St Paul's, Deptford

[1] It was designed by gentleman architect Thomas Archer and built between 1712 and 1730 in Deptford, which was then a settlement in Kent but is now part of South East London.

[2] With St John's, Smith Square, it was one of two churches designed by Archer to be built under the Act.

He began almost immediately, designing it in his usual Roman Baroque style[4] and completing the fabric and most of the decoration by 1720 (though work continued until its consecration in 1730).

The structural damage was confined to the east end, where much of the stained glass was lost and the joinery and decorative finishes were badly charred.

The most unusual feature of the building is the cylindrical tower with a steeple, around which is wrapped a semi-circular portico of four giant Tuscan columns; colossal pilasters articulate the body of the church facades.

Two additional, liturgically and practically unnecessary[14] side entrances in the middle of the walls, each approached by a grand divided symmetrical staircase, suited to a Palladian villa.

Ink and watercolour drawing inscribed "Elevation of the Painted Window and Altar Piece / as executed at St Paul's Church Deptford by William Collins , 1813"
Exterior of the apse with its unconventional convex Venetian window
Exterior view of north side
Interior looking east
Interior looking west