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History
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The first Anglican Church services in Bayswater were held in the Lutheran Church in 1898 and was sited near the intersection of Mountain Highway and Sydney Rd. As Bayswater was a rural area at this time there was a difficulty in having a regular clergyman to conduct services.

In 1905 a clergy house was established in Ferntree Gully were several clergymen and students from Trinity Theological College lived and it is they who provided the clergy who travelled on horseback to churches in the district of Vermont, Monbulk, Montrose, Bayswater and Macclesfield.

Since Anglican clergy conducted regular services at the Lutheran church and there was difficulty in getting Lutheran pastors, many of the Lutheran congregation attended the Anglican services and later made up the congregation of St Stephen’s Church of England when it opened in 1908

l Half an acre of land was donated by a Mr. Ridge in High Street as a site for the new church and the building was erected by Mr. Garrett a builder from Box Hill. The church was dedicated on 28th November 1908 by the Very Rev. The Vicar General, Archdeacon Hindley, assisted by the Revs. Canon Tucker, E.J. Withycombe B.A., C.A.M. Cerutty ThL., and the staff , clergy and reader from the clergy house.

On the 11th August 1920 the district was subdivided into three parochial districts each having their own priest in charge. The Rev Thomas McKeon was the first Vicar of the Vermont Bayswater Parochial district..

St Stephen’s became an independent parish in the 1960’s with the Rev Harry Ellson as the first parish priest.

1920 - 1923 Rev Thomas McKeon
1924 - 1926 Rev Craig
1927 - 1936 Rev Ernest T Leslie
1937 - 1941 Rev Jack Lee
1942 - 1942 Rev Berkeley Addison Rowell
1942 - 1947 Rev Frederick Alfred Philby
1947 - 1952 Rev A.G. Reynolds
1952 - 1960 Rev R.G. Mountney
1960 - 1966 Rev Harry Ellson
1966 - 1979 Rev Geoffrey Moorhouse
1979 - 1984 Fr Ian Johnstone
1984 - 1998 Fr Peter Wilson
1998 - 2001 Fr David Still
2002 - 2007 Fr Ronald White
2008 -  

St Stephen’s Church of England was a brown timber building in High Street. During the years alterations were made to the church building and many donations made for furnishings and decoration of the church. Around the time of the first world war services at the Lutheran Church ceased. Most of the remaining Lutheran families had joined other churches in Bayswater, including St Stephen’s. In 1923 the Lutheran Church building was moved to the site in High Street where it became the church hall. A supper room was added to the building. The bell which had been imported from Germany for the Lutheran Church by Mr. Carl Schmolling in 1888 was also donated to St Stephen’s. This is the bell that still calls the congregation to mass each Sunday.

A Book of Remembrance was established in 1939 and it records some of the donations and additions to the church between 1939 and 1955.

A pamphlet published in 1957 describes plans for the parish buildings. An architect had begun preparing plans for a new parish hall, a new floor had been put in the old hall and the lower walls had been lined. These were to be painted by the young people of the parish. With the growth of the parish a vicarage would be needed as the parish would be large enough to have its own vicar. The vicarage was built in 1960.

Bayswater continued to grow and in 1968 the decision was made that the church should move from the shopping and business area of Bayswater to the new residential area of Western Bayswater and Wantirna.

In 1974 the church building was moved from High Street to its present site in Warruga Avenue. The building was renamed the Kleinert Hall and is now the St Laurence Chapel. A new building consisting of a church, narthex and a hall as well as a vicarage were built on the Warruga Avenue/Phyllis Street corner between 1975 and 1977. The dedication service for the new church was held on Tuesday 28th November 1978.

During the past twenty years there have been modifications to the church building. The crying room has been removed, the sanctuary was lowered and the lighting in the church changed and decorations have been added to the church.

The above is an extract of a written account but not in its entirety of the history of St Stephen’s written by Vicki Court