'Church House' is the building that serves as the headquarters of the
Church of England, occupying the south end of
Dean's Yard next to
Westminster Abbey in
London.
The current building, designed by Sir
Herbert Baker, is a
1930s replacement of the original building, commissioned in
1902 by the
1888-formed ''Corporation of the Church House'' to commemorate Queen
Victoria's Golden Jubilee of
1887. Though delayed at first by the recession of the early
1930s, the foundation stone was laid by Queen
Mary on
June 26,
1937, and the building was officially opened by King
George VI on
June 10,
1940.
After the building's ''Assembly Hall'' was directly hit during
the Blitz and yet suffered little damage,
Winston Churchill requisitioned the building for use as makeshift
Houses of Parliament. The first meetings of both the
United Nations Security Council and
United Nations Preparatory Commission both took place in the ''Hoare Memorial Hall'' on
November 27,
1945.
The building was
listed in
1988, and is currently used as a conference centre when the general synod is not in session.
External links
★
The Corporation of the Church House
★
The Church of England
★
Church House's conference centre business
★
South Tawton's Church House 15th Century