Hi Guys I don't seem to have received the original of this one but this came up as a snip: "I wondered if all of the following churches were Huguenot. Allhallows London Wall, Saint Martin in the Fields, Worchester, Saint Benet Pauls Wharf, and Saint Nicholas Cole Abbey in 1801. Most are located in London" The quick answer to the question is no, none of these were Huguenot Churches, especially the London Churches. BUT, don't write them off as not having a large Huguenot first, second or third generation element in their congregation. All Hallows London Wall was one of the City churches, as was St Benet Pauls Wharf, where Huguenot families who were becoming assimilated into the English communities and congregations worshipped, both having Huguenot parishioners shortly after the French Church was founded in the 1570s. Similarly, St Martin in the Fields, St Annes Soho (where my ancestors worshipped and had their familial rites of passage) together with St Pancras Old Church and St Mary's, Marylebone, were parishes where Huguenots and their descendants quickly became part of the congregation. As we have discussed here many times, assimilation happened quickly for the Huguenots, those choosing to live as Englishmen becoming part of the congregations/communities much quicker than those who maintained their England based French connections, tho it did not stop Huguenot families continuing to inter-marry long after the families had left the mainstream Huguenot church structure. Hope this helps Regards Tony Fuller