St Mary's Church, Whitchurch

St Mary's, Whitchurch
51°30′48″N 3°13′16″W / 51.5133°N 3.2211°W / 51.5133; -3.2211Coordinates: 51°30′48″N 3°13′16″W / 51.5133°N 3.2211°W / 51.5133; -3.2211
Denomination Anglican
History
Status Active
Consecrated 27 May 1885
Architecture
Functional status Parish church
Heritage designation Grade II
Designated 19 May 1975
Architect(s) John Prichard
Groundbreaking 1883
Completed 1884
Construction cost £3559
Specifications
Materials stone
Administration
Diocese Llandaff

St Mary's Church, Whitchurch is a listed Anglican place of worship in the suburb of Whitchurch, Cardiff.

Early Churches

A church in the locality is first recorded in the twelfth century, though the date of its founding and its dedication are now unknown. At this time, Whitchurch was a chapel of ease to Llandaff Cathedral, and would remain so until the 19th Century. The first church which is known to have carried the dedication to Mary was first erected in the 14th Century. In the 15th or 16th Century, a porch was added, followed later still by a nave, then a belfry of Bath stone. The graveyard dated from 1616, when a licence for baptisms, marriages and burials was obtained. Later alterations to the interior were carried out in 1810. The old church could seat 300. Despite the fact that it was growing too small for the growing population (which the new Melingriffith Tin Plate Works had bolstered to 696), the issue of the church's inadequate facilities would not be addressed for several decades. During the 19th Century, Whitchurch also acquired its first Nonconformist places of worship, with the Whitchurch Methodist Church being founded in c.1820.[1]

Modern Church

As Whitchurch gradually evolved into a suburb over the 19th Century, the population of the district continued to expand. Whitchurch became a separate parish in 1845. The Revd. J.T. Clarke, who became the vicar of St Mary's in 1876, was dissatisfied by the inadequate (and increasingly rundown) church, and began to agitate for a replacement.[2] The new church was finally provided in 1884, located around 300 metres to the north-east from its predecessor. It was designed by John Prichard, and was consecrated for worship in 1885. After its replacement came into use, the old church was largely abandoned and lapsed into decay. It was ruinous by the turn of the 20th Century and was demolished in 1904. Its graveyard remained until being converted into a public garden, St Mary's Gardens, in 1973, which is still extant on Old Church Road[3]. The church became Listed in 1975.[4]

Organisation

The church is now in the Rectorial Benefice of Whitchurch. It has three daughter churches: All Saints (Rhiwbina), All Saints (Llandaff North) and St Thomas's (Birchgrove).

References

  1. "Cardiff Parks". Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  2. "Benefice of Whitchurch". Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  3. "Coflein". Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  4. "britishlistedbuildings". Retrieved 13 February 2018.
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