St Benet's traces its history back to the year 1111, when a church was built on the site and dedicated to
St Benedict. Over time the name became St. Benet's
Paul's Wharf after the hythe where the church was located. To the west of the site was the watergate of
Baynard's Castle, which is referenced in the biographies of Queen
Anne Boleyn and
Lady Jane Grey. Both the church and the castle were destroyed in the
Great Fire of London in 1666. It was redesigned by the architect Christopher Wren, and reopened in 1683. The builder was
Edward Strong the Elder. On 2 March 1706,
Henrietta Hobart married
Charles Howard, 9th Earl of Suffolk, a captain in the
6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons there. (Henrietta Howard subsequently became mistress to the future
King George II.) The church was narrowly saved from destruction in the late 19th century, when its parish was merged with that of
St Nicholas Cole Abbey. After an energetic campaign by its supporters, Queen Victoria in 1879 granted the church to Welsh Anglicans for services. St Benet's continues as London's Metropolitan Welsh church, with its services conducted in the
Welsh language, and with English translation provided. The parish is within the
Conservative Evangelical tradition of the Church of England, and it has passed resolutions to reject the
ordination of women and/or female leadership. ==Exterior==