for your own private recital perhaps? :unibrow:
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Hi guys, and Happy New Year 2010!
A few updates on the site of St Phillip's Church, Hardman Street.
St. Philip's Church was not on the site of the Fly in the Loaf pub, as we originally thought. It was on the land next to it, now occupied by the Victorian red bricked building leading up to South Hunter Street. Hopefully this should clear it up a little?
http://i861.photobucket.com/albums/a...tPhilips-1.jpg
Image 1 ^ Google earth view, with St Phillip's high-lighted.
http://i861.photobucket.com/albums/a...tphilips-2.jpg
Image 2 ^ 1848 OS map extract of Hardman Street
http://i861.photobucket.com/albums/a...Stphilips2.jpg
Image 3 ^ 1848 OS map large scale
http://i861.photobucket.com/albums/a..._HardmanSt.jpg
Image 4 ^ St Phillip's Church, Hardman Street
The map above [image 3] confirms that this is the correct image for St Philip's [the original image was unsourced] ie: 8No. buttress walls along the nave, and 2No. at the ends. Also the entrance is in the right place, and the plan is consistant with a tower/ spire-less church.
The image also shows the corner wall edge of what might be the Fly in the Loaf building? It has the same masonry keying as the photographs, although the window's do not correspond....and the lower glazing of the current building is not shown. All of which may have been added/ altered afterwards?
http://i861.photobucket.com/albums/a...c/FlyLoaf2.jpg
Image 5 ^ Fly in the Loaf, Hardman Street
http://i861.photobucket.com/albums/a...sc/FlyLoaf.jpg
Image 6 ^ Fly in the Loaf, Hardman Street
In image 4 the building being constructed [demolished?] is possibly the current Fly in the Loaf building? It looks like it's sitting further back from the road than the church gates? I assume that when the church was demolished, the developers had built right up to the edge of where the churchyard wall and gates where? And then following on - the ground floor bay windows to the Fly in the Loaf were added later to meet the new neighboring building, and new street line?
The red bricked building shown above is on the site of St Philip's Church.
D.
I think you're right about the masonry quoining in number 4 corresponding with the fly in the loaf. Any idea at all when number 4 was drawn?
that St Philip's church looks to have been slap bang on the site of an old haunt of mine, Stella Maris's 'Atlantic House' last known to be used as student accomodation for John Moores.
No sorry, I've been trying to fix the date myself but without success. It lies somewhere between 1816-1882 [life of the church].
Image originally posted here