 2.2 First years: 1824–38


    • 2.3 Ministry of Robert Allwood: 1840–84


    • 2.4 Changes: 1884–1904


    • 2.5 20th century


    • 2.6 21st century



  • 3 Description

    • 3.1 Architecture


    • 3.2 Interior


    • 3.3 Chapel of the Holy Spirit


    • 3.4 Crypt and Children's Chapel


    • 3.5 Memorials, monuments, records


    • 3.6 Renovation, restoration, conservation


    • 3.7 Condition



  • 4 Worship and ministry

    • 4.1 Liturgy


    • 4.2 Theology


    • 4.3 Congregation


    • 4.4 Community service


    • 4.5 Education


    • 4.6 Past and present clergy



  • 5 Music

    • 5.1 Organ


    • 5.2 Choir


    • 5.3 Music leaders


    • 5.4 Bells



  • 6 Heritage listing


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References

    • 8.1 Citations


    • 8.2 Sources



  • 9 Further reading


  • 10 External links




Location


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Photo showing of the end of the church. It is of brick and has three round-headed windows set between four sandstone pilasters, surmounted by a Classical lintel and pediment. At the further end of the church is a spire sheathed in pale green copper.

The eastern front



The church is seen from above, showing the spire and slate roof. The nearby park is full of dark leafy trees. In the distance is a large sandstone cathedral.

With Hyde Park and St Mary's Cathedral in the background




St James' Church is located at 173 King Street, Sydney, in the legal and commercial district, near Hyde Park and adjoining Queen's Square, adjacent to the Greenway Wing of the NSW Supreme Court.[2] The church forms part of a group of notable colonial buildings along Macquarie Street, which runs from Queen's Square to Sydney Harbour. At the time of construction, the church and the buildings nearby were "Sydney's most distinguished structures ... on the highest ground, and, socially speaking, in the best part of the city".[3]


The geographical parish of St James' is one of the 57 parishes of Cumberland County, New South Wales, and it initially shared responsibility for an area that extended as far as Sydney Heads. St James' acquired its own parish in 1835.[4][5][6] Its boundaries have since remained essentially unchanged.[7]


The underground St James railway station is named after the church. The precinct around the church is informally known as St James'.[5][8][9]




History





Francis Greenway appears as a chubby-faced man with an aquiline nose and his hair carefully arranged in a windswept style. He is looking inspired.

Architect Francis Greenway



The Reverend Richard Hill is a chubbier man of middle age, with a very bald head fringed with dark curling hair. He wears parson's bands (two white tags at his neck).

The Revd Richard Hill, first chaplain





Foundation and consecration


The building of St James' Church was commissioned by Governor Lachlan Macquarie in 1819, designed by the convict architect Francis Greenway and constructed between 1820 and 1824 using convict labour.[1] Governor Macquarie and Commissioner John Bigge laid the foundation stone on 7 October 1819.[10][11] The building was originally intended to serve as a courthouse[12] as Macquarie had plans for a large cathedral to be built on the present location of St Andrew's Cathedral but they were put on hold by the intervention of Bigge who had been appointed to conduct a Royal Commission into the colonial government.[11][13] Bigge initially approved of the courthouse project but by February 1820, less than four months after his arrival, he strongly recommended its conversion into a church.


"The reason for Bigge's change of mind may be found in the appointment, three years later, of his brother-in-law [and secretary], Mr TH Scott, a wine merchant, as Archdeacon".[14] The design of the courthouse was modified before construction with the addition of a steeple at the western end, to serve as a church, while the adjacent school buildings were put into use as a courthouse.[10] The first service was held in the unfinished church on the Day of Epiphany, 6 January 1822, the text being from Isaiah, Chapter 60: "Arise! Shine, for thy light has come. The glory of the Lord has risen upon thee". It was anticipated in the Sydney Gazette's report of the event that the church, when fitted out with stalls and galleries, would hold 2,000 people.[11] The church was consecrated by the senior chaplain, the Reverend Samuel Marsden, on 11 February 1824.[10][1]



First years: 1824–38



An old print. The church and law-court building stand at the top of a slight rise with only a couple of other small buildings in view. There is a broad dirt road along which two people approach the church on horseback and two on foot.

St James' Church in 1836, lithograph. Robert Russell, printed by John Gardiner Austin


Before the building of St James', Sydney's growing population had been served by St Philip's Church, York Street. However, as St James' was able to hold more people than St Philip's and clergy meetings as well as ordinations were held there, it quickly became the centre of official church activity.[15]


There was both official and general concern about the lack of morality within the predominantly male population, and the establishment of churches and of education was seen as a method of combatting this. The 19th-century church historian, Edward Symonds, credited a "better moral and spiritual tone" in the colony to "decent churches" and "the advent of additional clergy, headed by the Revd William Cowper, in 1808".[16][17] The first rector of St James', the Reverend Richard Hill, was ordained specifically for colonial ministry and sent from London as assistant to William Cowper at St Philip's.[18] Hill was energetic and a good organiser, with progressive views on education. He instigated a number of projects to aid the community, including an infants' school in the crypt of the church and a Sunday School.[19]


The focus of the church's liturgy at the time was on preaching and the church's interior reflected this. The east end of the church had a triple-decker pulpit placed centrally, from which the service was led and the sermon preached. From this pulpit Bishops Broughton, Pattison, Selwyn, Barker and Barry preached.[20] The parish clerk led the congregation in the responses from its lower level.[19] Between the three windows which at that time occupied the eastern wall, there were two large panels displaying the words of the Lord's Prayer, the Apostles' Creed and the Ten Commandments.[21] The church was full of box pews which faced each other across a central aisle. The western end had a gallery, which is still in place, for the convicts. Pews were rented to provide a source of income for the church and the whole was arranged in "rigid social order" with the poor occupying the free seats.[16][19] Sunday services consisted of Morning and Evening Prayer, with Holy Communion taking place only occasionally as an addition to the regular service. For this reason, there was no visual emphasis on the communion table, which was a small portable one, and no reredos.[19]





A watercolour showing the church in the distance with several buildings. Sheep are grazing in the foreground.

View from the south east, with a path leading to Bathurst Street. Elizabeth Street runs left to right (south to north) across the painting (John Rae 1842)



A faded old watercolour showing the church interior, with the walls painted pale blue.

Interior showing the original high pulpit, box pews and three windows of the eastern end (Bradridge 1831)




St James' suffered from a major scandal in the late 1820s ("a period of personal quarrels and violent newspaper controversies")[22] when Commissioner Bigge's secretary and brother-in-law, Thomas Hobbes Scott, who had been made Archdeacon of New South Wales in 1825, came into conflict with a parishioner, Edward Smith Hall.[11] Archdeacon Scott ordered that Hall should vacate the pew he rented at St James' for himself and his six daughters.[11] As Hall continued to occupy the pew, constables attended Sunday services to prevent his occupation of the pew by boarding it up and making it secure with iron bands.[22] Hall, critical of both the archdeacon and Governor Ralph Darling, was also a partner with Arthur Hill in the ownership of newspaper The Monitor. He published an attack on the archdeacon, for which he was sued for libel. The courts fined him only £1 and placed him on a bond. Hall appealed to Reginald Heber, Bishop of Calcutta (who was the relevant ecclesiastical authority at the time)[20][23] and to the law where he was awarded £25 damages.[24] The archdeacon, who was extremely unpopular, returned to London in 1828.[11]


The first major alteration to the church was the enclosing of the south portico to form a vestry. In 1832 John Verge constructed another vestry at the eastern end of the church, in strict conformity with the architectural style of Greenway.[25] Growth of the congregation necessitated further changes. Galleries were added along the northern and eastern walls. As the three eastern windows had been blocked by Verge's vestry, the interior became increasingly badly lit with every change. Verge's solution was to pierce ocular windows high in the walls to light the galleries.[25]


In 1836, the Reverend Richard Hill had a fit of apoplexy in the vestry and died.[18] Soon after this dramatic event, and while the church was still in mourning, the Right Reverend William Grant Broughton was installed as Bishop of Australia during a service in St James' lasting five hours.[26][27] Since Macquarie's plans for a new cathedral on George Street had not come to fruition, Broughton acted as if St James' were a pro-cathedral.[28] Robert Cartwright and then Napoleon Woodd succeeded Richard Hill at St James'.[26][29]



Ministry of Robert Allwood: 1840–84





The church interior looking very crowded with furniture as there are box pews, with galleries above them, and in the foreground is the altar

Interior in 1843 showing the altar surrounded by circular railing and the galleries



An orderly townscape with houses of two stories and the Church towards the end of the street. People are riding and walking in the street.


King Street looking east towards St James' (watercolour by Frederick Garling 1843)




In 1839 the Reverend Robert Allwood, educated at Eton College and the University of Cambridge, arrived in Sydney[15][30] and was appointed to St James' by Bishop Broughton,[15] in which parish he served for 44 years until his retirement in 1884. Allwood was an important patron of education in Victorian Sydney. Under him, the parish school expanded and his teacher training college became a "model school".[30] He was also the principal tutor at St James' College, which originally met in St James' parsonage (on the corner of King Street and Macquarie Street) until it was transferred to Lyndhurst at The Glebe.[31]


In 1848, St James' was the venue for a full military funeral, "attended by 150 carriages"[32] and in 1878 Allwood officiated at the wedding of Nora Robinson and Alexander Kirkman Finlay.[33] As the second vice-regal wedding in the colony this ceremony was attended by many dignitaries and attracted a "crushing" crowd of 10,000 cheering onlookers.[34][35]Edmund Barton, the first Prime Minister of Australia, was baptised at St James' on 4 July 1849.[36]


Unlike Hill, Allwood advocated the principles of the Oxford Movement (also known as "Tractarianism" after its publication of Tracts for the Times), which stressed the historical continuity of the Church of England, and placed a high importance upon the sacraments and the liturgy.[30][37] "The culmination" of a trend towards Tractarianism in the colony was the founding in 1845, of St James' College – "the first seminary for training local ordinands".[38] However, many colonial Anglicans were unhappy with Tractarian trends because Roman Catholics "were equated with Irish",[38] and with "Romanism". "Serious differences opinion in matters of doctrine" began to "escalate into public debate as the influences of the Oxford Movement began to be felt in the Australian colonies" in the 1840s.[39]


Allwood's sermons were brief and Holy Communion was celebrated every Sunday. The organ, which had been installed in 1827, was moved to the space of the southern vestry, and the pulpit and reading desk place in front of it where they could be seen from all parts of the church. The holy table continued to be located at the eastern end of the building.[37] Bishop Broughton supported the Tractarian views of Allwood, but his successor, Frederic Barker, who became bishop in 1855, was strongly Evangelical.[40] The division in style between St James' and the "low church" ethos that predominated in the Sydney Diocese began at this time.[37]



Changes: 1884–1904


During the 1880s Sydney became a prosperous city, commerce and industry flourished, and the suburbs expanded. As more churches were built and fewer people lived in the heart of the city, the congregation of St James' Church shrank. The challenge that it faced was to minister effectively to city workers, rather than dwellers, to serve the poor of the city, and to attract those whose preference was for the style of worship and intellectual, topical preaching that distinguished St James' from many of the newly created parish churches.[41] The young Henry Latimer Jackson, from Cambridge, was appointed in 1885. He introduced weekday services and a magazine called The Kalendar, one of Australia's first parish papers.[42] He also lectured at Sydney University, addressed conferences, spoke at synod and acted as secretary to the newly established Sydney Church of England Boys' Grammar School.[43] However, his sermons were described as "not so much opposed, as simply not understood".[44] He resigned in 1895 after accepting a position in the Diocese of Ely.[45]



The interior looking towards an arched exit. There are rows of pews and a wide centre aisle. The ceiling is coffered into decorative square shapes. There is a large gallery of dark wood with a curving balustrade across the back of the church.

The gallery at the western end of the church is the only one to remain


Although Sydney was prospering, St James' had an acute shortage of money and "the government considered resuming the site for a city railway".[44][46] The trustees at this time leased the parsonage and, in 1894, used the money for urgent restoration to the exterior of the building. The architect Varney Parkes replaced the old spire, using copper that was pre-weathered so that there was no radical change in its appearance.[47] He removed infilling from the north portico and designed a new portico and entrance to the tower to match that of the eastern vestry. The result was to make the north face of the building its most significant aspect.[46]


Jackson's successor was William Carr Smith, a man with socialist ideals and a commitment to social reform and spiritual outreach.[48] He preached long and engaging sermons inside the church and for a time in the open air in The Domain as well.[49] Carr Smith had brought with him from England the "most recent developments" in the restoration of ancient liturgy, so he was able to help St James' play a "notable part" in Sydney's revival of Anglo-Catholicism, setting "new standards of ceremonial".[50] To serve these purposes the architect John H. Buckeridge was employed to transform the building's interior, completing the work in 1901.[48]
The most significant change was the new emphasis given to the altar, which was made the focus of attention and "flanked by the pulpit, reading desks and lectern."[51] The "principal features" under the Carr Smith plan were the construction of the apse, set into the eastern vestry to create a sanctuary; the raising of the chancel floor which created a platform, five steps above the nave for the choir, framed by the organ divided into two sections; the making of a new, unobtrusive entrance to the tower and western gallery; and the removal of the box pews and the eastern and northern galleries.[52] The memorial plaques were also rearranged. The choir was ornamented with a mosaic floor and ornate brasswork which complemented the large brass eagle lectern by the English ecclesiastical suppliers, J. Wippell and Company, that commemorated Canon Robert Allwood.[41][48] The floor of the pulpit was made from parts of the old three-decker one.[20][53] The organ, refurbished and enlarged by Davidson of Sydney, was installed in 1903.[48] With the removal of the organ, the south vestry was made into a side chapel. Eight large stained glass windows were installed between 1903 and 1913, along with a new pulpit, altar and retable, all of which were given as memorials.[54] Another improvement was "the placing of double windows on the King-street side to shut out the sound of the traffic, which hitherto has been a serious annoyance to both the officiating clergymen and the congregation".[55] In 1897, St James' Hall was offered to Father Dorotheos Bakalliarios, a Greek Orthodox priest from Samos for Orthodox services in Sydney.[56] In 1904 the diocesan architect, John Burcham Clamp, was employed to design a new parish hall.[48]



20th century



Aerial black and white photo of the junction of Macquarie and King Streets when traffic could still run from one into the other. Buses and other vehicles are on the roads and the now demolished building at the corner can be seen


Queen's Square, Sydney c1930


In 1900, the Governor, Earl Beauchamp, presented to the church a number of embroidered stoles made by the Warham Guild of London, along with copes and chasubles.[57] The centenary of the laying of the foundation stone was celebrated in October 1919 with a program of events that extended over nine days. Festivities included services at which the Bishops of Armidale and Bathurst were special preachers, music, processions, a lantern lecture on "Old Sydney" by the municipal librarian, and social events such as a ferry outing and a luncheon at which the chief guest was the Governor Sir Walter Davidson accompanied by his wife Lady Davidson.[53] Also scheduled was a welcome to soldiers returned from the Great War.[11][58] An illustrated historical memoir was produced and sold for two shillings.[59]


The celebrations for the centenary of the Oxford Movement occurred during the tenure of the eighth rector of St James', Philip Micklem.[60] However, "they were not centred on the cathedral, but on St James'", Sydney being the only Australian diocese that "failed officially to observe the occasion".[61] Micklem chaired a rally on 19 July 1933 in St James' Hall that was attended by governor Philip Game and Lady Game, "and five bishops representing three states."[62] The 180th anniversary of the Oxford Movement fell in the 21st century, and the rector of St James' preached at the commemoration.[63]


Micklem was "a pioneer advocate of the preservation of early colonial architecture".[64] As the century progressed, there were a number of threats to the church's historic environment, which includes Greenway's Law Courts and Hyde Park Barracks.[65][66][67] In spite of the threats to these colonial era buildings, they survived to form an important Sydney precinct.[68] Both the building and the organisation continued to serve the city. During World War II, for example, the crypt was used as a "Hostel for Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen"[69] and the ninth rector, Edwin John Davidson, incumbent during that period, "gained fame" for the church with his "pungent sermons on current affairs".[70] The eleventh rector, Frank Cuttriss, had an ecumenical outlook – he was a member of a meeting of the World Council of Churches at Uppsala and an observer to the Second Vatican Council.[71]


St James' was the locus of many notable events throughout the 20th century, including weddings and funerals of famous, significant or notorious people, visits from theologians and senior clerics, and when needed, services for the Lutheran communities.[72] At the wedding of singer Gladys Moncrieff and Tom Moore on 20 May 1924, the crowd in the streets nearby was so large that traffic was brought to a standstill, several women fell and two were so badly hurt they were taken to hospital.[73] At the time Moncrieff was appearing in The Merry Widow and returned to the stage on the night of her wedding.[74][75] St James' was represented in the opening ceremonies of the Sydney Harbour Bridge by a float in the form of the church building.[76] The church was "packed to the doors" when the seventh rector, W.F. Wentworth-Sheilds, officiated at the "impressive funeral" of Walter Liberty Vernon in 1914.[77] In 1950, four thousand people were reported to have lined the streets after the State funeral at St. James' of the first Minister for Sweden in Australia, Constans Lundquist, who died suddenly at the Swedish Legation in Sydney.[78][79][80][81] Controversial former Governor-General, Sir John Kerr had a private funeral and memorial service in St James' in 1991 rather than a State funeral because of his fall from favour as the result of his decision to sack the Whitlam government in 1975.[82][83] Delivering the sermon at St James' during an ecumenical event on 14 October 1993, Archbishop Desmond Tutu thanked Australians for supporting the struggle against apartheid.[84]


During the 20th century both choral and organ musical components developed to a high standard and were integral to the liturgy at St James'.[85] In addition, music was offered to the wider community in the form of recitals, often in ways that elucidate the liturgy and take advantage of church acoustics and sacred settings. Weekday recitals, such as the organ recitals given in 1936 of music by Bach,[86] continued in addition to the music played on Sundays.



21st century



A recent photo. The church is seen framed by the gateposts of the nearby Barracks. Its steeple is seen against a backdrop of multi-storey buildings.

St James' Church in 2006


In the 21st century, St James' continues its work in the city centre via its ministry and engagement in the issues of the day. In the 19th century, there were controversies about tractarianism; in the 20th, there was the impact of the two world wars; in the 21st century, the church has confronted the difficult and topical issues of violence, euthanasia,[87] refugees,[88][89] marriage and sexuality.[90] The church's relationship with government and the legal community began when the colony was under military government and the Church of England was the established church. Due to the church's history and its proximity to the convict barracks (later an immigration centre), the law courts (both the old and the new ones) as well as the New South Wales parliament, the relationship continues. It is evident in special services attended by the governor as well as the annual service to mark the opening of the law term.[91]


St James' commitment to social justice and education began in the 19th century with efforts to serve both convicts and settlers. It continued in the 20th with support for people affected by war, for example, when the church became "a busy centre of war-time life".[92] Since early in the 20th century, service to the community has included visits to those imprisoned or ill as well as practical help to the city's homeless[93][94][95] and an annual schedule of educational seminars at the St James' Institute.[96]


On 6 February 2012, the rector Andrew Sempell officiated at a thanksgiving for Queen Elizabeth II to mark the sixtieth anniversary of her accession to the throne in a service attended by the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell and the Governor of New South Wales, Marie Bashir and on 9 September 2015, when Queen Elizabeth II became the longest-serving British monarch and Queen of Australia, there was a special Choral Evensong service to give thanks.[97][98] At the Jubilee service, the Chief Justice of New South Wales, Tom Bathurst, read the first lesson and the service concluded with the Australian National Anthem and an organ postlude of Edward Elgar's Pomp and Circumstance March No. 4.[97] On 23 March 2012, a memorial service for Margaret Whitlam, wife of former Prime Minister of Australia, Gough Whitlam, was attended by Prime Minister Julia Gillard, and several former prime ministers.[99]




Description



Columns supporting an entablature and pediment extending from the church to create a covered entrance

North portico


St James' Church is located at the east end and on the south side of King Street, Sydney and was constructed between 1819-1824. Set on an impressive sandstone base, the building is of face brick with the walls articulated by brick piers. The elongated windows have semi-circular heads with radiating rubbed bricks and protective fish-scale pattern, green glazing has been installed in the windows on the north side. On the east gable is a sandstone commemorative plaque with the inscription 'St James's Church Erected 1820 Lachlan Macquarie Esq. Governor'. The hipped roof is of slate with four gable vents on the north and south sides. The detailing of the lower, eastern extension (built in 1832-1833) is closely comparable with the original but with sandstone piers and pediment and with a domed copper roof. The two small porticos on the north and south sides, with sandstone columns and pediments, complement the original and much larger central porticos. A third small portico, added in 1894-1895, on the north side of the tower is of comparable design. The south portico was filled in before the building was completed and is now enclosed with glass. All of the entrances have slate steps with sandstone risers and are tiled with black and white marble. The square brick tower at the west end has a timber framed, candle snuffer spire, clad in sheet copper with chevron pattern, surmounted by a copper orb and cross. There is a peal of eight bells in the tower.[1]


The interior of the church, which is essentially as rebuilt in 1900-1902, faces east and has a raised chancel and sanctuary (the latter set within an apse with gold mosaic semi-dome) with marble and mosaic flooring, flanked by the organ and choir. The chancel is separated from the main body of the church by a wrought iron and brass screen with marble base on which stand the cedar pulpit and brass lectern. The western gallery, marble memorials and cedar panelling are parts of the 19th century interior retained in the later work. The pews are open cedar benches and the flooring is of polished timber blocks with white marble aisles with a black key border. The stained glass windows are mainly English and of 20th century date with some 1890s coloured and painted glass, including internal doors and fanlights. The pressed metal ceiling (installed in 1894-1895) has been adapted to improve ventilation and to accommodate modern pendant lights. The font is on a raised marble platform in the baptistery at the base of the tower. The emblems of St James the Great are incorporated in various decorative elements of the interior including stained and painted glass, pew ends and mosaic flooring. The walls of the Chapel of the Holy Spirit (the southern portico), installed in 1988, are a major contemporary glasswork which the chapel's furniture and fittings were specially designed to complement.[1]


The original building has an extensive undercroft (called the crypt) with sandstone walls and a central corridor with brick groined ceiling and twelve brick barrel vaults. The flooring is concrete with slate tiles. The basement beneath the eastern extension is of similar construction but has a timber ceiling as does the entrance at the base of the tower. The Children's Chapel and columbarium are located in two of the bays of the crypt. The church is enclosed with a decorative wrought iron fence set on a sandstone base.[100][1]


St James' Church is an integral part of the group of surviving Macquarie period buildings which also includes the former Hyde Park Barracks, [Old] Supreme Court, General Hospital [the Mint and Parliament House] and Government House offices and stables [Conservatorium of Music]. The church is the only building of this group to retain its original function.[1]



Architecture


One of Greenway's finest works, St James' is listed on the (now defunct) Register of the National Estate.[101][102][103][104] It has been called an "architectural gem"[105] and was featured by Dan Cruickshank in the BBC television series Around the World in 80 Treasures.[106] From 1966 to 1993 the spire of St James' appeared on the Australian Australian ten-dollar note among other Greenway buildings.[107][108] In 1973, the church appeared on a 50 cent postage stamp, one of four in a series illustrating Australian architecture issued to commemorate the opening of the Sydney Opera House.[109] The Old Supreme Court building, also designed by Greenway with alternations by others, located next to the church is of the same date.[110] Across the square is Greenway's "masterpiece", the UNESCO World Heritage listed-Hyde Park Barracks, designed to align with the church.[111] Beside the barracks stands Sydney's oldest public building, part of the General Hospital built in 1811 and now known as the Mint Building. Separated from the Mint by the present-day Sydney Hospital is Parliament House, Sydney, of which the central section is a further part of the early hospital, and is now home to the New South Wales State Parliament.[112]


The church was constructed between 1820 and 1824 with later additions made in 1834 by John Verge who designed the vestries at the eastern end.[113] Apart from these vestries, which retain the established style and proportions, the church externally remains "fine Georgian"[114] much as Greenway conceived it.[51][115] Relying on the "virtues of simplicity and proportion to achieve his end",[116] Greenway maintained the classical tradition, unaffected by the Revivalist styles that were being promoted in London at the time he arrived in the colony.[117] He planned the church to align with his earlier Hyde Park Barracks, constructed in 1817–19. The two buildings have similar proportions, pilasters and gables and together constitute an important example of town-planning.[102] Before the advent of high-rise buildings, the 46-metre (150 ft) spire used to "serve as a guide for mariners coming up Port Jackson".[4]


St James' originally took the form of a simple rectangular block, without transepts or chancel, with a tower at the western end and a classical portico of the Doric order on either side. To this has been added Verge's vestry framed by two small porticos, and a similar portico as an entrance to the tower. The church is built of local brick, its walls divided by brick pilasters into a series of bays. The walls are pierced by large windows with round arched heads in a colour that separates and defines them against the walls. The roof carries over the end walls with the gable forming triangular pediments of classical proportions carrying a cornice across the eaves line. Thus the architectural treatment on the side walls is continued around the end walls.[113]



A symmetrical photo looking down the nave towards the apse and chancel showing the corners of the underside of the western gallery at its edges and the pews with some people sitting in them

The interior looking towards the chancel



Interior


The original interior differed greatly in layout from that of the present. There was no structural chancel, the focus of the church being a large pulpit. During the mid 19th century galleries overlooked the pulpit from three sides.[46] Of the original galleries, only the western one of Australian Red Cedar remains in place. The coffered ceiling (an addition from 1882 replacing the original lath and plaster ceiling), the low-backed pews (from shortly after) and the predominantly classical memorials all contribute to the present interior retaining the character of a Georgian church.[1]


At the eastern end, the communion table is set into a small apse with its semi-dome adorned with gold mosaic tiles that were added in 1960.[118] The altar is a commemorative gift from the Lloyd family, whose son was the first server appointed at St James'.[118] It generally has an altar frontal in the colour of the liturgical season or festival. With no structural choir area, the chancel is built out and into the body of the church as a platform enclosed within gated wrought iron and brass railings and approached by steps. The mosaic floor of the chancel is ornately with designs showing the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit (Wisdom, Understanding, Counsel, Ghostly Strength, Knowledge, Godliness and Holy Fear) along with symbols of St James the Great (the staff, scrip, palm, scallop shell and hat of the pilgrim).[118] The chancel is framed on either side by the organ pipes.[119]


There are five large stained glass windows on the northern and southern walls and additional windows in the stairwell to the belltower and on the western wall. Most of them are designed by Percy Bacon Brothers and the majority were donated as memorials by parishioners in the period from 1900 to 1910. The stained glass fanlight depicting James and John, the sons of Zebedee, was designed by Australian artist Norman Carter in 1930.[120][121] The window behind the baptismal font, depicting Christ with the Children, was repaired and rededicated in 2004 by the fifteenth rector in the presence of the then Primate, Peter Carnley.[122]



Chapel of the Holy Spirit



Image of the panels that make up the artist's abstract interpretation of his subject. Swirls of cool colours in the upper section and swirls of warm colours in the lower with a central circular focus in the middle

Stained glass in the Chapel of the Holy Spirit


Previously enclosed and used as a vestry and then an organ chamber, the south porch became a chapel in 1903. In 1988, the side chapel was remodelled and dedicated as the Chapel of the Holy Spirit.[123] The parish and the Bicentennial Council of New South Wales funded the redesign which saw the removal of the infilling from between the columns of the portico and its replacement with stained glass. The award-winning "Creation Window", designed by Australian artist David Wright,[124][125] spreads across the three walls and represents the interaction of earth, air, fire and water, symbolic of the action of the Spirit in creation, in life and in rebirth in Christ.[126] The new furniture for the chapel was designed by Leon Sadubin.[127]



Crypt and Children's Chapel



Beneath the church is a large undercroft, built of brick and groin vaulted. It has been used for many purposes: as a residence by the widow of Richard Hill and later by a verger; by Canon Allwood as a part-time bedroom; for the parish's schools; and as a shelter by Australian, American and British armed forces during the two world wars.[4] Rector Francis Wentworth-Sheilds gave the city parish "a big role as a drop-in centre for servicemen" during the First World War.[128] During the Second World War bed and bedding were provided to over 30,000 Allied servicemen.[129]


The western bay on the south side of the crypt is the Chapel of St Mary and the Angels, better known simply as the "Children's Chapel". It was opened in 1929 as a chapel for younger children. A specially adapted form of Eucharist is celebrated there on the first Sunday of the month. All four walls of the chapel and its ceiling are decorated with murals designed by the writer and artist Ethel Anderson and executed by the Turramurra Wall Painters Union, a group of Modernist painters she founded in 1927.[130] The murals underwent extensive conservation in 1992–1993.[131]


The crypt was restored by Geoffrey Danks in 1977–78.[132] In the 21st century, the bays on either side of the crypt's central corridor are used for a variety of purposes. At the eastern end they house a commercial kitchen. Some bays are used as offices; one (The Chapel of All Souls) contains a columbarium; another houses a lending library for parishioners.[57]





St James is shown in layered robes holding a staff across his body and a Bible in his left hand. On his right shoulder is the scallop shell.


St James, a memorial to Elsey Fairfax-Ross (1905)



Mary is shown standing holding the baby Jesus high in her arms

Detail of the Sistine Madonna window, based on Raphael's painting[133]





Memorials, monuments, records


St James' provides a record of important elements of Sydney's history in both physical and documentary form.[134] There are over 300 memorials commemorating important members of 19th century colonial society, people who served the colony generally and parishioners from the 20th century. In addition, many of the stained glass windows and items of furniture have been donated as memorials. For example, the large stained glass window of Saint George on the northern wall is a memorial to Keith Kinnaird Mackellar, who died in the Second Boer War aged 20.[135] He was the brother of poet Dorothea Mackellar. These memorials are the reason the church was sometimes called "The Westminster Abbey of the South".[15] As early as 1876, the wall tablets were described as "full of sad memories to the old inhabitants, interesting reminiscences to those who have studied Australian history".[136]


The first monument erected in the church was the memorial to Commodore Sir James Brisbane, who died in Sydney on his way to serve in South America in command of HMS Warspite. It was sculpted by Sir Francis Chantrey, sent to Sydney by Lady Brisbane and installed in the church in 1830. The Brisbane memorial began the tradition of memorial tablets to "prominent people".[137] The memorial to Robert Wardell in 1834 rendered "bushranger" into Latin as "a latrone vagante occiso".[4] Four other monuments were installed between 1830 and 1839. The only memorial on which an indigenous Australian appears is that of Edmund Kennedy[138] (said to have been "a communicant at St James’")[139] on whose tablet Jackey Jackey is remembered.[20][139] There are memorials to the Macleay family of naturalists, Alexander and William Sharp Macleay.





Photograph of a marble memorial on a wall with carved fabric draped over it and text on a panel

Memorial to Alexander Macleay



Photograph of a marble memorial carved with the image of James Brisbane in profile, carved cloth over the top and text on a panel beneath

Memorial to Sir James Brisbane




The largest single memorial of the 20th century is the war memorial, to the design of Hardy Wilson, dedicated on 14 June 1922. It commemorates more than 50 men associated with St James' who were killed in the First World War, throughout which the roll of honour was regularly read during the Eucharist.[140] In 2014, St James' was part of a series of commemorations of the bicentenary of the death of the colony's first Governor, Arthur Phillip. On 31 August, a memorial plaque, similar in form to one placed in the nave of Westminster Abbey on 9 July,[141][142] was unveiled by the 37th Governor, Marie Bashir.[143]


The church has all its baptismal and marriage registers dating from 1824 to the present day. These were originally handwritten; printed forms came into existence "by government order" in 1826.[144] Since it was not compulsory to register births, deaths and marriages until after 1855,[145] the records held by St James' are particularly valuable to historians and genealogists and copies are held in the National Library of Australia.[146]



Renovation, restoration, conservation





An old photo showing the church with a muddy road in the foreground and scaffolding around the spire.

St James' with the spire under restoration in 1894



A detail of the tower and spire showing that it is octagonal and shaped rather like a witch's hat. In this view the copper has been renewed and appears brown and lustrous. On top are a cross and ball with green patina. The tower is brick, has flat corner pilasters and large louvred windows.

Spire after a major restoration in 2010




Since its erection, the building has undergone significant repair, renovation and conservation, including work on the building fabric, the stained glass windows, the mosaic floors in the chancel and sanctuary and conservation of the Children's Chapel. Major work was done on the interior and the spire in the 1890s[4] and on the crypt in the 1970s.[132]


The spire was extensively restored from 2008 to 2010, including the tower masonry, the interior framing, the copper covering and the orb and cross.[147] The spire was rededicated on 20 October 2010.[148] The restorations were awarded the National Trust of Australia Built Heritage Award on 4 April 2011[149] and the AIA Greenway Award for Heritage.[150][151] The jury said that the restoration work showed "consummate care by the architect, the engineer and the builder in conserving the original structure and fabric of the building, improving its strength, performance and waterproofing".[152]


Restoration continued with work on the church's slate roof and sandstone perimeter fence. The Spanish slates, installed in the 1970s, proved not to be durable in Sydney's climate due to their high iron content and their poor fixing had resulted in further damage. The solution to the deterioration was to replace the slates using Welsh slates. The roof project was completed after a fund-raising effort supported by the National Trust of Australia. In 2013, the interior was repainted after preparation that involved "colour testing and selection, memorial protection and ceiling acoustic repairs".[153] As a heritage-listed building, the church has a program of continual conservation. Its custodians remain "ever mindful" of their responsibility to the wider public as well as to the congregation.[105]



Condition


As at 8 April 1995, the Spanish slate roof (1970s) needed replacement with Welsh slate.[1] Substantial modifications and additions have been made to St James' Church since its completion in 1824 but without significant loss of character of the exterior as a Georgian town church. The interior of the church was totally remodelled in 1900-1902 and all earlier fabric removed with the exception of the 19th century memorials, some timber panelling and the basic retention of the western gallery. The form and contents of the interior of the church are essentially as designed and built at this period with the exception of the Chapel of the Holy Spirit (south portico) which was rebuilt in 1988.[1][100]



Worship and ministry



Liturgy





The brass lectern is in the traditional form of an eagle and the organ pipes are shown behind it.

The eagle lectern (one of two memorials to Canon Allwood) and the organ



The image on the glass is of an angel in full frontal with wings outstretched behind and above holding a banner that reads "Praise Ye the Lord"

The oldest stained glass in the church (in the entrance door)




St James' offers three Eucharists on Sundays: a Said Eucharist, a Sung Eucharist and a Choral Eucharist. There is a regular Choral Evensong on Wednesdays and one Sunday each month. The Eucharist and other services are also celebrated during the week[1] and the robed choir contributes to its "cathedral style worship".[154] Festival services are popular and known for their standard of liturgy and music, particularly those services which celebrate high points of the church year such as Holy Week and Easter, the Advent carols, the Nine Lessons and Carols, the Christmas Eve Midnight Mass and the patronal festival of St James (son of Zebedee, also known as James the Great) in July. A series of orchestral Masses is held in January.[155]


St James' continues to maintain a formal and sacramental liturgy and has weathered the storm of criticism from a diocese with increasingly "Low church" practices.[48] It is one of the few Sydney Anglican churches that has upheld the norms of mainstream Anglican tradition, including the use of the stole by clergy during services, especially during sacraments such as baptisms and marriages; the Book of Common Prayer and sacred church music, including the singing of hymns from a hymnal.[156]



Theology


The Constitution of the Anglican Church of Australia "commit[s] Anglicans to mainstream Christian orthodoxy", but its ruling principles direct it to that particular tradition within as "represented by the Church of England".[157] The Australian church had to work out the meaning of its common heritage "in the context of the different cultures of the separate colonies"[158] but "the way in which that faith pedigree was appealed to and interpreted ... has highlighted differences."[157] Peter Carnley, former primate of the Anglican Church of Australia, has described Anglicanism's "unique or essential identity" as having "not so much a body of theological teaching, as a style of theological reflection"[159] that goes back to the Elizabethan theologian Richard Hooker.[160] St James' conforms to this Anglican tradition, part of which is a general dislike of what used to be referred to as 'Enthusiasm': that is, a dislike of "pious individualism and emotional exuberance".[161] St James' theological position in the liturgy is evidently consistent with Carnley's explanation that incarnational reality "might be experienced with the aid of aesthetic, symbolic or sacramental aids to worship."[162] Such an adherence to the importance of the sacred and the sublime in worship remains in sharp contradistinction to practice in the surrounding mostly evangelical diocese, which typically eschews beauty and holds to an "ultra-low ecclesiastical aesthetic" that is combined with "ultra-conservative social values".[163][164] Teaching at St James' takes account of both the Biblical and contemporary historical context.[165] In the Sydney diocese, St James's differing view has therefore been controversial since the 19th century as the various rectors led the church towards and away from Anglo-Catholicism.[166] Micklem, for example, renewed Anglo-Catholic churchmanship and Davidson "returned it firmly to a moderate position".[167]


St James' aims to be "an open and inclusive Christian community" that "welcomes all, regardless of age, race, sexual orientation or religion".[168] During the long debate in the diocese about the acceptability of women as priests and also as preachers, for example, women clergy were welcome. One of the first women ordained as a priest in the Anglican Church in Australia, the Revd Susanna Pain, served as a deacon at St James'[169] and women in leadership positions in the Anglican Church such as Bishops Kay Goldsworthy and Genieve Blackwell, have been invited to preach.[164][170] The current rector contributes to the public debate about the role and responsibilities of the church in a secularised world[171] and in response to statements about same-sex marriage from the Archbishop of Sydney, published a dissenting view.[90][172]



Congregation


In the beginning, convicts, soldiers, governors and civil authorities attended the church; in the 21st century, regular patronage by, and programs for, governors, politicians, the legal community and the homeless create a similarly diverse mix. In 1900, such a congregation was described by the sixth rector as representing "many types, many classes. Here we find rich and poor, old and new, the Governor and the Domain loafer, the passing visitor, and the grandchildren of those whose memorial tablets testify to a long connection with the church." William Carr Smith's observation was that "this makes the congregation a difficult one to handle."[20]


Nevertheless, the congregation provides volunteer labour and donates funds for many of church's activities, including laundry work, library administration, flower arrangements, bell ringing, singing in the parish choir and hospitality for the Sister Freda mission. Furnishings for the chapel in the Sydney Hospital were provided by the parishioners during Carr Smith's time, when he became chaplain to the hospital.[173]



Community service





View of the crypt from west to east showing the low curved ceiling and the bays created by the junctions of the arches

Crypt



View of the Children's Chapel from its doorway with its altar in the centre and the murals on gold walls

Children's Chapel




St James' work for the poor, as well as for the city's legal and medical professions, has been continuous from the 19th century. Since early times work "for the poor of the parish"; the promotion of "overseas and inland missions"; liaison with "the city professions in law and medicine" and running "devotional and discussion groups" has been incorporated into the church's mission.[174] In the 20th century, the ninth and tenth rectors emphasised "the church's responsibility to society" and encouraged St James' role in the city.[175] In the 21st century, these activities have been supplemented by chaplaincy and professional counselling services directed at dealing with the problems associated with the stresses of city life.[176]


The "most direct part of St James' social welfare work" is the Sister Freda Mission, which began in 1899.[173] Among other things, this ministry provides weekly lunches to the needy and a full dinner at Christmas. Sister Freda (Emily Rich) was a member of the Community of the Sisters of the Church, a religious order which started the Collegiate School in Paddington in 1895. Sister Freda and other members of the order took over the organisation of its mission to the homeless in 1899.[177] On Christmas Day in 1901 "about 60 men were entertained at dinner at St James' parish hall, and later in the afternoon 250 unemployed men were treated to tea in the same building by the sisters of the church."[94] After her death in 1936, Sister Freda's name was given to the mission and St James' took over responsibility for its organisation.[173] Since 1954, this service has operated out of the church crypt, relying on donations, including food sourced by OzHarvest, and the efforts of volunteer parishioners.[95]



Watercolour of St James' next to the Supreme court. The view is looking north along an unpaved road (now Elizabeth Street) on which there are people walking, riding horses and driving carriages. An empty space (now Hyde Park) appears on the right hand side.

Old Supreme Court and St James' Church, showing their proximity. John Rae (1842)


The church's ministry to Sydney's legal fraternity is facilitated by its proximity to buildings used by the profession, including the Law Courts, which is the main building of the Supreme Court of New South Wales and houses the Sydney registry of the High Court of Australia; the College of Law and the St James Campus of the University of Sydney, which is the former home of Sydney Law School, still mainly used for legal education by the university.[178]Phillip Street, which runs north from the church, is home to a large number of barristers' chambers as well as the Law Society of New South Wales.[179]


Due to this proximity, the church and legal profession have a longstanding relationship, anchored by an annual service to mark the beginning of the legal year which is attended by judges, solicitors and members of the Bar from the Supreme Court of New South Wales in ceremonial attire.[180][181][129] In the 19th century, the relationship was reported in the context of delays to the law and concerns about the need for a suitable set of new courts.[67] In the 20th, it was noted that the "relationship of law and religion" was one of "two co-operating forces, approaching, from different sides, a problem which was common to them both of securing right conduct";[182] and in the 21st century, the Governor still attends special services. Since 1950, there has also been an annual service for the members of the Order of St Michael and St George.[129]



Education





Old photo of the front of the former Hall showing its complex details. It was built of brick with a rusticated basement, balconies with curved wrought iron balustrades, a large entrance stairway under a prominent pediment and Art Nouveau panels.

St James' Parish Hall (designed by Burcham Clamp, dedicated 1903, demolished 1961, replaced 1963)



A weathered stone triangular building fragment with a worn carved inscription.

Fragment from St James' School.
The inscription reads:
Saint James's Grammar School Erected A:D: MDCCCXL [1840] William Grant Broughton D.D. Bishop of Australia




In the 19th century, religious denominations made a major contribution to education at all levels before this was taken over by the state. From its beginnings, St James' was involved in education for both children and adults. Richard Hill, the first incumbent, "began Australia's first kindergarten and William Cape managed a school based on new educational principles".[183][184] Hill worked with the Benevolent Society, the Bible Society, Aboriginals, the Hospital, "various convict establishments and a range of schools," including Industrial Schools.[177] By 1823 Greenway's school building had been erected in Elizabeth Street and the principal St James' School was situated there until 1882, becoming the Anglican "normal" school with more than 600 students and a range of experienced teachers.[31] In secondary education, a Sydney branch of the King's School operated briefly in the Greenway building and Bishop Broughton operated the St James' Grammar School in a building erected in Phillip Street. The Grammar School, presided over by the Revd C. Kemp was described as "of inestimable value to the then youth of the colony".[20] Bishop Broughton also set up St James' College to provide tertiary education for secular students as well as to prepare students for ordination. The St James' School closed in 1882 and the government resumed the Greenway building.[31] Tuition for the students of St Paul's College, University of Sydney was originally provided in the vestry of St James'.[31]


In the 20th century, St James' developed its education program for children and adults and continued them in the 21st century.[185] A Sunday school for children is held in the crypt. Educational activities for adults are offered through the St James' Institute which provides a range of programs open to all to explore the Christian faith and engage in debate about contemporary issues from a theological perspective.[186] For example, in 2012, the Institute hosted a seminar on "Women in the Australian Church: Untold Stories" in conjunction with the International Women's Network and MOWatch.[187][188] In 2013, there was a meeting of "deans and ministers from Anglican churches that serve the business districts in major cities around world" to discuss the churches' response to the Global Financial Crisis.[189]



Past and present clergy


The Reverend Samuel Marsden delivered the first sermon on 6 July 1824.[190] In 1836 the first (and only) Bishop of Australia, William Grant Broughton, was installed at St James' as there was still no cathedral. Broughton regularly officiated at St James'[12] as at the first ordination of an Anglican priest in Australia (the Revd T. Sharpe) on 17 December 1836.[191]




The 16th rector in King Street outside the church (2014)


The rector of St James' is assisted by associate rectors (it was not until the 1890s that the title "rector" was used).[42][43] The current (sixteenth) rector is the Reverend Andrew Sempell and the associate rector is the Reverend John Stewart.[192][193]



  • 1824–1836 Richard Hill

  • 1836–1838 Robert Cartwright

  • 1838–1840 George Napoleon Woodd

  • 1840–1884 Robert Allwood

  • 1885–1895 Henry Latimer Jackson

  • 1896–1910 William Carr Smith

  • 1910–1916 W.F. Wentworth-Sheilds[194]

  • 1917–1937 Philip Arthur Micklem

  • 1938–1955 Edwin John Davidson

  • 1956–1962 William John Edwards

  • 1962–1975 Frank Leslie Cuttriss

  • 1976–1983 Howard Charles Hollis

  • 1984–1997 Peter John Hughes

  • 1997–2001 Richard Hurford

  • 2001–2009 Peter Walter Kurti

  • 2010–present Andrew John Sempell



Music


St James' has had a strong musical and choral tradition "integral" to its liturgies since the 1820s and is known both for the high standard of the sacred music as well as for its regular public recitals and concerts.[195][196] St James' has a choir, a fine three-manual pipe organ and a peal of bells hung for change ringing.[155]Isaac Nathan, who "constituted himself musical laureate to the colony"[197] and is considered "Australia's first composer", created a musical society at St James' in the 1840s.[198]



Organ


The original organ, installed in the west gallery, was built by John Gray of London and was played for the first time on 7 October 1827. It received the following praise in the colonial newspaper The Australian.





alt=A black and white photo of a man playing the organ showing the keyboard and the pedals

Organists Mr Field (1931)



Colour photograph of smiling organist in red and white vestments playing the St James' organ. The sheet music, keyboard and some of the organ stops are visible.

and Alistair Nelson (2014)




"St. James's new organ pealed its notes of praise for the first time at noon service on Sunday, to an overflowing congregation, more numerous perhaps than any congregation St. James's had ever before witnessed. The organ was not in perfect harmony, owing, in a great measure, to its yet incomplete state. Its intonations, however, in many instances, was full, rich, and harmonious, and those of the congregation were not a few who felt its tones swell on the ear like the welcome voice of a long parted friend!"[199]


The organ was modernised and enlarged in the 1870s by William Davidson. After a number of moves around the galleries, it was placed in what had been intended as the south porch. At the time the church's interior was reconstructed at the turn of the 20th century, it was positioned on either side of the chancel platform at the eastern end where it remains.[119] Organ specialists Hill, Norman & Beard (Aust) Pty Ltd gave the organ a major refurbishment and reconstruction between 1970 and 1971 at a cost of $35,000.[200]



Printed cover page of musical score, using different fonts and "Respectfully dedicated to the Revd. R. Allwood, B.A., incumbent of St. James' and Canon of the cathedral church of St. Andrew", for use in a service at St Andrew's


Nunc dimittis by organist and choir master, James Furley



Choir


St James' has had a choir since early colonial times. James Pearson accepted the office of choir leader in 1827 and arranged some of the music that was sung.[201][202][203] He also offered to teach "a few steady persons, of either sex," if they would volunteer to join the choir.[204] In those early days, the choir was a "mixed one, of male and female voices, some of them professional", but by the end of the 19th century, the choristers were all males.[4] Until Anthony Jennings was appointed Director of Music in 1995, the choirmaster was also the organist.[205][206] Some choirmasters, such as James Furley, also composed original works for the choir.[207]Arthur J. Mason served 1898–1907 (and was City Organist 1901–1907),[208] was succeeded by George Faunce Allman in the role.[209]


The current choir is composed of about a dozen semi-professional adults. They sing on Sundays at the 11.00 am Choral Eucharist, Wednesdays at the 6:15 pm Choral Evensong, monthly at the 3.00 pm Choral Evensong held on the last Sunday of the month, as well as at a number of midweek feast days held during the year.[210] In January, during the summer holiday period, St James' presents three full orchestral Masses during which liturgical music by composers such as Mozart, Haydn and Schubert is used for its original purpose and incorporated into the service. On these occasions, the choir is joined by a small orchestra.[211]



A photo of a red-robed choir in the chancel with the altar behind them. Candles and a brass cross are on the altar and the choirmaster is facing the singers with his back to the camera

The choir performing during a subscription series (2013)


On occasion, the St James' choir has combined with other choirs,[212] such as when it joined the Sydney Philharmonia Motet Choir[213] or the choir of St Mary's Cathedral to present Monteverdi's Vespers in 2013.[214] It has recorded CDs[215] and premiered new works by composers such as Ann Carr-Boyd and Gordon Kerry,[216] as well as new arrangements of traditional works.[213] They have also performed with international touring groups such as with the Tallis Scholars' Summer School; broadcast on ABC Radio, both in their own right as well as with leading ensembles such as Australian Baroque Brass.[210]


Musical critique of the choir has appeared in the press from the beginning and continues to the present day. In 1827, one singer was criticised for her diction: "If her pronunciation were as pleasing as her notes, she would be entitled to unqualified praise" wrote a critic in 1827.[217] In 1845, St James' was being described as the "exception" to the prevailing low standard of church music in both England and New South Wales.[218] In 2013, singers from the combined choirs of St James' and St Mary's Cathedral were appraised as creating "a clear, well-defined edge that swirled gloriously".[214]




Music leaders


Organists and Choirmasters[206][209]

  • 1827–1831 James Pearson

  • 1831–1835 William Merritt

  • 1836–1844 James and William Johnson

  • 1844–1860 James Johnson

  • 1860–1874 James Furley

  • 1874–? Schofield

  • 1876–1897 Hector Maclean

  • 1897–1907 Arthur Mason

  • 1907–1961 George Faunce Allman

  • 1961–1965 Michael Dyer

  • 1966–1994 Walter Sutcliffe



Directors of Music[206]
  • 1995 Anthony Jennings

  • 1995–1997 David Barmby

  • 1997–2007 David Drury

Head of Music
  • 2008–present Warren Trevelyan-Jones[219][220][221]


Bells



Photo of a large metal bell and its circular wooden support in a half unpacked crate

The Mears Bell after repairs (2011)




File:Bellringers (St James', Sydney) video.ogvPlay media

St James' bellringers practising, being conducted by Alan Coates (2014)


The church's eight bells are rung by the Guild of St James' Bellringers which is affiliated with The Australian and New Zealand Association of Bellringers.[222] The tenor bell, weighing 10 cwt, was cast in 1795 by John Rudhall and hung previously in St Paul's Church, Bristol, England. Bells 1 – 7 were cast in 2002 by John Taylor Bellfounders in Loughborough, England.[223] The bells were dedicated on 27 July 2003 and are named after people associated with St James' Church, as follows:[224][225]




  • Treble – Francis Greenway sounds the note of G, named for the architect

  • 2 – Mary Reibey sounds the note of F#, named for an early pioneer

  • 3 – Sister Freda sounds the note of E, named for a Sister of the Church with an important ministry in the City of Sydney

  • 4 – King George IV sounds the note of D, named for the king at the time of the church's foundation

  • 5 – Reverend Richard Hill sounds the note C, named for the first rector of St James'

  • 6 – Lachlan Macquarie sounds the note B, named for the governor at the time of the church's foundation

  • 7 – Eora sounds the note A, named for the traditional owners of the land


  • Tenor – St James sounds the note G, named for the patron saint


There is also the service bell of 4¼ cwt, known as the Mears bell, cast by Thomas Mears II of Whitechapel Bell Foundry in 1820.[223] It was repaired there in 2011.[226]



Heritage listing


As at 7 November 1997, St James' Church is the oldest church building in the City of Sydney and has been in continuous use from its consecration on 11 February 1824 to the present. It is a prime example of the architectural work of the Macquarie period, designed by Francis Greenway and built by convict labour. Subsequent changes to the building and its contents exemplify the development of ecclesiastical thought and practice in the Australian context. The church has always formed a significant element within the city of Sydney, as a spiritual and intellectual stimulus and as a centre of musical excellence and community activity. While this contribution has been realised in various ways over its long history, the reality of its work and its essential characteristics have been maintained. The church has long been regarded as a prime element of Sydney's built environment and its conservation is an example of a long history of heritage concern in the community.[1]


The church contains a rare collection of 19th century marble memorials, its painted Children's Chapel is unique in Australia and it includes amongst its collections and contents rare items of movable heritage.[1]


St James' Church is an integral part of the most extensive surviving group of Macquarie period buildings in Australia, Macquarie's construction of official Sydney in the eastern part of the city, which includes the former Hyde Park Barracks, Supreme Court, General Hospital and Government House stables. The church is the only building of this group that retains its original function.[227][1]


St James' Church, Sydney was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 3 September 2004 having satisfied the following criteria.[1]


The place is important in demonstrating the course, or pattern, of cultural or natural history in New South Wales.


St James' Church is important in the course of the cultural history of NSW as:
The second Anglican church in Sydney and now the oldest church building in the City of Sydney in continuous use for its original purpose since its consecration in February 1824. A part of the group of official buildings constructed for Governor Macquarie on the east side of Sydney which were an important element of Macquarie's town plan and improvements in Sydney. A building whose location was altered by the intervention of the British government's Commissioner of Enquiry, J T Bigge and whose completion was adversely affected by the administrative consequences of the recommendations of the Bigge Commission. An institution reflecting the association of government and religion in the colonial period and the role of the colonial chaplains in that establishment. The church in which the first Bishop of Australia, W G Broughton was installed in 1836 and the first church in which the Bishop regularly officiated. The church in which the first ordinations of Anglican clergy were held in Australia and classes held for the first theological college. For its role in education including the first attempt at kindergarten teaching in New South Wales. For the part played by the renovation of the building in 1900-1902 in a shift in attitude towards the retention of historic buildings and an appreciation of the church's architecture, despite the denigration in the later 19th century of the style of the building and its associations. For the important part played by the building in discussions of heritage, town planning and conservation generally.[100][1]


The place has a strong or special association with a person, or group of persons, of importance of cultural or natural history of New South Wales's history.


St James' Church has strong associations with the life and work of:
Architects, Francis Greenway, John Verge, Varney Parkes and John Hingeston Buckeridge. Artists Ethel Anderson and the Turramurra Painters, Norman Carter, David Wright and Leon Sadubin, Bishop William Grant Broughton and a long line of significant clergy who have contributed to the life of the church and of the city Governor Lachlan Macquarie and Commissioner John Thomas Bigge. A continuing sequence of notable choirmasters, organists and organ builders who have contributed to the musical life of the church, city and state. The individuals and families commemorated in its memorials representative of 19th century colonial society and of its 20th century parishioners. The individuals and organisations commemorated in its war memorials, dating from the Maori wars to the present time.[100][1]


The place is important in demonstrating aesthetic characteristics and/or a high degree of creative or technical achievement in New South Wales.


St James' Church demonstrates aesthetic characteristics and a high degree of technical achievement:
For the quality of its original workmanship, its brickwork being "far superior to any in Colony" on its completion in 1824. As a fine example of Francis Greenway's civic architecture. As the tallest building in Sydney from 1824 until the construction of the Town Hall tower in the late 1860s-early 1870s, and an important landmark in the early colony. For the craftsmanship of its 19th century stone and marble memorials, many of which are fine examples of local memorial work. For the high degree of craftsmanship exhibited in the remodelling of the interior of the church and in the manufacture of its new furnishings and fittings in the early 20th century. For the aesthetic quality of the murals in the Children's Chapel by the Turramurra painters under the direction of Ethel Anderson and for the high level of technical expertise and conservation skill exhibited in the restoration of the murals. For the quality and design of the glasswork in the Chapel of Holy Spirit and its furnishings. For the high degree of regard and care shown, from 1890s onwards, for the continuous tradition of religious ministration of the sacraments and its expression in the preservation of parts of the original fabric relating to these traditions in new construction. For the role of the church building in the development of restoration techniques and philosophies in the early years of the heritage conservation movement in Australia.[100][1]


The place has a strong or special association with a particular community or cultural group in New South Wales for social, cultural or spiritual reasons.


St James' Church has strong associations with particular groups:
With the Anglican church, as a strong and continuous link in the history of the Anglican church in Australia. As a leader in the development of the Anglo-Catholic tradition in the Anglican church in Australia. With considerable numbers of important Sydney families, as represented in its memorials and with families who have celebrated rites of passage (baptisms, weddings and funerals) in the church. With the historical community generally as an acknowledged part of the history of Australia. With those who value the heritage values of the built environment, as an acknowledged "icon" of the early 19th century heritage. As the traditional church of the legal fraternity in Sydney. For its long and active association with the staff and patients of Sydney Hospital. With many of the Governors of New South Wales and their families as the vice-regal parish church. With the families, friends and military and defence organisations associated with those commemorated in the war memorials. With the organists, choirmasters, chorister and organ builders who have been associated with the musical life of the church and city. With its parishioners, past and present, who have maintained a worshipping community in the church from 1824 to the present day and who from the 20th century onwards represent a significant link between the city church and a non-resident congregation.[100][1]


The place has potential to yield information that will contribute to an understanding of the cultural or natural history of New South Wales.


The church, its crypt and curtilage have the potential to yield information relating to all periods of construction and use of the building from 1819 to the present, including original construction and fabric. As a site with some archaeological potential which may yield information relating to all periods of construction and use of the building from 1819 to the present.[100][1]


The place possesses uncommon, rare or endangered aspects of the cultural or natural history of New South Wales.


St James' Church contains rare aspects of NSW's cultural history:
St James' Church is the oldest church in the City of Sydney and has been in continuous use for its original purpose since 1824. The church is an integral part of the most extensive surviving group of Macquarie period buildings in Australia, once part of Macquarie's construction of official Sydney in the eastern part of Sydney. The form and construction of the crypt are unique in a Greenway building. The painted Children's Chapel is unique in Australia and the work is a rare surviving example of the mural art of the Turramurra painters, an unusual 20th century collaborative partnership of artists. The church contains a rare collection of 19th century marble memorials. The church has in its collections rare items of movable heritage including early colonial furniture, church plate, paintings and a vice-regal funeral hatchment.[100][1]



See also


@media all and (max-width:720px).mw-parser-output .mobile-float-resetfloat:none!important;width:100%!important.mw-parser-output .stack-containerbox-sizing:border-box.mw-parser-output .stack-clear-leftfloat:left;clear:left.mw-parser-output .stack-clear-rightfloat:right;clear:right.mw-parser-output .stack-leftfloat:left.mw-parser-output .stack-rightfloat:right.mw-parser-output .stack-objectmargin:1px;overflow:hidden

  • List of Anglican churches in the Diocese of Sydney


References



Citations




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  13. ^ The Church 1963, p. 3.



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  15. ^ ab Judd & Cable 2000, pp. 6–18.


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  21. ^ ab The Church 1963, p. 7.


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  42. ^ ab The Church 1963, p. 10.


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  46. ^ Cable & Annable 1999, pp. 28.


  47. ^ abcdef Cable & Annable 1999, pp. 34–41.


  48. ^ St. James' Church (Sydney, NSW) 1919, p. 25.


  49. ^ The Church 1963, p. 12.


  50. ^ ab The Church 1963, p. 21.


  51. ^ The Church 1963, p. 21–22.


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  56. ^ ab The Church 1963, p. 31.


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  67. ^ Cable & Annable 1999, p. 27.


  68. ^ Cable & Annable 1999, p. 20.


  69. ^ The Church 1963, p. 13.


  70. ^ The Church 1963, p. 49.


  71. ^ "King Gustav". The Sydney Morning Herald. 7 November 1950. p. 9. Retrieved 20 December 2013.


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  73. ^ "Peer and skating star wed". The Australian Women's Weekly. Sydney. 18 November 1939. p. 13. Retrieved 8 April 2012.


  74. ^ "Theatrical Wedding". The Sydney Morning Herald. 21 May 1924. p. 14. Retrieved 8 April 2012.


  75. ^ "St James Church float at the opening ceremony of the Sydney Harbour Bridge". Digital Collections – Pictures – National Library of Australia. March 1932. Retrieved 17 November 2013.


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  101. ^ ab Australian Heritage Commission 1981, pp. 2; 95.


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  104. ^ ab The Church 1963, p. 23.


  105. ^ 2005, Episode 3.


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  110. ^ Freeland 1968, p. 40.


  111. ^ Leary & Leary 1972, pp. 34–40.


  112. ^ ab Freeland 1968, p. 39.


  113. ^ Judd & Cable 2000, p. 12.


  114. ^ Apperly, Irving & Reynolds 1989, p. 28.


  115. ^ Freeland 1968, p. 38.


  116. ^ Freeland 1968, p. 37.


  117. ^ abc The Church 1963, p. 22.


  118. ^ ab Cable & Annable 1999, pp. 24–25.


  119. ^ Cable & Annable 1999, p. 41.


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  128. ^ abc The Church 1963, p. 18.


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  130. ^ "25 iconic projects". International Conservation Services. Archived from the original on 13 November 2011. Retrieved 28 September 2011.


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  132. ^ Gift of Mr & Mrs L.T. Lloyd (The Church 1963, p. 24.)


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  134. ^ The inscription reads: "To the Glory of God and in loving memory of Keith Kinnaird Mackellar Lieutenant 7th (Princess Royal) Dragoon Guards who was killed in action at Onderstepoort South Africa on the 11th July 1900 in the twentieth year of his age. 'Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord: or who shall rise up in his holy place? He that hath clean hands and pure heart.'"


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  136. ^ Cable & Clarke 1982, p. 15.


  137. ^ Memorial plaque to Edmund Beasley Court Kennedy. North wall, St James' Church, Sydney: Executive Government, Legislative Council of New South Wales. 1849.


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  139. ^ St. James' Church (Sydney, NSW) 1919, p. 31.


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    Restoration project sheet



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  155. ^ Porter 2011, pp. 10–12.


  156. ^ ab Kaye 2002, p. 171.


  157. ^ Kaye 2002, p. 170.


  158. ^ Carnley 2004, p. 81.


  159. ^ Frame 2007, p. 56.


  160. ^ This third theological tradition (later called the 'Broad Church' or 'Liberal' tradition) is in addition to those created by the "tensions between Evangelicals and Tractarians". It is one which also "claimed its origins in Richard Hooker's appeal to human reason ... as a rational account of the universe." (Frame (2006) p.56)


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  163. ^ ab Lindsay & Scarfe 2012, p. 179.


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  172. ^ abc The Church 1963, p. 17.


  173. ^ Cable & Annable 1999, p. 11.


  174. ^ Cable & Annable 1999, p. 17.


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  176. ^ ab Cable & Annable 1999, p. 30.


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  187. ^ St James' Institute 2012 Program pp. 10–11


  188. ^ Andrew West (presenter) (18 April 2012). "The church and corporate greed". Radio National. Retrieved 7 November 2013.


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  190. ^ The Church 1944, p. 6.


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  194. ^ Cable & Annable 1999, p. 24.


  195. ^ "St. James' Church". The Sydney Morning Herald. 26 July 1897. p. 9. Retrieved 8 October 2011.


  196. ^ Catherine Mackerras (1967). "'Nathan, Isaac (1790–1864)'". Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved 17 January 2014.


  197. ^ Graeme Skinner (2008). "Nathan, Isaac". Dictionary of Sydney. Dictionary of Sydney Trust. Retrieved 17 January 2014.


  198. ^ "No title". The Australian. 10 October 1827. p. 2. Retrieved 31 August 2013.


  199. ^ Mark Dunn (2008). "St James Anglican church Queens Square". Dictionary of Sydney. Dictionary of Sydney Trust. Retrieved 17 January 2014.


  200. ^ "No Title". The Monitor. 9 March 1827. p. 8. Retrieved 8 January 2014.


  201. ^ Skinner, Graeme. "A chronological checklist of colonial Australian musical compositions, arrangements, and transcriptions c. 1788–1840". Austral Harmony Music and musicians in colonial Australia. Archived from the original on 10 January 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2014.


  202. ^ Bebbington 1997, p. 120.


  203. ^ "Tristan d'Acunha". The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser (NSW: 1803–1842). 21 July 1829. p. 2. Retrieved 8 January 2014.


  204. ^ Drummond 1978, p. 53.


  205. ^ abc Cable & Annable 1999, p. 25.


  206. ^ Furley, James (c. 1870). "Nunc dimittis". Composition for St James' choir. J. R. Clarke (music publisher). Retrieved 14 January 2014.


  207. ^ "Church News". The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 January 1901. p. 5. Retrieved 8 January 2014.


  208. ^ ab Cable & Clarke 1982, p. 40.


  209. ^ ab "Information about the choir" (PDF). St James' King Street. 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 January 2014. Retrieved 18 January 2014.


  210. ^ "Orchestral masses". St James' King Street. 2014. Archived from the original on 14 January 2014. Retrieved 18 January 2014.


  211. ^ "Combined choirs". The Sydney Morning Herald. 25 August 1933. p. 4. Retrieved 13 January 2014.


  212. ^ ab Pleskun 2012, p. 580.


  213. ^ ab McCallum, Peter (16 August 2013). "Brilliant compendium of Monteverdi's genius". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney, NSW. Retrieved 13 October 2013.


  214. ^ The CDs are entitled Christmas at St James (2003), No Ordinary Sunday (2004), Any Given Sunday, A German Requiem by Johannes Brahms and Metamorphosis (2012), which includes original compositions by St James' choristers.


  215. ^ Pleskun 2012, pp. 350, 464, 525, 527, 538–39, 580, 528, 659, 675, 699.


  216. ^ "Domestic Intelligence". The Monitor. 3 September 1827. p. 3 Edition: Evening. Retrieved 8 January 2014.


  217. ^ Rushworth 1988, p. 366.


  218. ^ "St James' Music Staff". St James' Church, Sydney. Retrieved 3 September 2014.


  219. ^ "About The Consort of Melbourne". The Consort of Melbourne. Archived from the original on 3 September 2014. Retrieved 3 September 2014.


  220. ^ "Warren Trevelyan-Jones". ABC News "Sunday Nights". 1 May 2011. Retrieved 21 December 2014.


  221. ^ "Sydney, St James' (Queen's Square) (8 bells, 10–0–12)". Australian and New Zealand Association of Bellringers. 2013. Archived from the original on 17 November 2013. Retrieved 17 November 2013.


  222. ^ ab Higson, Andrew (29 January 2010). "Sydney, Queen's Square, St James". Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers. Retrieved 17 November 2013.


  223. ^ "Our bells" (PDF). St James' King Street. 2013. Retrieved 18 January 2014.


  224. ^ Moses, Alexa (28 July 2003). "Among the peal of new bells, one marks the toll of AIDS". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney, NSW. Retrieved 21 January 2014.


  225. ^ "Return of the Mears Bell" (PDF). Parish Connections. October 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 January 2014. Retrieved 25 January 2014.


  226. ^ Annable, 2004




Sources


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Cited sources

  • Apperly, Richard; Irving, Robert; Reynolds, Peter H. (1989). A pictorial guide to identifying Australian architecture : styles and terms from 1788 to the present. North Ryde, NSW, Australia: Angus & Robertson. ISBN 0-207-18562-X.


  • Apperly, Richard; Lind, Peter (1971). 444 Sydney Buildings. Sydney: Angus & Robertson in association with The Royal Australian Institute of Architects. ISBN 0-207-12083-8.


  • Australian Heritage Commission (1981). The Heritage of Australia: the illustrated register of the National Estate. South Melbourne: Macmillan of Australia. ISBN 0-333-33750-6.


  • Bebbington, Warren, ed. (1997). The Oxford companion to Australian music. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-553432-8.


  • Cable, Kenneth; Clarke, Peter (1982). St. James' Church, Sydney: an illustrated history. Sydney: Churchwardens of St James' Church. ISBN 0-9592772-0-X.


  • Cable, Kenneth; Annable, Rosemary (1999). St James' 1824–1999. Sydney: Churchwardens of St James' Church. ISBN 0-646-37719-1.


  • Carnley, Peter (2004). Reflections in Glass: trends and tensions in the contemporary Anglican Church. Pymble, NSW, Australia: HarperCollinsPublishers. ISBN 1-86371-755-2.


  • Cochrane, Peter (2006). Colonial Ambition – Foundations of Australian Democracy. Carlton, Victoria, Australia: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-85331-5.


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  • Frame, Tom (2007). Anglicans in Australia. Sydney, NSW: UNSW Press. ISBN 978-0-86840-830-9.


  • Frappell, Ruth (1997). edited by John A. Moses; with contributions by K.J. Cable; et al., eds. From Oxford to the bush: Catholic Anglicanism in Australia: the centenary essays from The Church Chronicle 1932–1933. Adelaide, SA: Broughton Press & SPCK/Australia. ISBN 1-876106-06-9.CS1 maint: Extra text: editors list (link)


  • Freeland, J.M. (1968). Architecture in Australia – A History. Melbourne: Cheshire. ISBN 0-14-021152-7.


  • Judd, Stephen; Cable, Kenneth (2000). Sydney Anglicans – A History of the Diocese. Sydney: Anglican Information Office. ISBN 0-949108-41-3.


  • Jupp, James, ed. (2001). The Australian people: an encyclopedia of the nation, its people and their origins (2nd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-80789-1.


  • Kaye, Bruce (2002). Anglicanism in Australia: A History. Carlton South, Victoria: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-85003-0.


  • Leary, Frank; Leary, Judith (1972). Colonial heritage: historic buildings of New South Wales. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. ISBN 0-207-12309-8.


  • Lindsay, Elaine; Scarfe, Janet, eds. (2012). Preachers, prophets and heretics: women's ministry in the Anglican Church of Australia. Sydney: NewSouth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-74223-337-6.


  • Pleskun, Stephen (2012). A chronological history of Australian composers and their compositions. Sydney: Xlibris Corporation. ISBN 978-1-4653-8225-2.
    [self-published source]


  • Porter, Brian, ed. (1989). Colonial Tractarians: The Oxford Movement in Australia. Melbourne: The Joint Board of Christian Education. p. 39. ISBN 0-85819-788-X.


  • Porter, Muriel (2011). Sydney Anglicans and the threat to world Anglicanism: the Sydney experiment. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-4094-2028-6.


  • Rushworth, Graeme David (1988). Historic organs of New South Wales: the instruments, their makers and players, 1791–1940. Sydney, NSW: Hale & Iremonger. ISBN 0-86806-320-7.


  • St. James' Church (Sydney, NSW) (1919). The Church, ed. Historical sketch of S. James' Sydney: written for the commemoration of the hundredth anniversary of the laying of its foundation stone, October, 1919. W.C. Penfold & Co. (printer).


  • The Church (1944). A Short story of historic St. James', Sydney (1st ed.). Sydney.


  • The Church (1963). A Short story of historic St. James', Sydney (2nd ed.). Ashfield: James & James.


  • Whiteoak, John; Scott-Maxwell, Aline, eds. (2003). Currency companion to music and dance in Australia. Sydney: Currency House in association with Currency Press. p. 128. ISBN 0-9581213-1-1.

Other sources

  • Destination NSW (2018). "St James' Church".


  • Attraction Homepage (2007). "St James' Anglican Church". Archived from the original on 29 May 2017. Retrieved 8 December 2018.


  • Gorman, James (2013). 'St.James Repairs Funded', in Sydney Central 12/6/2013.


  • H.O. Woodhouse & Danks P/L (1988). Historical Report & Conservation Plan for St.James' Anglican Church, King St., Sydney.


  • Heritage NSW (2013). St James Anglican Church.


  • Herman, M. The Early Australian Architects and Their Work.


  • Ellis, M. H. (1964). Francis Greenway.


  • Noel Bell Ridley Smith & Partners (2001). Conservation Management Plan.


  • Heritage Office (2001). Religious Heritage Nominations.

Attribution

CC-BY-icon-80x15.png This Wikipedia article contains material from St. James' Anglican Church, entry number 1703 in the New South Wales State Heritage Register published by the State of New South Wales and Office of Environment and Heritage 2018 under CC-BY 4.0 licence, accessed on 14 October 2018.




Further reading


  • Gladwin, Michael (2015) Anglican clergy in Australia 1788-1850: building a British world, Woodbridge, Suffolk, UK : Boydell and Brewer
    ISBN 9780861933280


External links





  • "St James' King Street". Official website. Archived from the original on 19 December 2013.


  • "Cable Clerical Index of clergy who served in the Anglican Church of Australia from 26 January 1788 through to those ordained or serving by 31 December 1961" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 October 2013.









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