St Mary-le-Bow

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Bow Church
A view of Cheapside in 1750, showing St Mary-le-Bow Church
Official Name St Mary-le-Bow
Type of Establishment Church
Denomination Church of England
Current Incumbent Simon Bradbury
Location Cheapside, City of London
St Mary-le-Bow Church, Cheapside

Built in 1683, St Mary-le-Bow Church, on Cheapside in the City of London, is one of the 52 churches designed by Sir Christopher Wren after the Great Fire of London of 1666. Traditionally, a true Cockney is a person born within the sound of the bells of St Mary-le-Bow. The mileposts along the road from London to Lewes in Sussex mark the distance from the door of St Mary-le-Bow, rather than Charing Cross as other distances are measured.

In 1811, the vicar of St Mary-le-Bow Church is Simon Bradbury, the stepfather of Sir Felix Sutcliffe and father of Clara Bradbury.

Sukey Hutchinson and Robert Vickery discussed the architecture of St Mary-le-Bow, among other churches designed by Wren, during a drive from Hyde Park to Miss Hutchinson's home in Gracechurch Street[1]

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