St Mark’s started out as an iron mission-room, built in Fourth Avenue, Bush Hill Park, by the vicar of Enfield (St Andrew’s) in 1885 and served by clergy from the parish church. The permanent church of St Mark was consecrated in 1893 as a chapel of ease to St Andrew’s, to serve the new suburban area which had grown up around Bush Hill Park station.
An independent parish was formed in 1903 and the vicar appointed by the Bishop of London, with whom the patronage has remained. The church, a wide, light, aisled building with nave, chancel, and north and south chapels, was designed by JEK and JP Cutts in a plain early English style and built of red brick with stone dressings. It was not completed until 1915; and a spire, which was planned for the north-west tower, was never built.
An diocesan architect’s report on a Cutts Brothers church in another part of London described it as “architecturally uninspired; but spacious and with a certain dignity”. We are grateful for the faintest of praise; but since the outside of St Mark’s does look a bit forbidding, the light and colourful interior comes as a nice surprise.
The single tolling bell, cast by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry who restored and rehung it on the western elevation in 2006, is controlled electronically. Since 1910 the church has maintained worship in the Catholic tradition of the Church of England