Neha Patil (Editor)

St Patrick's Cathedral, Auckland

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Location
  
Auckland Central City

Denomination
  
Catholic

Dedicated
  
23 February 1908

Phone
  
+64 9-303 4509

Designated as world heritage site
  
6 September 1984

Country
  
New Zealand

Founded
  
1841

Bishop
  
Patrick Dunn

Founder
  
Jean Baptiste Pompallier

Architect
  
E. Mahoney and Son

St Patrick's Cathedral, Auckland

Website
  
St Patricks Cathedral Parish

Address
  
43 Wyndham St, Auckland, 1010, New Zealand

Architectural type
  
Gothic Revival architecture

Similar
  
Crystal Mountain, Maungauika/North Head Historic R, Auckland Domain, Manukau Heads Lighthouse, Kelly Tarlton's Sea Life

Profiles

The Cathedral of St Patrick and St Joseph (usually known as St Patrick's Cathedral) is the Cathedral of the Catholic Bishop of Auckland. It is situated on the corner of Federal Street and Wyndham St in Central Auckland, New Zealand.

Contents

Masses

The normal Mass times are:

  • Sunday, 8am, 11am, 4.30pm & 7pm;
  • Monday to Friday, 7 am & 12.15 pm;
  • Public Holidays and Saturdays, 8.30am.
  • Origins

    It is on the original site granted by the Crown to Jean Baptiste Pompallier, the first Bishop, on 1 June 1841. To minister to the 300 or 400, mostly Irish, Catholics in Auckland in the 1840s, a wooden chapel, clergy house and school room (the first amenity ready for use) were opened and blessed on 29 January 1843. Work soon began on a more permanent church. In 1845, the Australian architect Walter Robinson arrived in Auckland on the encouragement of Pompallier and he was commissioned to design a stone church. The new church was built on the original grant of land and situated on the corner of Chapel Street (now Federal Street) and Wyndham St.

    Cathedral

    At first referred to as a chapel, and then a church, St Patrick's became the Catholic Cathedral when Auckland was made a diocese in 1848 and when Pompallier, after a visit to France and Rome, returned to Auckland in April 1850, and made the city (then the capital of New Zealand) his headquarters. This simple, plain church, seating 700, was built of locally quarried hammered scoria and had a very substantial appearance similar to others designed by Walter Robinson at this time.

    Expansion

    On 4 May 1884, the foundation stone of a new (24.4m by 12.2m) nave was laid, and the old stone church became the transept, the altar, for which a recess was built in 1895, being on the east wall. The architect for this major addition was Edward Mahoney. Between 1884 and 1885, the nave was extended according to Edward's scheme. The nave had a tower, and the bells for this were brought from Rome. The organ was brought from Brompton Oratory, London for £600. The new addition was opened on 15 March 1885 by Archbishop Redwood, the Archbishop of Wellington.

    Edward Mahoney's son and architectural partner, Thomas Mahoney, was ultimately responsible, by 1907, for the final demolition of the 1848 church, the further extension of the nave (by 12.2 metres), the addition of a sanctuary, the construction of four sacristies and two side chapels, and the addition of three ample entrance porches (one constituting the Baptistry). The building was transformed from a modest structure into a large and impressive building befitting its status as the Catholic cathedral of Auckland. On 23 February 1908, the newly reconstructed building - the present St Patrick's Cathedral - was opened, in the presence of a capacity congregation of 1,300, by Cardinal Moran the Archbishop of Sydney.

    Consecration

    On 1 September 1963, St Patrick's Cathedral, free of debt and built in permanent materials, was solemnly consecrated by Archbishop Liston.

    Connections

  • A grapevine outside the cathedral is believed to have come from a vine brought to New Zealand by Bishop Pompallier.
  • In 1940, after a requiem Mass at Sacred Heart Basilica, Wellington and a train journey, the body of New Zealand Prime Minister Michael Joseph Savage, who had died in office, rested in the Cathedral before being interred at Bastion Point where the Savage Memorial was constructed.
  • St Patrick's Cathedral (especially its spire) was the climactic location in the 1988 Vincent Ward-directed film The Navigator: A Medieval Odyssey.
  • A major restoration programme was completed in 2007. This involved a major reordering of the interior of the Cathedral.
  • The Cathedral is registered as a historic place.
  • George Michael Lenihan OSB (1858-1910), fifth Bishop of Auckland (1896-1910), and John Mackey (1918-2014), ninth Bishop of Auckland (1974–1983) are buried in the Cathedral
  • Administrators

    The Administrators of the Cathedral have included the following priests:

    References

    St Patrick's Cathedral, Auckland Wikipedia