The church was destroyed in the
Great Fire of London in 1666, and rebuilt to the designs of
Christopher Wren in 1674 at a cost of £5,737. A tower, also to Wren's design, was added ten years later. The east end of the church, in Lime Street, had a
pediment and two pairs of coupled Ionic
pilasters with a large window below carved
festoons. A row of shops, built against the south wall, stood between the church and Fenchurch street. The main body of Wren's church was 66 feet long and 59 feet wide. It was divided into
nave and aisles by
Ionic columns supporting an
entablature. The ceiling of the nave was arched, and pierced with circular windows under groin vaulted openings, while the aisle ceilings were horizontal. There was a west gallery with an organ. The bell tower was divided into three storeys by
string courses. At the top was an open
parapet, and a small bell turret which had been removed by the nineteenth century. In 1724 the church received a new three manual organ with 29 stops, large for its day, which cost £749. It was designed by
Renatus Harris and approved by a number of experts including George Frederick Handel.
Charles Burney was later to be appointed organist in 1749. ==Demolition==