Discovery of the Crypts
We are indeed fortunate that when the time came to rebuild St. Bride's after the war there was a band of visionaries, led by the then incumbent, Cyril Armitage, who ensured that Fleet Street should have a twentieth-century church worthy of its long history. But there is also another romance which must be recorded.

The medieval Chapel
This also resulted in St. Bride's having two almost unique series of human remains. These, which are not open to the public, include well over 200 skeletons which are identified in regard to their sex and age at the time of death and thus form a very important source of research into forensic and other forms of medicine. The other series which is estimated by some to include nearly seven thousand human remains, is in a medieval charnel house where all the bones are put in their categories, thigh bone with thigh bone and so on, and laid in chequer-board pattern. This is probably evidence of a land shortage in London even many centuries ago.
Throught the generosity of Sir Max Aitken, the crypts not only display all their ancient archaeological remains but also house a visual statement, designed by John Lansdell, of two thousand years of Church and community in Fleet Street.
The crypt plays a central role in worship at St Bride's: at 8.30am on Monday, Wednesday and Friday there is a service of Holy Communion, and on Tuesday and Thursday, morning prayer. On Sunday mornings it hosts our busy Sunday School.
