St Peter and St Paul's Church, New Brighton
St Peter and St Paul's Church, New Brighton | |
---|---|
Ss. Peter and Paul and St. Philomena Catholic Church | |
Location | Wirral |
Country | United Kingdom |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Website | Shrine Webpage |
Architecture | |
Functional status | Parish church |
Heritage designation | Grade II listed[1] |
Designated | 22 December 2003 |
Architect(s) | Ernest Bower Norris |
Completed | 1935 |
Administration | |
Diocese | Shrewsbury |
The Sacred Shrine of Ss. Peter, Paul and St. Philomena is a Grade II listed Church in Atherton Street,
Origins of the church
The church was founded by a priest called Father Tom Mullins. Born in Ireland, he studied for Priesthood in Lisbon, Portugal. When Father Tom got back to the Wirral, he was serving at a church (now demolished) in Hope Street. He went on to pursue his dream of constructing the church. When construction was finished New Brighton was becoming a very popular resort. The church opened in 1935.
Serving priests
- Fr Tom Mullins 1935-1945
- Mgr Canon Maurice Curran V.G 1945-1960
- Father John Quinn (1960–1983)
- Father Joseph Prendiville 1983
- Father (later canon) Robert Fallon 1983-1990
- Father Anthony Myers 1990-1996
- Father Michael Wentworth 1996-2006
- Father John Feeney 2006–2008 (church closed)
- Canon Oliver Meney 2011-2012
- Canon Amaury Montjean 2012 -
In addition, a retired Canon, William Briscoe O.B.E was in residence from 1986 to 2001.
The present
In 2006, when Father Wentworth retired, Father Feeney was welcomed as the new Parish Priest. Father Feeney had a job of looking after three parishes, the others being English Martyrs and Our Lady of Lourdes. Together, all three churches united in becoming the North Wallasey Catholic Community.
In 2008, the church was closed by a decision of the local diocese. The parishioners were relocated to another church, about a five-minute walk away, called All Saints, owned by the Church of England
In 2011 the church was re-opened for a weekly mass,
On 15 October 2011 Canon Oliver Meney and another member of the Institute of Christ the King took up residence in the fully renovated
See also
References
- ^ Church of SS Peter, Paul AND St Philomena from Historic England, retrieved 27 July 2019
- ^ Cureton, Stephanie (24 February 2011). "Wallasey's landmark church will re-open". Wirral Globe. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
- ^ Cureton, Stephanie (14 March 2011). "Religious order bids to revive Wirral's 'Dome from Home' church". Wirral Globe. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
Bibliography
- Hargreaves, Jennie My Beloved Church: A Story of the Parish of S.S Peter & Paul's R.C. Church, New Brighton (Liverpool, 2006)
- Religious Wirral landmark ‘Dome of Home’ celebrate rich history from the Wallasey News
External links
- Dome of Home site
- BBC TV, The Hairy Builder, "Dome of Home", 27 July 2016