‘I do not know, say the Great bells of Bow’
The bells of Bow are indeed famous, and not just because of the song. They are the bells that called back Dick Whittington, they were used during the Second World War by the BBC as a signal for those secretly listening abroad, and legend tells that any born within their sound is a Cockney. A more recent theory suggests that the expression ‘within the sound of Bow Bells’ may actually refer to the area between this church and Bow Church in the East End. Given the fact that Cockneys are associated with East London, this theory may well be correct.
The church dates from 1087, and was originally called St Mary New Church, to differentiate it from the nearby Aldermary. Its Norman crypt dates from this time and is the source of its present name. ‘Bows’ are the arches in the vaulted crypt and the ecclesiastic court, known as the Court of Arches, is held here. The history of the Church is somewhat chequered. Stow writes of ‘divers accidents’ which caused the church to be ‘more famous than any other parish church’.
St Mary’s brushes with infamy began early. In 1090 a tempest lifted the roof and dropped it into the street, causing fatalities. In 1196 a seditious tailor named William Fitz Osbert, along with several accomplices, barricaded himself into the steeple. He fortified his position with munitions and victuals, but the steeple was stormed and he was captured, later hanged at Smithfield. In 1271 part of this steeple collapsed, causing more fatalities. Thirteen years later, a goldsmith named Laurence Ducket sought sanctuary in the church after wounding a Ralph Crepin. Unfortunately, the angry Crepin and some of his friends violated the ancient law by entering the church and dispatching the unfortunate Ducket. This crime led to sixteen men being hanged, drawn and quartered, and one woman – apparently the cause of the mischief – being burned at the stake. For a while the church was interdicted, its doors and windows ritually stopped up with thorns.
It was open again by 1331, when festivities were held in Cheapside to commemorate the birth of the man later known as the Black Prince. A balcony was constructed outside the church for the comfort of Queen Phillippa and her ladies in waiting. Somewhat predictably, given the building’s history, the balcony collapsed. The Queen was injured but survived.
In 1469 it was ordained that the bells should be rung nightly at 9 o’ clock, and local apprentices wrote a poem to the Clerk of the church: ‘Clarke of the Bow bell with the yellow lockes, for thy late ringing thy head shall have knocks’. The Clerke responded ‘ Children of Cheap, hold you all still, for you shall have the Bow bell rung at your will’.
Wren rebuilt the tower and steeple following the Great Fire, and he must have done a good job as it hasn’t collapsed since, not even after wartime bombing which left little but the tower and the crypt. The postwar rebuild was by Laurence King.
I visited St Mary in the company of Pete G. The churchyard is paved, and contains a statue of parishioner John Smith (of Pocahontas fame). Milton is commemorated by a plaque, as he was born in adjacent Bread Street.
The interior is bright and colourful, lots of white and gold, but also greeen and pale blue in the ceiling. The crypt is a famous vegetarian cafe and the pulpit has been used for lunchtime ‘dialogues’. Trevor McDonald, Jeffrey Archer and Dame Diana Rigg have all been ‘on the spot’ here. Noticeable are a throne for the Bishop of London, a bust of Admiral Phillip who was born nearby and founded Australia, and the carved heads above the aisle supports which are of fairly recent benefactors. On Sundays, the church is used by the St Thomas Syrian Orthodox Church.
Not by Cockneys!
Author Mark McManus
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