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Glenn Chandler, then CFA president, took advantage of a 2008 business trip to London to visit and photograph St. Margaret's Church, a site that is important to all descendants of John Chandler of London and Virginia. The historic church is quite near many other famous London landmarks.
According to Westminster Abbey's web site, St. Margaret's Church was built on the Abbey grounds by the Benedictine Monks of Westminster Abbey, whose daily routine was disturbed by the local people attending church and receiving the sacraments at the Abbey. Margaret of Antioch, to whom the church was dedicated, was extremely popular in the middle ages but little is known of her today. The original St. Margaret's was built in the latter part of the 11th century. The parish of St Margaret's originally covered a large area. The baptisms, marriages, and burials registers are extensive. The original registers, which include the baptism of our John, are kept in the Abbey's Muniment Room. Microfilms of the registers can be consulted at the Westminster Archives Centre at 10 St Ann's Street, London. The facade of St. Margaret's was cased in Portland stone in 1735. The tower was largely rebuilt in the 1730s and is an important example of early eighteenth-century Gothic. Within the tower is a ring of ten bells, the oldest dating from 1739.
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Aerial view of Big Ben and St. Margaret's by Joyce Chandler ![]() Joyce Chandler of Woodville, Alabama, traveled to London immediately after our 2008 meeting in Chattanooga. She sent this arial photo showing the back of St. Margaret's Church, with Big Ben in the foreground. Joyce said, "I took the picture from atop the London Eye using the zoom feature on my camera." The London Eye is the giant ferris wheel-type attraction that you see in so many photographs from London. It is 135 meters (about 443 feet) tall and is the tallest cantilevered observation wheel in the world. The 32 high-tech London Eye passenger capsules, representing the 32 boroughs of London, allow a spectacular 360 degree panorama at the top. The London Eye can carry 800 passengers per revolution. Each rotation takes about 30 minutes and the wheel travels slowly enough to allow passengers to step on and off while it is moving. Thanks for sharing your photo, Joyce! |
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