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ST JOSEPH’S CHURCH, CHANCE STREET, TEWKESBURY
THE STORY OF A BUILDING
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On Thursday 6th
October 1977 an important event took place in the history of St Joseph’s
Parish, Tewkesbury, Bishop Mervyn Alexander came for the ‘Opening and Blessing
of the New Church in honour of St Joseph in Chance Street, Tewkesbury’. Bryan
Little later wrote of the occasion in the magazine ‘Gloucestershire and Avon
Life (February 1978):
‘For the first
time, Roman Catholics in Tewkesbury have found a convenient place of worship
near the centre of the town. Their new church, dedicated to St Joseph, like its
predecessor, has been fitted out in a neat little building first designed as a
telephone exchange, and as the Bishop of Clifton, aptly remarked at the opening
Mass recently, the parishioners, some 500 all told, can now truly feel
themselves to be on a “hot line to Heaven”.’
The brochure for the occasion reminded worshippers of the
following details:
‘The new church in Chance
Street will now replace the old St. Joseph’s on The Mythe, after 107 years as
Tewkesbury’s centre of Catholic worship. The old church was opened on 19th
March 1870 with a service of consecration “largely attended by the Catholic
gentry of the neighbourhood and the surrounding town” according to the
Tewkesbury Register.
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It had been built at the expenses of the Marquis de Lys,
who had lived in Mythe House since 1863, and represented the conversion of a
tumbledown block of stabling belonging to one of the houses on Marquis’s
estate. As much of the old building as possible was retained, with the addition
of windows, niches and buttresses in the Gothic taste then fashionable. The
interior arrangements were plain, for the time, with a boarded floor, open
benches and, initially, no stained glass. The roof of the building was raised,
a vestry added, and a gallery and staircase constructed at the West End for
organ and choir. “The result of the labour expended” wrote the Register’s
correspondent “is that what was recently a dilapidated block of stabling is now
a substantial and neat looking place of worship”. We hope that he would say the
same for our converted telephone exchange.’
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Plans for this move from
the Mythe to Chance Street was the result of a number of contributory factors.
In recent years the little church had become too small for a growing
congregation; it was too remote from the centre of Tewkesbury and some of the
new housing areas and the Mass centres that had been established at the Link
Centre and at Northway were fragmenting parish life. Secondly, the parking
facilities were seriously inadequate and vehicular manoeuvres were treacherous
on the then busy A38, which adjoined the property. Thirdly, in 1952 the
Diocese had purchased a site in Chance Street for a total of £1100. The need
for a new, more central building was evident, and it was hoped that
construction would begin as soon as funds allowed. Christine Collins, writing
in 1994, referred to this purchase as ‘a bequest of land’.
Bryan Little wrote in his article of
1978:
‘More
recently, however, the opportunity came for a church far less costly than a
wholly new building. The Post Office decided to replace its exchange, on a site
next to the land bought by the Catholic authorities, by a larger and more
modern building a few hundred yards away. Now the old exchange, with suitable
alterations, has blossomed as the second St Joseph’s.’
It has been said that various
organisations were interested in purchasing the building including Holy Trinity
Church, which hoped to acquire it as a church hall, but only the Catholic
Church had a realistic hope, as it owned the adjoining land.
In 1921, one of our most senior
parishioners, Almer Page, moved to 20 Chance Street, then called 2 Willow
Cottages. He remembers the church site well recalling the old Barnes,
Richardson and Russell’s Almshouses, which stood across the alleyway on the
land now occupied by Spring Gardens. Beyond were railway sheds and the railway
line down to Healings Mill. Behind the present Presbytery was the firm of
Thomas Walker, which made fairground equipment and Almer remembers the children
testing out the rides! A pathway led down the side of the present church to
these premises.
If one had visited the site of the
church during the 1920s and 30s it would have been largely taken up with
gardens or allotments owned by Mr Walker. Almer Page and a few others
cultivated these gardens and it was said that the soil was very rich indeed.
Almer believes that the iron railings along the church boundary were
probably erected when the market was established
In 1922 Mr Walker removed a pair of
entrance gates and erected on their site a tiled timber garage for his car,
incorporating some old bricks that had been left over when Almer had re-erected
the garden wall of No. 20. Originally the doors of this garage opened on to
Chance Street. During the 1930s Mr Frederick Charles Cook, the Confectioner of
5 Chance Street parked his car here. Between the garage and the present
entrance gates was a blacksmith’s shop, which was run during the late 1930s by
John James Whiteley and Son of 1 and 2, Rope Walk.
In 1938 the Post Office erected the
telephone exchange. It was constructed by Messrs. Collins and Godfrey the
well-known Tewkesbury builders of the Cross, who had premises then at the back
of the Avon boat yard. At the time of its construction, the doors were at the
Presbytery end, there were fewer windows in the sides and none facing on to the
street. The construction was of rendered brick with deep parapets and best
quality Westmoreland slates.
Bryan Little wrote:
‘The
rectangular building, of stone and with a peaked roof and four casement windows
on each side, dates from 1938. Post Office specifications are high, and the
Tewkesbury exchange was sturdily built, with a good-quality floor, obviously of
great strength, to support heavy equipment. Maintenance costs, after
renovation, should not be high.’
Almer Page recalls that the telephone
engineer lodged with his mother at No 20 and on one occasion he allowed Almer
to enter the old telephone exchange. He remembers seeing the metal framework
and the coils built on racks.
On 9th July 1975 the Clifton
Diocesan Finance Committee agreed to the purchase of the G.P.O. site for the
sum of £10,050. At the same time the committee approved taking up the loan
offered by the Van Neste Foundation for £15,000 interest free, for a period of
five years. The minute of the meeting continued:
‘In view of
current assets of the parish only allowing approximately £750.00 for
repayments, the Committee made it a condition that two years repayment of
£3,000 p.a. shall always be kept in hand at least until the sale of the Mythe
property alleviates this problem and guarantees regular debt servicing without
prejudice to other committees.’
On 22nd May 1976 Fr House,
the Diocesan Finance Secretary, was able to write to Fr Larkin, the Parish
Priest, informing him that £1,000 had been paid on deposit for the purchase of
the G.P.O. Building in Chance Street and that the Van Neste Foundation had
loaned £9,045. Bryan Little wrote in his magazine article:
‘The
architects for the recent conversion were George Mather (sic) Associates of
Cheltenham. The altar, and some of the fittings, were made at Prinknash Abbey,
but some other furnishings were moved from the church at the Mythe. It seems a
pity, though, that the bell which still hangs at the Mythe could not have made
the journey too, to the more convenient and spacious new building.’
The architect, George Mathers,
considered the building to be a substantial brick structure with steel framed
roof and as well detailed and built to a high standard.
The transformation from telephone
exchange to Catholic Church involved major building work which including the
installation of new door and windows and also the construction of a covered way
at the West End to protect the entrance from wind and rain.
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Winefride Hopkins wrote to Fr Larkin
from the Bishop’s residence on 7th December 1976 saying:
‘I have
recently made the third payment to the Builders and this makes a total of
£7,110.00 which exceeds the loan received from the Van Neste, by £5,955.00. I
should be most grateful, therefore if you could send me a cheque to get me ‘out
of the red’ and to be ready for the next bill. By the way the Builders when
sending their last claim for the third instalment mentioned that they would “do
all they could to ensure the church is completed for 17th December
1976.” I am sure you will be very glad to have the church in use.’
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Furnishings from the former Church
included two fine nineteenth century plaster statues - Our Lady and the Sacred
Heart – both bear the trademark of Mayer & Co of Munich. The statue of the
Sacred Heart has lost a finger and is awaiting restoration.
A statement of accounts dated 24th
October 1978 reveals that £14,820 was released from the sale of the Mythe
property. The diocese used the firm of Stanley, Alder and Price in its property
dealings but Fr Larkin and later Fr McCarthy raised disquiet over the small
price obtained in the sale. After the Mythe property had been sold Fr Larkin
lived in various local cottages, including one of the ancient timber framed
houses adjoining the John Moore Museum.
The move from the Mythe to Chance
Street had all gone fairly smoothly and now the next phase of the scheme was
unveiled. Christine Collins wrote in her article:
‘With the
former exchange and the land adjoining there was sufficient space for a
bungalow to be built and to give the required amount of car park space
necessary in order for planning permission to be granted.’
On 4th April 1978 an
Agreement was signed between the local builder Ray Pitt of 2, Bredon Road,
Tewkesbury and the Diocese of Clifton for the construction of a detached
bungalow, together with all drainage and site works. The cost was to be
£17,840-61 and the work was to be carried out between 5th April and
30th September 1978. The architect, Peter Wolstenhulme and Partners
of Gloucester drew up plans, dated 14th October 1977, for the Diocese.
Within a year of the new church being
opened and before the presbytery was even completed Fr Larkin had left the
parish to be replaced by Fr Stirrat. Fortunately John Turner had carried out
much of the negotiations between the parish, diocese and the builder so there
was an easy transition. Ted Farrell, the Assistant Diocesan Financial
Secretary, wrote these encouraging words to John Turner on 15th
November 1978:
‘I understand from Father that he
hopes to move into the bungalow this coming weekend. No doubt I will have some
conversations with him regarding the finishing touches. I must say how much I
appreciate the interest you have taken in supervising the work and hope that
Fr. Stirrat will share this.’
The bungalow was to cost the parish
£18,164 including the architect’s fees. At the time the parish still owed £500
for pews and £1,500 was still owed for furniture. Ted Farrell commented in a
letter to Father Stirrat:
‘This will leave you with a
short-fall of about £3,500, which it has been agreed will be lent, Interest
Free, to the Parish by the Diocese. Re-Payments will commence in 1982 when you
have eliminated the Van Neste Foundation loan.’
During
April1979 the Borough Council was reminding Fr Stirrat of the landscaping
scheme for the site which had been agreed back in March 1976 as part of the
planning consent. In this letter Fr Stirrat was also being urged to get on and
remove the old garage. In fact the diocese had urged him to ‘use the existing
garage if only as a temporary measure’ because the proposed new garage ‘might
spoil the site for further development if it was built where we originally
thought’. Paddy Walsh, a parishioner, carried out much of the groundwork around
the church. However, the old garage is still awaiting demolition!
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Shortly
after Fr McCarthy arrived in the parish in 1980 he received a cheque for
£237.90 from the Poor Missions Fund to cover the cost of the new furniture that
he had bought for the Presbytery. Ted Farrell explained to Fr McCarthy that
‘the small sum allocated to Fr. Stirrat when he moved into the new bungalow was
as a check against any extravagance on his part’! As early as March 1981
the minutes of Parish Meetings reveal much anxiety regarding the general state
of the church building. On this occasion we read the following:
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‘Church Ceiling: The question of its
appearance, and the loss of heat up there, was brought up by Father. Mr Hill
has seen an architect who will come and have a look. We were asked for ideas to
improve the situation. Mr Russell suggested a scheme with partitions and a
stained glass window. A false ceiling would make the remaining space quicker,
and more economical to heat, but against this was the fact that, when the
Church is crowded, there would be very little air space’
Discussion
continued at the September meeting when a proposal was made to lift the iron
structure of the roof by four feet so that it would be less noticeable whilst
the earlier proposal of actually filling in the ceiling was effectively
abandoned. In the end the girders were simply painted! A year later Father
McCarthy was expressing concern about the damp walls and in February 1983 it
was reported that a surveyor had been called in to examine the walls and it was
thought that the damp had been caused by faulty drains. During later years much
thought and action was given to eliminating water leaks and discussion has
continued on this subject to the present day. This discussion was followed up
in 1987 when nearly £1500 was spent on inserting a damp proof course under the
copings and addressing internal damp and cracks at the east end of the church.
The builder Dave Heeks of Twyning, under the supervision of the architect,
Peter Finnigan, was responsible for carrying out this work. During 1988 Messrs
T.W. Fisher, builders carried out £1148 worth of work on internal and external
plastering, rendering and paintwork.
Having
successfully moved into the new church and presbytery the parish council
started to explore ways of improving facilities. At a Parish Meeting in April
1983 it was reported that a parishioner, Mr Reginald Taylor (1914-2001), ‘had
done some clear drawings to illustrate the proposed extension’ to the porch. It
was resolved that Mr Finnigan, an architect in the parish, be asked to draw up
some plans, and two or three builders were to be approached for estimates. In
July 1985 the scheme was drawn up by Peter Finnigan, the Tewkesbury architect,
to enlarge the entrance lobby of the church and the specification duly went out
to tender. The Committee resolved to proceed with the project regardless of the
cost even though some members felt a degree of reservation because the parish
still owed £4,000 for the bungalow. In the event permission was given by the
diocese to go ahead and ‘The Annexe’ soon became a reality.
By January
1986 it was realised that approximately £13,000 had been spent on the Annexe. A
report for the Parish Council was received from Mr H.G. Benyon, the treasurer,
who revealed that in April 1985 £3,438 had been paid to the Diocese to clear
the debt on the bungalow. In addition in December 1985 £6,769.67 was paid to
the builders as the first instalment on the cost of the porch and in January
1986 a further £4,850.87 was paid as the second instalment. At that time he
stated that a final instalment would be due when all the business was
completed.
During Fr
McCarthy’s tenure as parish priest a major development was the installation of
set of coloured glass windows in the church. As early as 1983 a pair of
coloured glass windows was installed in the sanctuary for the cost of £600; the
total cost being covered by donations. The rather abstract designs included
first a pneumatic symbol of a dove descending and secondly a christological
symbol of the cross set against the rising sun. On July 27th 1990
Bishop Mervyn Alexander came to St Joseph’s to bless four further windows in
the nave that had been glazed with modern coloured glass depicting religious
letters and symbols. These windows were installed on 27th February
1990 and cost £4,153. Mike Honour of Northwick Business Park, Moreton-in-Marsh,
carried out all this work.
At the same
time that the new windows were blessed Bishop Mervyn also re-hallowed the
Pearce-Serocold window, which had been installed in the north wall of the
Annexe or Narthex.
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The return of this Victorian window attracted quite a lot of
media attention and the Gloucestershire Echo reported on 31st July
1990:
‘Victorian Window back at St Joseph’s
– Church team reach target. Church leaders in Tewkesbury celebrated the return
of the 19th century stained glass windows left behind when they sold
up and moved thirteen years ago. Parishioners of St Joseph’s thought they had
lost their windows for good but when Catholic historian Les (sic) Hough
explained their plight to the new owner, who is converting the old church into
two houses, he agreed to sell them for a nominal fee.
The church team have (sic) spent the
last year raising £8,500 needed for restoration and to transfer them from the
Mythe to their new church in Chance Street, which is a converted telephone
exchange.
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Mr Hough, chairman (sic) of the
Gloucestershire and North Avon Catholic History Society, explained: “The new
owner, Mr Peter Vose, was very interested and touched by the story.”The church team have (sic) spent the
last year raising £8,500 needed for restoration and to transfer them from the Mythe to their new church in Chance Street, which is a converted telephone
exchange.
Mr Hough, chairman (sic) of the
Gloucestershire and North Avon Catholic History Society, explained: “The new
owner, Mr Peter Vose, was very interested and touched by the story.”
The windows which show the moment the
Archangel Gabriel announced to Mary she was to be the mother of Jesus, were
given to the church by Mrs Amelie Pearce-Serocold, of Forthampton, in 1888, in
memory of her husband, Walter.’
Lez Hough
managed to track down Walter Pearce-Serocold, a descendent of the family who
attended the re-hallowing and Lez also traced the existence of the cartoon of
the window in the archives of the original manufacturers, Hardmans of
Birmingham. He discovered that the cost of the window, installation,
transportation, workmen’s wages, etc. in 1888 was £42.
The idea of
moving the window was first mooted in June 1989 when Lez Hough approached Fr
McCarthy and, as a result of this meeting, was asked to address the Parish
Council. The members supported the project and the Annunciation window was
removed from the Mythe in July and fitted into St Joseph’s on 24th
January 1990 for the sum of £3,061. Mike Honour again carried out the project.
It involved the creation of a wooden frame in the Narthex to hold the pair of
Victorian stained glass lights together with four other lights containing
modern coloured glass, which were arranged on either side. The upper Victorian
quatrefoil, depicting a lily crucifix, was set in another wooden frame within a
new round window, which was cut into the north wall of the Narthex. Although
the original window had been split up and two of the windows were now at low
level at least the parishioners could say that it had come home.
Chairman of
the Parish Council, Major John O’Rourke, oversaw the project and he later said:
“Next to the move this is the most important thing which has happened to the
church.” The total cost for this glazing work at St Joseph’s was offset by
generous donations and fundraising by parishioners amounted to £5,460.
At about
this time Bernard Arnold painted a Eucharistic panel which was attached to the
front of the Altar but this has since been placed above the Credence. The
Tabernacle was also moved to a new position behind the altar having previously
stood on the platform now occupied by the sedilia.
In 1991 Fr
McCarthy left the parish and was replaced by Dr Michael Saunders who
immediately set into motion plans to enhance the Church and the adjoining
presbytery.
In February
1993 the architect, George Mathers, was invited to produce plans to increase
the accommodation of the church from 108 to 200, utilising the existing
structure but extending it side-ways into the car park so that seating could be
‘in the round’. Parishioners suggested that a hall be provided on an upper
floor level but George Mathers considered this to be an expensive solution and
urged the cheaper option of building a single-storey parish hall elsewhere on
the site. He placed an approximate price tag of £200,000 for this scheme.
In the event
it was decided not to proceed with these plans so Dr Saunders concentrated his
efforts on enhancing the church, using the services of Ormsbys Ltd of
Scarisbrick in Lancashire. This company provided a mural for the wall of the
Sanctuary, a tympanum created out of leaded coloured glass above the altar and
various new sanctuary furnishings.
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As early as
March 1992 Dr Saunders was writing; ‘as you know, the
sanctuary area of the Church is presently painted in yellow emulsion. The wall
behind the altar needs some feature to remove the blandness of the view from
the pews… I favour the idea of a religious mural.’
The mural on the wall of the Sanctuary was actually designed by Paul Melia of
Ormsbys in different textured Viero plasters including Visoplast, Ceramitz and
Graniplast and the commission cost £2,467.50. The concept was inspired by a
similar mural which had been commissioned by the Ursuline sisters for one of
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Whilst the texture of the Tewkesbury mural has been
retained the colour scheme has actually been altered in recent years. The coloured
glass panels, erected in the roof supports in front of the altar, were
installed in October 1995. This glazed tympanum was blessed at a Mass
concelebrated by Bishop Mervyn Alexander, on 23rd March 1996 in the
presence of the Town Mayor of Tewkesbury and other officials. The glass
represents the seven sacraments, each triangular panel depicting one sacrament
with two large central panels together representing the Eucharist. From the
left to right the panels show Matrimony, Penance, Confirmation, Eucharist,
Baptism, Anointing of the Sick and Holy Orders. The work was carried out by
Ormsbys Ltd and cost £11,639.65.
An alternative scheme by Sister Bernadette
Mewburn Crook of Isleworth, which would have involved placing two panels in
each of the five ceiling trusses, reached an advanced stage before it was
finally rejected.
During Dr
Saunders’ sojourn as Parish Priest other furnishings were provided for the
church including a new paschal candle stand and a processional cross -
purchased from Ormsbys at a total cost of £1,150. New benches and other items
were also planned and during 1992 the Stations of the Cross were acquired for
the parish from the chapel of St Angela’s Ursuline Convent at Forest Gate. They
are very finely carved wooden stations, possibly from Oberammergau, and the oak
cross for Station VII was missing so a replica was carved by Trophy Woodwork of
Tewkesbury for the princely sum of £64.
During this
period research was undertaken into a suggestion that during medieval times the
Abbey had been the focus of a specific Marian devotion. As a result
consideration was given to commissioning a new statue of ‘Our Lady of
Tewkesbury’, for St Joseph’s, modelled upon the medieval Abbey seal. It was
eventually decided that the evidence for such devotion was unsubstantiated so
the plan for the new statue was not pursued. However, the present fibre-glass
statue of St Joseph was acquired at this time to replace a plaster statue of St
Joseph which had been sent away for restoration and was lost by the painter.
In 1996 Fr
Tom Lane succeeded Dr Saunders and, after a year, Fr Michael Fountaine in turn
replaced him. From February 1999 until his departure in 2004 he pursued an
exciting scheme to build a new church on a site at Mitton. Within this scheme
was a plan to demolish the present church and, as a result, the site would have
been re-developed. The architect, Simon Radford of Cheltenham, produced plans
for the erection of twelve town houses, which received the necessary planning
permission. An archaeological investigation was carried out in November 2001
and the report revealed little of interest concluding that ‘any potential for surviving evidence was destroyed during
the erection of the telephone exchange and the subsequent conversion to a
Church with associated construction of the bungalow’.
During the years that Fr Fountaine was Parish Priest the church in Chance
Street was re-seated, the interior was redecorated and a new organ, a Christmas
Crib and carpeting were all provided.
In September
2004 I was appointed Parish Priest and the parish was faced with an agonising
decision - whether to proceed with the plan for a new church or to remain in
Chance Street and refurbish the existing property. Alan Price of O’Brien and
Price, Consulting Civil & Structural Engineers of Stroud undertook a structural
survey in November 2004 and his report was generally favourable. A plan was
also drawn up by an architect, Tony Thompson of the Falconer Partnership for a
complete makeover for the building. In the event it was decided to stay put and
since then the church has been re-slated, insulated and re-rendered as part of
a phased restoration. Plans are also well under way to landscape the grounds
providing new railings and gates, removing trees, replacing the old garage and
possibly re-building the Narthex as a more useful facility. The Falconer
Partnership of Stroud is overseeing the whole refurbishment in conjunction with
John Hall, a retired builder who is also a parishioner.
All these
developments have only been possible as a result of the immense generosity of
those who have given their money, time and talents to finance the works
mentioned above. We are indebted to generations of Catholics who have given
sacrificially so that we have a place of worship today and we must never forget
their commitment. St Joseph’s Church has seen many changes during the last
sixty-seven years and we hope that it will serve the Catholic community in
Tewkesbury for many years to come. Deo Optimo Maximo.
RICHARD
BARTON NOVEMBER 2005
addendum
6 November 2009
Bishop Declan visited our Tewkesbury parish to celebrate Mass and bless the
new narthex at St Joseph’s.
This was a celebration of the completion of some five years construction and
site tidying projects - with accompanying fund raising - resulting in a
parish centre comprising our church, an appropriate new entrance and social
area (the narthex), a weatherproof presbytery and parish office, and a
replacement garage and store.
Thanks to the generosity of parishioners over the five years, the funds for
the work (including some unexpected extras!) were raised through donations,
fund raising events, and some extremely generous legacies. These
exceptional results were achieved despite local difficulties with
horrendous floods and the general effects of recession. A huge
testimony to all concerned.
Simon Gegg
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