The original
church was consecrated to the
Virgin Mary by the Right Reverend
George Frederick Hose, the Bishop of Singapore, Labuan & Sarawak, on 13 February 1887. This structure was built of timber on Bluff Road, on top of a hill now known as
Bukit Aman, where the headquarters of the
Royal Malaysian Police is now located. It served as the centre for worship and spiritual life for the small group of Anglicans around Kuala Lumpur at that period. Notable parishioners of the church in that period include the
British Residents of
Selangor,
W. H. Treacher and
F. A. Swettenham (later
Resident-General of the
Federated Malay States and Governor of the
Straits Settlements).
Relocation In 1893, a decision was made to erect a new building to house the growing congregation, and a new site was found beside the
Padang or
Parade Ground (now known as
Dataran Merdeka or Independence Square) of the
Selangor Club. The amount raised by the congregation for the building of the new church was supplemented by a gift of five thousand
Straits dollars from the government of
Selangor on a suggestion by the
Governor of the Straits Settlements, Sir
Cecil Clementi Smith. Notable local contributors to the building fund included personalities like
Yap Kwan Seng and
K. Thamboosamy Pillay, even though they were not
Christians themselves. The foundation stone was laid on 3 February 1894 by the British Resident of Selangor, Sir
W. H. Treacher, in a ceremony officiated over by Bishop
G. F. Hose. On 9 February 1895, the 'first brick church erected in the native States of Malay Peninsula' was consecrated by the same Bishop. When the
Diocese of West Malaysia was established in 1970, St. Mary's Church was made the
see of the Bishop of West Malaysia. ==Architecture==