Puneet Varma (Editor)

St Peter's Church, Woolton, Liverpool

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OS grid reference
  
SJ 423 869

Denomination
  
Anglican

Status
  
Parish church

Phone
  
+44 151 428 6810

Country
  
England

Website
  
St Peter's, Woolton

Opened
  
1887

St Peter's Church, Woolton, Liverpool

Location
  
Church Road, Woolton, Liverpool, Merseyside

Address
  
The Simon Peter Centre, Church Rd, Liverpool L25 5JF, UK

Diocese
  
Anglican Diocese of Liverpool

Architectural styles
  
Gothic Revival architecture, Perpendicular Style

Similar
  
St Peter's Roman Catholic, 251 Menlove Avenue, 20 Forthlin Road, Liverpool Central railway st, Toxteth Park Cemetery

St Peter's Church is in Church Road, Woolton, Liverpool, Merseyside, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Liverpool South Childwall, the archdeaconry of Liverpool, and the diocese of Liverpool. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building. It is one of the largest parish churches in Liverpool, and its bell tower stands at the highest point of the city. The church also has connections with The Beatles.

Contents

History

In 1826 a chapel was built near the side of the present church. It was built in sandstone and could hold about 200 people. The chapel was in Neoclassical style. The population of Woolton continued to grow, and the style of the church was disliked by the congregation. A number of wealthy merchants were living in the area, and it was decided to build a new church. The foundation stone for this was laid in 1886. The new church was designed by the local architects Grayson and Ould, and was completed in 1887. An extension was added to the west of the church in 1989, which includes an eight-sided hall.

Exterior

St Peter's is constructed in red sandstone. It is a large church in Perpendicular style. The church provides seating for nearly 500 people. Its plan consists of a nave, north and south four-bay aisles under separate gables, a south porch, a north transept, a chancel, a three-bay north chapel, a south vestry, and a southwest tower. The tower is 90 feet (27 m) high. It has angle buttresses, a canted turret in the southeast angle, paired two-light bell openings, a cornice. gargoyles, an embattled parapet, and pinnacles. The windows along the sides of the aisles have three lights, and the west window has five lights. There are four-light windows in the transept and the chapel, and a seven-light east window.

Interior

Inside the church are five-bay arcades carried on quatrefoil columns. The nave has a hammerbeam roof, and in the chapel is a canted, stencilled ceiling. The reredos contains five niches containing paintings dating from 1905 by Sigismund Goetze. The octagonal font is in alabaster, and has a traceried cover. The pulpit is also in alabaster, and is decorated with a frieze of angels. There are wrought iron screens to the chancel and the chapel. In the chancel is a sedilia with cusped arches and pinnacles. Most of the stained glass is by C. E. Kempe, and there are two windows by Morris & Co. Also in the church is a memorial to the First World War by Heaton, Butler and Bayne. The original pipe organ was designed by Foster and Andrews in 1895. This was rebuilt by Rushworth and Dreaper in 1945, and refurbished in 1994 by David Wells. The organ has three manuals, 38 stops, and 2338 pipes. The tower contains a ring of eight bells.

Connection with the Beatles

On 6 July 1957, John Lennon first met Paul McCartney in the church hall of St Peter's when Lennon was playing with his group, The Quarrymen. McCartney eventually joined the group, which later became The Beatles. In the churchyard of St Peter's is the grave of Eleanor Rigby, who became the subject for one of The Beatles' songs. Also in the churchyard is the grave of Lennon's uncle, George Toogood Smith, with whom he lived as a child.

References

St Peter's Church, Woolton, Liverpool Wikipedia