Oranges and lemons,
Say the bells of St Clement's.
You owe me five farthings,
Say the bells of St Martin's.
When will you pay me?
Say the bells of Old Bailey.
When I grow rich,
Say the bells of Shoreditch.
When will that be?
Say the bells of Stepney.
I do not know,
Says the great bell of Bow.
Say the bells of St Martin's.
When will you pay me?
Say the bells of Old Bailey.
When I grow rich,
Say the bells of Shoreditch.
When will that be?
Say the bells of Stepney.
I do not know,
Says the great bell of Bow.
1] St Clement Danes. Historian John Stow showed the church was named after Danish King Harold and other Danes buried there. Harold was the son of King Canute and after his death, Harold’s remains were thrown into the Thames by his angry brother. Luckily Harold was found and buried in St Clement Danes churchyard.
The medieval church wasn’t rebuilt until 1640 but very soon after, London was hit by the Great Plague in 1665. The parish of St Clement Danes alone was heavily hit by 1,319 deaths. However the church managed to escape destruction from the Fire of London 1666, only to be declared unsafe and rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren. The spire was rebuilt by James Gibbs c1719, with the original tower being incorporated. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell were congregants there.
The interior was badly damaged in the 1941 Blitz but miraculously the exterior and tower survived, and the remains of the medieval crypt were discovered during WW2. Restored post-WW2, a Latin inscription over the door reads “The Royal Air Force restored it 1958”.
St Clement Eastcheap, on the other hand, was first mentioned in the C11th but unlike the other St Clement WAS destroyed in the 1666 Great Fire and rebuilt by Wren 1683-7. This was yet another church badly damaged in 1940.
2] St Martin’s was probably St Martin's Orgar, a C12th medieval church in Martin Lane. Described by John Stow as small, it was popular with 15th & C16th mayors for a burial place. Here too the Great Fire of 1666 damage was terrible, and although the Tower and nave survived, St Martin was abandoned. French Protestants restored the tower and used it for worship, until it was demolished in 1820
St Martin's Orgar
In the rhyme, its bell chimes you owe me five farthings. This related to the many money lenders who worked around the church. Money lenders loaned money to the poor when they were struggling, making the poor even poorer!
3] Old Bailey was a famous medieval court, not a church, and it did not have any bells! So the bells referred to must be those of St Sepulchre’s, first mentioned in 1137 and called St Sepulchre’s-without-Newgate opposite the courthouse. The bells sing when will you pay me. This refers to those debtors locked up in the notorious Newgate prison, in crowded and stinky conditions. The medieval courthouse was yet another building destroyed by the Great Fire. It was rebuilt in 1674 and Old Bailey is still used as a court today!
This was yet another church gutted by the Great Fire with the outer walls surviving. Famous burials include courtier Thomas Culpeper executed in 1541 for being Queen Catherine Howard’s lover. In close proximity to Newgate prison, posies were handed to the condemned as they passed the church on their way to execution. Note the handbell kept in the church which was rung outside the condemned person’s cell, before execution. St Sepulchre’s-without-Newgate tells us that this church was built just outside of medieval city walls.
St Dustan's
4] St Leonard’s Shoreditch was built in the C12th. In the C18th, part of the tower collapsed during a service. Rebuilt by George Dance the Elder in 1736 who attempted to build the steeple in the same style as that of Mary-le-Bow. This was yet another city church damaged during the Blitz, but luckily was soon repaired. Buried here is Will Somers, Henry VIII’s jester, with a 1560 plaque marking his tomb.
St Leonards Shoreditch
5] St Dunstan’s and All Saints Stepney. The oldest of the Orange and Lemon Churches, a church has stood here for 1000+ years. The churchyard was enlarged to cope with the massive number of 1665 Great Plague deaths: 6,583. A disastrous fire in 1901 destroyed everything, including a Grinling Gibbons carved organ. The funds were raised to repair the church but the C15th roof was irreplaceable. Fortunately St Dunstan’s survived the Blitz, although the areas close to the docks suffered greatly.
Mary-le-Bow
The bells nowadays can be heard tolling on every quarter hour. Thus only people who are born within the sound of the famous Bow Bells are true East London Cockneys. The Great Bell of Bow might refer to the bell which rung always at 9pm, saying that people should go home!
You might like to read Cities of London and Westminster by N Pevsner 1957.