St Mary's church - Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 54° 06.916 W 003° 13.973
30U E 484776 N 5996372
St Mary's RC church, Duke St., Barrow-in-Furness.
Waymark Code: WM188M5
Location: North West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/19/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member fi67
Views: 2

"St Mary’s Church in the Parish of Our Lady of Furness opened for worship on the 28th August 1867. It was the first Catholic Church built in the Borough of Furness. The building is situated on Duke Street along with Ramsden Square and the Town Hall. St Mary’s is a Neo-Gothic style Church and was built in a prominent position in the heart of the town on land which was presented by the Duke of Devonshire. The Church was designed by Edward Welby Pugin, a famous architect who designed and completed more than one hundred Catholic churches. There is a chapel of Our Lady placed adjacent to the Altar. The chapel serves as a quiet area in solitude surrounded by the light of the stained glass windows.

In 1976 St Mary’s Church received Grade II listed status by English Heritage. In 2016 the Heritage Lottery Fund supported the restoration of the church spire. The spire was an addition to the original building in 1888 and is a much loved feature of the town’s skyline which has been preserved for future generations. This funding has assisting in allowing us to keep the church open and to continue its valuable work in serving the local community.

St Mary’s Church is open daily from 10-3pm and visitors are welcome to explore the church for themselves outside of service or event times and/or to join us for services and events."

SOURCE - (visit link)

"Built to the designs of E. W. Pugin and the first and the finest Catholic church in Barrow, a planned nineteenth-century town built on the fortunes of the ironworks. The tower and spire are a major local landmark, and the church and (later) presbytery a composition of high townscape value, on the edge of the town centre conservation area.

Barrow is a planned nineteenth century town, with wide tree-lined streets and many imposing civic and commercial buildings. The two chief landowners at the time of the town’s expansion were the Duke of Devonshire and the Duke of Buccleuch. In 1840 the population numbered only about 300. The fortunes of the town were transformed by the arrival of the railway in 1846 and the discovery soon afterwards of fabulous iron deposits. The ironworks were established by 1859, and by 1876 was the world’s largest. The demand for labour was fed by Irish immigrants, and a large contingent of Cornish tin miners. Building iron ships was a natural development for the ironworks; shipbuilding began in 1869, and was taken over by Vickers in 1897. At its peak (1921) the population of Barrow was 74,000. The shipyard remains a major employer in the town, although only about 4,000 work there now. Other industries have developed, but the town remains an area of high deprivation.

Owing chiefly to the arrival of Irish immigrants, by 1863 there were said to be 500 Catholics in Barrow. To meet their spiritual needs a site was obtained from the Duke of Devonshire (in what is now Duke Street), at no cost. Initially served by a priest from Ulverston, the church of St Mary was completed in 1867 to the designs of E. W Pugin. The tower and spire were added in 1888 under Fr Caffrey – he also built the baptistry and confessionals (1894). About the same time, a large presbytery was added to the east of the church, to the designs of James O’Byrne of Liverpool.

List description -

II

Catholic church. 1866-67. By EW Pugin; tower dated 1888; sacristy and confessionals added 1894. Snecked red sandstone with grey ashlar sandstone dressings, slate roof. Orientated north-west/south- east: ritual orientation used here. 6-bay nave with west porch and lean-to aisles, 5-stage tower with spire at west end of south aisle; north aisle has octagonal baptistry at north-west corner and 3 small confessionals on north side; semi-octagonal chancel with small south chapel and north sacristy in link to presbytery (qv). Gothic Revival style; lancet windows with hoodmoulds and Geometrical rose windows. Nave: lean-to vestibule against west gable has central doorway with ogee-moulded arch, hoodmould with head-carved stops and roundel in coped gable with cross. Main gable has tall, cusped lancets; short dripmould; elaborate rose window with hoodmould; string course and 2 louvres beneath apex of coped gable with kneelers and cross. South aisle: deeply-chamfered plinth; offset buttresses; 6 lancets each with trefoil above a transom; 3-light chapel window on right. Clerestorey has 14 small lancets the easternmost pair in gabled projection with rose window and cross. North aisle: 2- light west window; baptistry has battered plinth, lancets and hipped roof. Confessionals under hipped roofs set below eaves of aisle; clerestorey as before. Tower: ashlar ground floor (date on Duke Street side). Set-back buttresses with traceried panels and gablets flank pointed west door; the buttresses rise 3 further stages. Above door is a statue of Mary and Child under crocketed canopy set between lancets; lancet above; string course below triple lancets to 4th stage. Buttresses end at an offset from which rise octagonal corner turrets to flank single-light belfry openings set between Ionic columns; blind arcading links the corner turrets which then rise as pinnacles. Slender ashlar spire with tall lucarnes, band of quatrefoils and cross. Chancel: semi-octagonal and under hipped end of main roof; triple lancets beneath continuous hoodmould, roof finial. Short and low south chapel with rose window to east.

INTERIOR: west gallery with organ. Arcades: square bases with broaches and moulding; round piers with octagonal and carved capitals; tall moulded arches, the easternmost pair are narrower. Paired clerestorey windows linked by hoodmoulds. Scissor-braced and arch-braced trusses. Chancel: ornate reredos; the triple lancets have colonettes and hoodmoulds; columns on angel corbels support radial, arch-braced roof with boss. Altar with marble colonnettes and crucifix under crocketed canopy flanked by statues of saints within niches. Lady Chapel has alabaster reredos with Mary and Child beneath a canopy. Stained glass in south aisle marked ‘Barnell, Newcastle’. Built at a cost of £5,000-6,000, the tower costing a further £2,950. Statue over west door of tower by ‘Miss Rogerson of Liverpool’ "

SOURCE - (visit link)

Mass times are listed on the website - (visit link)
Type of Church: Church

Status of Building: Actively in use for worship

Date of organization: 01/01/1858

Date of building construction: 08/28/1867

Dominant Architectural Style: Neo-Gothic

Archdiocese: Liverpool

Diocese: Lancaster

Address/Location:
St Mary RC church
Duke St.
Barrow-in-Furness , Cumbria England
LA14


Relvant Web Site: [Web Link]

Associated Shrines, Art, etc.: Not listed

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