St. Augustine's Church is an active Anglican church in Pendlebury, Greater Manchester, England. Dedicated to St Augustine, it is part of the benefice of Swinton and Pendlebury along with St Peter's Church in Swinton and All Saints' Church in Wardley. The church is in the Eccles deanery, the archdeaconry of Salford and the diocese of Manchester.[1] The church was granted Grade II* listed status in 1966 but has since been upgraded to Grade I.[2]
St Augustine's Church | |
---|---|
53°30′39″N 2°19′21″W / 53.5107°N 2.3224°W | |
Location | Pendlebury, Greater Manchester |
Country | England |
Denomination | Anglican |
Churchmanship | Anglo-Catholic |
History | |
Dedication | St Augustine |
Consecrated | May 1874 |
Architecture | |
Functional status | Active |
Heritage designation | Grade I |
Architect(s) | George Frederick Bodley |
Architectural type | Church |
Style | Gothic Revival |
Groundbreaking | 1871 |
Completed | 1874 |
Specifications | |
Materials | Red brick |
Administration | |
Province | York |
Diocese | Manchester |
Archdeaconry | Salford |
Deanery | Eccles |
Parish | Swinton and Pendlebury |
Called the "Miners' Cathedral", due to its almost cathedralesque stature, in the heart of a one time coal-mining community, it was also sometimes locally called "Gussie's".
The church is situated on Bolton Road and has a connected primary school.
History
editManchester banker, Edward Stanley Heywood of Heywood's Bank commissioned G. F. Bodley to design the church in March 1870. Its foundation stone was laid in the following September and it was consecrated in May 1874. Heywood paid for its construction, decoration and furnishings. The church was constructed to the design of Bodley and Thomas Garner between 1871 and 1874.[3] The cost, £3,300 (£390,000 in 2023)[4][3] was largely borne by Heywood.
Bodley designed a bell tower for the south-east side, higher than the main roof, but it was not built.[2]
Architecture
editExterior
editThe church is built of red brick and has clay tile roof and stone dressings. It was inspired by the Gothic cathedrals in Albi and Toulouse in France. Its nave and chancel occupy ten bays under a continuous roof. The church has a door at the west end, a porch on the south side and vestry on the north. The bays are separated by shallow weathered buttresses that terminate in triangular gablets above the coped parapet which has pierced quatrefoils above the chancel. The nave and chancel are differentiated by their windows. The nave has three-light windows below blank arches while the chancel has four-light windows with reticulated tracery. The east window between angled buttresses topped by crocketted pinnacles has seven lights decorated with flowing reticulated tracery. The west window has five lights.[2]
Interior
editThe church has large internal buttresses that are pierced by passage aisles and which support high-level arches. The barrel roof is richly painted above chancel. An elaborately carved rood screen separates the nave from the chancel and the sanctuary is raised. The reredos is decorated with painted figures. The organ case, rood screen and sedilia were designed by Bodley.[2] The ornate font on a carved stone is raised from the ground by several steps, and above it is a carved wooden hood suspended from the walls.
Clergy
editThe first vicar, Doctor Alfred Dewes (b. Coventry 1825; d. Pendlebury 1911), was vicar from the consecration of the church in 1874 until his death in 1911. He worked unceasingly throughout the smallpox and cholera outbreaks, helping the poor and afflicted. Both vicar and church were the focal point for the mourning following the Clifton Hall Colliery explosion on 18 June 1885, in which 178 men and boys were killed.[5]
Churchyard
editBelow the east window is a memorial to 64 victims of the Clifton Hall Colliery disaster who were buried in the churchyard. The churchyard also contains war graves of twelve service personnel of the Great War and four of the Second World War.[6]
Reception
editNicholas Pevsner writing in the Buildings of England described the church as one of the greatest and most moving of all Victorian churches, with an interior of "breathtaking majesty and purity".[3]
The church was the subject of drawings and paintings by artist L.S. Lowry[7] who lived at 117 Station Road, Pendlebury, between 1909 and 1948.
Current condition
editIn recent years, several church restoration projects have been completed, including re-pointing southeast side and the addition of toilets and kitchen. The church is in need of at least £1 million for refurbishments to the interior roof and to repair the pointing on the exterior of the church, and is a priority project for English Heritage, who quote it as being "exceptionally important".[8]
See also
editExternal links
editReferences
edit- ^ Church list, anglican.org, retrieved 30 November 2014
- ^ a b c d Historic England, "Church of St Augustine (1067508)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 30 November 2014
- ^ a b c Hartwell, Clare; Hyde, Matthew; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2004). Manchester and the South-East (Rev. and expanded. ed.). New Haven, Conn. [u.a.]: Yale University Press. pp. 558–561. ISBN 0300105835.
- ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
- ^ "English Heritage inspires Greater Manchester to help historic places of worship", Government News Network, retrieved 4 July 2006.
- ^ [1] CWGC Cemetery Report. Breakdown obtained from casualty record.
- ^ Destiny at the dark end of the street, The Tate, retrieved 12 April 2016
- ^ "The Diocese of Manchester: Handling problems in partnership", English Heritage, retrieved 4 July 2006.