About Us
St Peter's Church, which stands between Prescott Place and Clapham Manor Street just off of Clapham High Street, was originally a small brick building, covered with a corrugated iron roof and contained within the dimensions of the nave. The church was set apart for divine worship in 1879.
By 1902, and only after the cottages in Clapham Manor Street had been replaced with the chancel extension and the upper clerestory added, the outside of the church, rising from the pavement in Clapham Manor Street, but with the entrance in Prescott Place as viewed from the external picture, is how it looks today.
By 1904 the Lady Chapel, adjacent to the chancel, the organ loft (containing a fine 3-manual Hunter organ), vestry and sacristy had been completed. Inside the most striking feature of St Peter's is the mighty reredos above the high altar at the east end. This is a 1914-18 war memorial and was completed by the Easter of 1919, and like all later additions to the church is by Kempe. The central panel shows the risen Lord with the two Roman soldiers beneath. The remaining panels are of saints and doctors of the church. Most of the added internal fixtures were completed by the 1920s. These included the wrought iron chancel screen with gates surmounted by carved wooden Rood with attendant figues carved by Hitch. The 14 Stations of the Cross were carved by a Bavarian artist in the Austrian Tyrol. Among the fine stained glass windows are those representing the Beatitudes by Reginald Halward. The choir vestry is part of a large hall complex which was completed in 1907.
Following bomb damage in 1944, rooms were included in the repair and the refurbished halls were reopened in 1953. The church's sound system contains a hearing aid loop and a portable ramp is available at the main door to assist with wheelchair users."