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Lincoln Memorial Tower

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stand-alone building with its own ground floor and entrances, though still integral to the complex. As more memorial funds were raised, the new architects, like E. C. Robins before them, added a lofty spire; raising the tower 200 feet high. The spectacular spire incorporated Robins' concept for an architectural version of 'stars and stripes' - the use of a polychromatic colour scheme of red and white stones.
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as an elevated structure above the centre of the new Congregational chapel. This was adapted in the final scheme by architects Paull and Bickerdike, who kept much of the original design and detailing of the building complex as a whole, but gave greater prominence to the Lincoln Tower. This became a
266: 612: 180:, with a still larger tablet giving the name and purpose of the tower – to commemorate emancipation by the martyred Lincoln, the contribution of half the cost of the tower by American citizens, and as a pledge of international brotherhood. 50:, and paid for partly by Americans. Once part of a complex of nineteenth-century philanthropic institutions sited alongside a Congregational chapel, it is all that now remains of the original design. It is located at the corner of 592: 602: 219:, although the Lincoln Tower survived. In the 1950s a large commercial office block, with an integral Congregational and Baptist chapel and community office space, was planned where the nineteenth-century 94:
The Lincoln Tower is built on the site of an orphanage for females, founded in 1758. When the orphanage closed in the mid nineteenth century, its site was acquired by trustees of the
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on nearby Blackfriars Road, whose own chapel lease was due to expire. This larger site provided them with ample opportunity to fund-raise not only for a new
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was re-located from Surrey Chapel, with a tablet inset into the interior wall above. There was another tablet in memory of his successor,
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style, was widely regarded at the time as one of the best examples of steeple and tower architecture in south-central London.
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The Lincoln Tower within its contemporary setting – a modern office block and integral Christ Church & Upton Chapel
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in London, to Abraham Lincoln, and incorporated this into plans for redevelopment of the former orphanage site.
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tower. The Lincoln Tower, as well as the chapel and adjoining community office space, are presently owned by
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On the Tower's north entrance, above the apex of a large archway, a stone was added bearing the title
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The original design by the architect E. C. Robins, developed in 1873, would have placed the tower and
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List of buildings and monuments honoring presidents of the United States in other countries
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Name plaque of the Lincoln Tower above the original entrance in Westminster Bridge Road
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Congregational chapel and its school and meeting rooms (Hawkstone Hall) had stood.
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Monuments and memorials to presidents of the United States in the United Kingdom
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The Lincoln Tower was opened on 4 July 1876, the centenary of
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Grade II listed buildings in the London Borough of Lambeth
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The pastor of Surrey Chapel at the time was the energetic
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Grade II listed churches in the London Borough of Lambeth
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who had lectured and written extensively in support of
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Index


Gothic revival
Lambeth
London
Abraham Lincoln
Westminster Bridge Road
Kennington Road
Waterloo station
Lambeth North tube station
London
listed building
Christ Church and Upton Chapel

Surrey Chapel
Congregational
Christ Church
Christopher Newman Hall
Abraham Lincoln
abolition
slavery
American Civil War
American independence
Robert C. Schenck
spire
Rowland Hill
James Sherman
Kentish Rag stone
Bath stone
Gothic

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