Church of St Mary, Lowe House

Church of St Mary, Lowe House

South side of the church
Coordinates: 53°27′26″N 2°44′25″W / 53.4571°N 2.7404°W / 53.4571; -2.7404
OS grid reference SJ5093595844
Location St Helens, Merseyside
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website StMarysLoweHouse.co.uk
History
Founded 1924 (1924)
Architecture
Status Active
Functional status Parish church
Heritage designation Grade II listed
Designated 11 September 1951
Architect(s) Charles B. Powell[1]
Administration
Parish St Mary's and St. Thomas of Canterbury
Deanery St Helens - St Monica Pastoral Area
Archdiocese Liverpool
Province Liverpool (aka Northern)
Clergy
Archbishop Most Rev. Malcolm McMahon O.P.
Priest(s) Rev. Thomas Gagie

The Church of St Mary, Lowe House is a Roman Catholic Parish church situated on the North Road in St Helens, Merseyside. It was founded in 1924 and staffed by the Society of Jesus until 1981. It is a Grade II listed building with Romanesque and Gothic features.[2]

History

Foundation stone

Origin

The church is named St Mary's Lowe House because it was built on a piece of land that was occupied by Lowe House. It was given in 1793 by Winefred Eccleston née Lowe, the widow of John Gorsuch Eccleston, the owner of Eccleston Hall, in Eccleston, outside St Helens.[3]

Foundation

On that piece of land a chapel was built to accommodate the growing Catholic population in the town. The church itself was built in 1924. The foundation stone was laid by the Archbishop of Liverpool, Frederick William Keating on 11 May 1924. The scale was decided on by Fr Reginald Riley SJ who wanted a larger size church for the local Catholic community. He was parish priest at the church from 1912 to 1946.[3] The church was opened three years later, in 1929, and was designed by Charles B. Powell, an Irish architect who did other architectural work for the Jesuits in Dublin.[1] It is colloquially referred to as 'The Basilica of St Helens' and 'The Poor Man's Cathedral' by people in St Helens, because construction of the church was funded by donations from the local population during a time of economic struggle.[3]

The dome, designed in a Romanesque crossed with Gothic style, is on the point where the nave, sanctuary and transepts meet, sitting on a castellated octagonal tower. There is a copper cross on the dome that is 16 feet high. It was given to the church by the family of a local builder, Mr James Yearsley whose company helped lay the foundations.[3] The clock face on the 130 ft tall tower is set in gold mosaic.

Carillon

A major feature of the clock tower is the historic Carillon (bells playable in musical notation by a keyboard, rather than in sequences by ropes). Cast and built by renowned bellfounders John Taylor & Co. of Loughborough, it is the largest in the North West of England housing 47 bells.[4] The Carillon is regularly played and there are also occasional recitals by visiting Carillonneurs.

Parish

On 27 July 1980, the head of the Jesuits in Britain announced to the congregation that, as of Easter 1981, the church would no longer be staffed by Jesuits and would be handed over to the Archdiocese of Liverpool.[5]

In 2010, the parish was merged with the nearby Holy Cross and St Helen parish in the centre of St Helens to become the parish of Holy Cross and St Mary. However in 2014, following Archdiocesan changes, St.Mary's, Lowe House was paired with the parish of St. Thomas of Canterbury, Dentons Green under its Parish Priest, Fr Thomas Gagie. The church of Holy Cross & St. Helen reverted to a single parish under a new Parish Priest.

Every week, the church has two Masses every Sunday, one at 11:00am and the other at 4:30pm. Also, there are Masses at 9:15am on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Interior

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Dictionary of Irish Architects retrieved 15 August 2013
  2. British listed buildings retrieved 14 August 2013
  3. 1 2 3 4 History from StMarysLoweHouse.co.uk retrieved 15 August 2013
  4. "St Mary's Lowe House Carillion". British Carillon Society.
  5. Society of Jesus (December 1980). "Province News". Letters and Notices 84: 133.

External links

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