|
| Richmond Concert Society | ||||
| Home | Concerts | Artists | Venues | How to join the Society | ||||
![]() ![]() Concert dates for the German School are: 25th September 2007 16th October 2007 22nd January 2008 22nd April 2008 20th May 2008 |
The German School Petersham Road, Petersham
In 1968, proposals to build a school
where children of German nationals
living in London could be educated had
almost foundered; the then West German
government could not afford to buy a
suitable site in London. The matter,
however, was taken up by Jürgen
Sudhoff, a young diplomat in the London
Embassy who was anxious to make his
mark, and he eventually carried Bonn
with him. A competition among German
architects was staged, a winner chosen
and plans drawn up. Thereafter,
complications began. The German
Embassy in London asked a German
architect called Marmorek, who had
worked for them, to take charge. Because
his was a small partnership, he asked for
the assistance of a local firm which
could administer the site and steer the
enterprise through the local planning
process. The Culpin practice was chosen.
The building was begun in 1978 and
completed in 1980. There was much local
opposition to the size of the building and
to the placing of a school in this quiet
neighbourhood.
How to get to the German School: By bus: 65 or 371 to first stop on Kingston side of Dysart Arms. Take the road by Ham House Gatehouse; the school is beyond Douglas House on the right. LIVE TRAVEL NEWS By car: Parking is restricted; cars should take the road to the left of the Gatehouse and follow the one-way system. Park only where indicated by the school's staff. [CLICK TO VIEW MAP] |
|
![]() ![]() Concert dates for St Margaret's are: 11th December 2007 11th March 2008 |
St Margaret's Catholic Church St Margaret's Road, East Twickenham This church is named for St Margaret, Queen of Scotland (1046-93), who was married to King Malcolm III. Among her many other virtues, she was a cultivated and educated woman (Malcolm himself could not read) who encouraged the arts and education. The parish was initiated in 1930 as an offshoot of St Bridget's, Isleworth, and its first administrators were Mill Hill Missionaries. It was formally constituted as a parish in 1935 and, between then and the 1960s, when it became possible to finance the construction of a new church, Mass was said in a hut on the site. The church we know today was consecrated in 1969. English Heritage, impressed by its innovative design and use of materials, has designated it a Grade II Listed building. The design of the interior reflects the link between the liturgical services and the socially supportive side of church life, which means that, as at the German School, the Richmond Concert Society can conduct the musical and social aspects of its concerts here within a single unified space. How to get to St Margaret's: By bus or train: H37 or SWT to St Margaret's SWT station. The church is a few yards north of the station on the opposite side of the road. LIVE TRAVEL NEWS There is a small car park in front of the church and other parking can be found in nearby streets. [CLICK TO VIEW MAP] |
|
![]() ![]() Concert dates for St Mary's are: 13th November 2007 12th February 2008 15 July 2008 (AGM) |
St Mary's Church Riverside, Twickenham St Mary's has a medieval tower of Kentish ragstone and a Georgian brick nave, the latter built by John James of Greenwich in 1713, when the original, chronically neglected nave fell down. The rebuilding was initiated by one of the churchwardens, the court painter Sir Godfrey Kneller (1646-1723). Among local notables commemorated in the church is the poet Alexander Pope. A brass tablet in the floor near the front row of pews marks the approximate location of his interment. His parents are celebrated by an elaborate memorial in the north gallery, while a tablet on the east wall (outside) touchingly records his gratitude to "a faithful old servant", his nurse, Mary Beach. During the 1720s the tea and coffee merchant Thomas Twining built Dial House behind the church; in 1890 the Twining family gave the house to the parish and it became the vicarage. The church has a ring of eight bells, the oldest dating from before the Reformation. These are regularly rung, although we perhaps cannot expect a repeat of the event in 1749 when the Society of Twickenham Scholars rang "a complete peal of 6,000 changes". Less clangorously, the Society uses St Mary's for its string quartet concerts whenever possible and the church's acoustic has been highly praised by the quartets who have played here. How to get to St Mary's: Bus or train to Central Twickenham. The church is reached from York Street through the pedestrianised area between York House and the Municipal Buildings, or via Church Street. LIVE TRAVEL NEWS [CLICK TO VIEW MAP] |
|
|
For maximum comfort we recommend
that you bring cushions to concerts in
both churches and we request that
neither toddlers nor babes-in-arms are
brought to concerts.
Please switch off mobile phones, pagers,
etc.
|
| www.richmondconcerts.co.uk |
|
|