Harrison is kept in mind by his statue in
City Square, but his real and abiding memorial is in his
church of St. John at the head of Briggate, which he built and endowed and saw consecrated by
Richard Neile,
Archbishop of York, on 21 September 1634. An incident occurred at this consecration day which shows the peculiar temper of those times. At the morning service the sermon was preached by
John Cosin, then Archbishop's Chaplain and later
Bishop of Durham; in the afternoon, by the first incumbent, Robert Todd, who was highly inclined to the
Puritanical and
Presbyterian notions. Todd made a fierce onslaught on the sermon to which he had listened in the morning. Neile immediately suspended him from his living for twelve months, and only forgave him at the direct intercession of founder Harrison and Sir
Arthur Ingram. It is somewhat curious that no great beauty was attributed to St. John's in its youth nor, indeed, for a long time afterwards.
Thomas Dunham Whitaker, in his
Lyoidis and Elmete (1816: a revised edition of
Ralph Thoresby's famous
Ducatus Leodiensis), goes out of his way to pour scorn upon it, declaring that it "has all the gloom and all the obstructions of an ancient church without one vestige of its dignity and grace". Such, however, is not the opinion of later experts. Mr. J. E. Morris, in his "West Riding of Yorkshire", declares Harrison's church to be "a singularly interesting example though far less pure, of course, in its architecture than
Wadham College Chapel of the last, faint flickering of the
Gothic spirit; it is interesting, also, as affording us, in its sumptuous fittings, a good example of the
Laudian revival". In 1885, the Harrison Memorial Window was added to the church, painted in 1885 by
Burlison and Grylls. The lower half depicts scenes from John Harrison's life. From bottom left: Harrison gives a tankard of coins to the imprisoned King Charles I; the construction of St John's Church; Harrison praying in his study; Harrison helps an old woman into his almshouse; Harrison sets up a market cross on Briggate in Leeds. ==References==