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St Thomas' Church, Birmingham

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Location
  
Denomination
  
Completed
  
1829

Address
  
Birmingham B15 1LZ, UK

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

Demolished
  
1940 (partial)

Architect
  
Country
  
Consecrated
  
22 October 1829

Capacity
  
800 people

Opened
  
1829

Dedication
  
Groundbreaking
  
22 October 1826

St Thomas' Church, Birmingham

Similar
  
Bishop Ryder Church - B, Christ Church - Birmingham, St Barnabas' Church - E, St Martin in the Bull Ring, St George's Church - Edgbaston

St Thomas’ Church, Bath Row, Birmingham is a former Church of England parish church in Birmingham.

History

It was built as a Commissioners' church. The foundation stone of the church was laid by Folliott Cornewall, Bishop of Worcester on 22 October 1826 and the church was built to designs of the architect Thomas Rickman and consecrated by Cornewall on 29 October 1829.

Part of the parish was taken to form the parish of St Asaph's when this was consecrated in 1868.

It was restored in 1893 under the supervision of the architect Frank Barlow Osborn when the old high-back pews and pew platforms were removed, the church was cleaned and renovated, and the organ restored by Walter James Bird of Birmingham, all at a cost of £1,200.

On the night of 11 December 1940, during World War II, all but the tower and classical west portico was destroyed by German bombs. The parish was united with Immanuel Church, which had closed in 1939, and Immanuel Church was reopened.

The remaining portico and tower have been preserved and are now part of St. Thomas' Peace Garden.

References

St Thomas' Church, Birmingham Wikipedia


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