The Church is near
Bryanston Square and
Montagu Square in the
neoclassical Portman Estate area of London, which was developed by
Henry William Portman in the 18th century. A
chapel of ease called the Quebec Chapel was founded on the present site in 1787 to commemorate the
Battle of Quebec. It is thought that this chapel was built on the site of the riding school of the Portman Barracks. By the early 20th century the chapel had fallen into disrepair and it was demolished in 1911. Among the priests-in-charge of the Quebec Chapel was the theologian and hymnodist,
Henry Alford, who wrote the hymn "
Come, ye thankful people, come". The Annunciation Church has always been closely associated with the
Anglo-Catholic movement started in the mid 19th century, and in the early part of the 20th century many of its adherents were strongly opposed to the growing
Ecumenical movement. In May 1951 an
interdenominational Christian rally was held in nearby
Hyde Park to coincide with the launch of the
Festival of Britain. A number of Anglo-Catholic clergy and lay people, led by Rev.
Hugh Ross Williamson, held a protest meeting at the Annunciation Church to express their opposition to
Bishops of the Church of England sharing a platform with
Methodists,
Baptists and other
Non-Conformist churches, organisations which, in their opinion, did "not accept the traditional Faith of the Church". In a signed letter, they expressed the concern that "the participation of the Church of England may give the additional impression that Roman Catholics are the only religious body which defend the full Catholic Faith." The poet
John Betjeman was among the signatories; although he admitted to
T. S. Eliot (a fellow Anglo-Catholic and a churchwarden of
St Stephen's, Gloucester Road) that he found the tone of the protest "somewhat extreme", he nevertheless declared "I have nailed my colours to the mast and cannot let down my co-signatories."
Rose Macaulay, a novelist, also commented on the protest at the Annunciation, expressing dismay at opposition to the rally. ==Architecture==