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01. 200th Anniversary of St. John’s Church

This week: Why not visit our History page – All Saints Network – Our History You’d be surprised how much information is already there, not just about St. John’s, but about the churches that make up the All Saints Network, and others from the region that are now closed. Special feature: Stained Glass of St. […]

02. The Mission House – Shelter, Outreach and Women of Strength

From 1893, St. John’s reached out to the poor and vulnerable by establishing a Mission House, firstly in the former Queen’s Head Hotel in Wellington St. (now the site of Coles supermarket carpark), and then in a purpose-built centre in Canning St. opposite the Brickfields – nowadays a backpacker hostel. The early years of the […]

03. John Youl’s Chalice

John Youl arrived at George Town in 1819 as the first appointed chaplain for the young Port Dalrymple settlement, and St. John’s Church was built during his time, but died less than 2 years after its opening, and before it was consecrated. His story, however, includes an adventurous time as a missionary to Tahiti, involving […]

04. Ernest Wynne-Evans – Missionary and peace-maker

Born in 1905, Ernest Wynne-Evans served with Church Missionary Society (CMS) from the mid-1920s until 1929, leaving to study for ordained ministry. He served as assistant curate at St. John’s in 1931-32, and was sent out again through CMS Tasmania, becoming superintendent of the Emerald River mission on Groote Eylandt. Read of his work and […]

05. John Cameron Memorial Window

Arriving in Van Diemen’s Land in 1837, John Cameron was a successful businessman and landowner. He was a strong supporter of St. John’s Church, and commissioned Ferguson and Urie of Melbourne to create the beautiful Ascension window, likely Launceston’s most splendid example of the craft of stained glass making during the height of the gothic […]

06. George Hopkins – Organ Builder

Born in 1872 in Rochester, England, to a family with strong musical traditions, organist and organ builder George Hopkins arrived at St. John’s in 1912, to find the 1862 organ, formerly in the west gallery of old St. John’s, had been moved, more or less as it was, into the cavernous new organ loft.  In […]

07. Charlotte Balfour – First Burial

Launceston residents will be familiar with Balfour Street, named after Lieutenant-Colonel William Balfour, who was appointed civil and military commandant of the Port Dalrymple settlement in 1825, and came to Launceston with his wife Charlotte and children in April that year. Tragically, she fell ill and died on 22nd August, aged just 33, leaving behind […]

08. North’s Grand Vision

Even in the first decades of St. John’s Church, the size of the building was seen as inadequate for the growing town. A small eastern chancel, added in 1866, hardly improved the seating capacity, and by 1884, Leslie Corrie had drawn up a plan, never implemented, to double the length of the building. Corrie’s business […]

09. The hidden walls – 1938

While earlier plans for the extension of St. John’s proposed a lengthening of the building eastwards, and some felt a complete demolition was best, Alexander North’s 1893 plan included the vast dome area and transepts, the present chancel and sanctuary, the vestries and organ loft. Stage 2, implemented in 1938, would see the nave de-roofed […]

10. Burial Ground Controversy

By default, the majority of the population of colonial Launceston, convict and free, was considered “Church of England”, and the “Episcopalian Burial Ground” was consecrated in 1823 in what is now Cypress Street. An estimated 9000 people were buried there before its closure in 1929. The site apparently went through long periods of neglect, and […]

11. Grammar Connection and Tragedy in Stained Glass

Launceston Church Grammar School occupied what is now the Colonial Hotel, adjoining St. John’s in Elizabeth St, and connections with the church were historically strong. When the great “extension” was completed in 1911, the side chapel was referred to as the Grammar Chapel. As the building drew towards completion, sponsors were invited to contribute stained […]

12. Heroic Fernau – The Smallpox Epidemic

Revd Felix Albert Fernau, curate at St. John’s 1902-6, was a remarkable, if nomadic character, who made a name for himself caring for victims of epidemics and leprosy, but also worked as a missionary in New Guinea and in the outback. He was part of a group of doctors, nurses and clergy who risked their […]

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https://resources.allsaints.network/wp-content/uploads/Knopwood-baptisms-and-marriages-at-Launceston-1811-1814.pdf

https://resources.allsaints.network/documents/History/1914_St_Johns_Launceston_Souvenir.pdf

https://resources.allsaints.network/documents/History/The_Building_of_St_Johns_Launceston-PG_Webb.pdf

St. John's Church in 2020
Old Interior west
1879 painting of St John’s from east signed RJ or RS Formerly owned by St. John’s Church but now held by Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Launceston

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