Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Cathedral of St John the Evangelist, Portsmouth

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OS grid reference
  
SU6392300478

Country
  
England

Consecrated
  
1882

Phone
  
+44 23 9282 6170

Location
  
Portsmouth, Hampshire

Denomination
  
Roman Catholic

Opened
  
August 1882

Architect
  
Joseph Hansom

Cathedral of St John the Evangelist, Portsmouth

Website
  
portsmouth catholiccathedral.org.uk

Address
  
Bishop Crispian Way, Portsmouth PO1 3HQ, UK

Architectural style
  
Gothic Revival architecture

Similar
  
Cathedral of St Michael a, Wrexham Cathedral, Middlesbrough Cathedral, Ayr Cathedral, Northampton Cathedral

Profiles

The Cathedral Church of St John the Evangelist (also known as St John's Cathedral) is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Portsmouth, England. It was opened in 1882 and is the first cathedral to have been built in Portsmouth. It is the mother church of the Portsmouth diocese and seat of the Bishop of Portsmouth, currently the Right Reverend Philip Egan. It was dedicated on 10 August 1882.

The cathedral is one of two cathedral churches in the city, the other being the Church of England Cathedral Church of St Thomas which is located about one mile to the south.

Structure

The cathedral was originally designed by John Crawley in 1877-1881. Crawley died just as building started and his partner Joseph Hansom took over the project and modified the design, working on it until 1896. The church is built of Fareham Red Brick with Portland Stone dressings. Most of the stained-glass windows sustained some bomb damage in 1941, especially those over the high altar. The round window in the south transept was the only one not damaged. An elaborate baldacchino surmounting the high altar was removed in the 1970 reordering. The last part to be built was St Patrick's Chapel in 1924.

References

Cathedral of St John the Evangelist, Portsmouth Wikipedia


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