All Saints' Anglican Church, St. Kilda East
The church is known as a fashionable venue for weddings, and the Australian Dictionary of Biography lists numerous notable marriages.
Architecture and interior
Billing, a pupil of Sir George Gilbert Scott, designed a long nave with side aisles. The church, built of bluestone with Tasmanian freestone dressings, is considered the largest Anglican parish church in the southern hemisphere, capable of seating up to 1400 people. Although the original plan for a 41-meter tower was never realized owing to financial constraints, All Saints' stands as an impressive example of Gothic architecture.
Near the entrance of the church is the baptistry and a WW1 and WW2 sandstone sculpture memorial of parishioners who had died as a result of the conflict. Along the walls of the nave and toward the north and south transepts are various stained glass windows, depicting events in the life of Jesus Christ, and of many saints. This includes a window depicting Judas Iscariot, possibly the only church window dedicated to him in Australia.
Known for its stencilled chancel decorations, the church features elaborate decorations, most notably in the sanctuary, which hosts a marble altar. As with most Anglican churches built in the same period, the altar was designed to be the main focus of the church rather than the pulpit, intended for a more Catholic style of sacramentally-centred worship.
In the north transept, next to the sanctuary, is the Chapel of Our Lady, used for weekday Masses. Inside it is an oratory dedicated to Our Lady of Walsingham.
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The nave
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Chancel and sanctuary
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War memorial
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Baptistry
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Chapel of Our Lady
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Our Lady of Walsingham Shrine
Liturgical traditions
All Saints' conducts Anglo-Catholic style devotional and liturgical practices based on the English Missal, with ample use of incense and the wearing of complete sets of vestments for clergy and servers. Traditional English from the Book of Common Prayer is used throughout the liturgy, with traditional hymns and plainsong chants accompanying the worship.
The church supports a rich musical life, with John O'Donnell as music director, maintaining a traditional parish choir of men and boys, along with a girls' choir, called the St. Hildegard Singers. Collectively, they are called the All Saints' Singers.
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Procession at Christmas Midnight Mass
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Consecration of the host
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Gospel reading
Parish priests
All Saints' has had a succession of parish priests, with the current 16th vicar being Fr. René Knaap. The church continues to uphold traditional Anglican doctrine, ministry and worship.
Adjacent to the church is the Vicarage, built in 1860, where the parish priests live, showcasing polychrome brickwork.
Gregory hall
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/90/Allsaints_parish_hall.jpg/220px-Allsaints_parish_hall.jpg)
Built in 1910–11, Gregory Hall is an integral part of All Saints' complex, representing abstracted Gothicism with its beaten copper panel. It was named in honour of the church's first vicar and founder, Fr. Gregory. Presently, it has been leased out and transformed into a gym
Founded in 1871 and being operated in Gregory Hall, All Saints' Grammar School was one of the earliest church-associated schools. The school saw periods of success and decline, eventually closing in 1937.