St John's Wood Church started life as a
chapel of ease to
St Marylebone Parish Church, and was constructed in 1814 by Thomas Hardwick, who was simultaneously constructing the current St Marylebone Church. Although the church originally had extensive burial grounds, these were closed in 1855 and opened as a public garden,
St. John's Wood Church Grounds, in 1886. There are thought to be around 50,000 graves, including those of the artist
John Sell Cotman and the prophetess
Joanna Southcott. In 1898 the building became a chapel of ease to
Christ Church, Marylebone, and increasingly became the centre of administration for the parish. After bomb damage during the
Second World War rendered St Stephen's, Avenue Road unusable, St John's Wood Church became a
parish church in its own right in 1952. As well as holding regular services for the community, the church hosted the society wedding of
Peggy Cripps to
Joe Appiah in June 1953, the blessing of the marriage of
Paul and
Linda McCartney in 1969, and the funeral of
Ursula Vaughan Williams in 2007. A Church Hall complex was constructed in the 1970s, the completion of which was marked with the erection of a statue of the church's patron,
John the Baptist, by
Hans Feibusch. Restoration of the church interior took place in 1991 under the supervision of
Michael Reardon, when the chancel pavement was relaid in limestone and the present central altar replaced the high altar at the east end of the church. == Present day ==