Puneet Varma (Editor)

St Mary's Church, Widnes

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OS grid reference
  
SJ 513,838

Country
  
England

Website
  
St Mary, Widnes

Opened
  
1910

Phone
  
+44 151 423 3881

Location
  
Widnes, Cheshire

Denomination
  
Anglican

Consecrated
  
1910

Capacity
  
770

Architect
  
Sharpe, Paley and Austin

St Mary's Church, Widnes

Address
  
St Mary's Rd, Widnes WA8 0DP, UK

Similar
  
St John the Evangelist's Church, St Mary's Church - Dodleston, St Mark's Church - Antrobus, All Saints Church - Scholar G, All Saints Church - Harthill

St Mary's Church is in the West Bank area of Widnes, Cheshire, England. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building. It is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Liverpool, the archdeaconry of Warrington and the deanery of Widnes. Together with the churches of St Paul, Widnes, and St Mary, Hale, it forms the South Widnes Team. It has been described as "the last great church masterpiece" created by the Lancaster architects Austin and Paley.

Contents

History

The first church in West Bank, known as Widnes Dock Church and dedicated to St Mary, was opened in 1858. This church was never completed and consisted only of the nave. It had been built on chemical waste which subsided, leading to bulging of the walls and twisting of the roof. In the early 1900s a new site was obtained near the promenade, and money was raised for a new church. The foundation stone was laid on 14 May 1908 and the church was opened on 12 November 1910. The church was designed by Austin and Paley, cost £16,669 in total (equivalent to £1,530,000 in 2015), which included £5,400 for the site, and provided seating for 770 people.

Exterior

The church is built in red flecked sandstone, and the nave roof is in Ruabon tiles. The aisle roofs are in lead. Its plan consists of a five-bay nave with a clerestory, north and south aisles which embrace a west tower, and north and south transepts, a chancel. The northwest porch is set at an angle to the church and the south porch is perpendicular to it. The church is built in Perpendicular style. The north transept is in one bay and includes the organ. The south transept is in three bays and forms a Lady chapel. The tower has a projecting octagonal staircase on the southeast corner and buttresses on the southeast corner. An inscribed frieze of the Te Deum runs around the tower and below the parapet of the south and east sides of the church.

Interior

The furnishings are of oak and were designed by the architects. The font is made of Darley Dale stone. The stained glass in the east window depicts the Ascension and an Apocalyptic Vision and was designed by Shrigley and Hunt. The three-manual organ was built by Wm. Hill and Son in 1902 and restored and enlarged between 1936 and 1947 by Henry Willis & Sons.

References

St Mary's Church, Widnes Wikipedia