Some of the industries and commercial businesses depicted in the 1984 glass have since left the area. The latter range includes buildings as diverse as Sampson House, the Lloyds Bank Computer Centre, Sea Containers House, the Kirkaldy Testing Museum and a J Sainsbury supermarket. The first range memorably includes a London Transport bus. The church has two large sequences of stained glass, one of 1959 by Kenneth Bunton, the other of 1984 celebrating the church's 25th anniversary by John Lawson, both showing features of life within the parish. Today this is an office location north of Southwark Station on the London Underground Jubilee line, and forms part of the London Borough of Southwark. Its jurisdiction was outside that of the Bishop of Winchester's ' Liberty of the Clink' to its east and the Archbishop of Canterbury's Manor of Lambeth to its west. Its parish coincided with the manor of Paris Garden, mentioned by Shakespeare in his play Henry VIII as being, at that time, a disreputable place. It is also the home of the South London Industrial Mission. Marshall is commemorated in the porch of the church by his coat of arms and also the attached church hall is also named after him. The garden was renovated in 2000 with support from the MPGA, amongst others. The position in which it landed is marked with a stone cross, and is near to the drinking fountain which remains in place and is Grade II listed. The burning cross from the church fell into the churchyard, scorching the ground. The church was destroyed by bombing in 1941. Those works included a drinking fountain donated by the philanthropist John Passmore Edwards. In 1900 the Metropolitan Public Gardens Association laid out the churchyard as a public garden, and it was opened by the Bishop of Rochester that year (the parish then being in the Diocese of Rochester). The churchyard was closed to burials in 1856. By 1741 the new Christ Church had been completed in Italian Romanesque style with a clocktower rising in three stages from the ground, surmounted by an octagonal lantern and cupola. By an Act of Parliament dated 1738, the trustees were empowered to demolish the church and rebuild it in an improved enclosure. The first had been built on marshy ground, and by the 1720s was in a poor condition and collapsed. The first charge on the charity is the maintenance of Christchurch which they have completely rebuilt in 1738. The beneficiaries are Rectors of parishes of the Church of England. The John Marshall Trustees are independent of the parochial charities and the wealth they have accumulated for its objects are distributed over most of the counties of Kent, Surrey (including those parts now in Greater London) and Lincolnshire. This charity still provides for these purposes. His will, of 1627, provided from 1637 and directed that a new church should be built and a Rector be appointed and paid for in that Manor, the most westerly part of St Saviour's parish. This was previously part of the St Saviour’s parish. The parish of Christ Church, Surrey was created by Act of Parliament in 1682 in the manor of Paris Garden as a result of the gift under the direction of the executors of John Marshall, a member of a Southwark family of “whitebakers”.
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