Henry Croswell et al. in the Church of All Hallows, Great and Less, Upper Thames Street, City of London - 17 November, 1878, 07:00 PM
from Transcript of the diaries of Henry Croswell, page 135:
O[rgan]. – Old, good, simple tunes played. The canticles were sung, the Psalms read.
C[hoir]. – Boys in the West gallery and congregational singing.
[The congregation numbered] 100 – It was a wet night. There were nice old men and women in old fashioned pews.
[…]
M[iscellaneous]. – The service is altogether more like the Countess of Huntingdon's Connection than that of the Catholic Church of England.
Henry Croswell, Transcript of the diaries of Henry Croswell. In British Library, number 000826807, C.194.c.113 , p. 135. https://led.kmi.open.ac.uk/entity/lexp/1547632357672 accessed: 7 November, 2024 (By permission of the British Library.)
Listeners
Listening to
hide composersAnglican church music | performed by the congregation choir and organist of the church of Allhallows, Great and Less, Upper Thames Street |
Experience Information
Date/Time | 17 November, 1878, 07:00 PM |
Duration | 1 hours 15 minutes |
Medium | live |
Listening Environment | in the company of others, indoors, in public |
Notes
Henry Croswell (1840–93) kept a record of his visits to churches in London over a period of more than twelve years (1872–85). He made methodical notes about the number of clergy, the churchmanship, the congregation, the sermon and the church architecture, as well as commenting on the music that he heard (the organ, the hymns and the choir). The above listening experience has been extracted from one of these records. The Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion is a small society of evangelical churches, founded in 1783 by Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntingdon, as a result of the Evangelical Revival. For many years it was strongly associated with the Calvinist Methodist movement of George Whitefield.