St Philip and St James Leckhampton
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St Philip & St James Leckhampton is a parish in south Cheltenham , Gloucestershire (England). Part of the Anglican Diocese of Gloucester, the church has been centre for worship for more than 150 years and has a present congregational roll of over 200.
[edit] History
On 1 May 1840 the church of St Philip was consecrated as a daughter church of St Peter's and a priest in charge was approved. In 1869, St Philip's was granted separate parish status, and the first vicar was appointed in May that year.
Ten years later, the church was found to be too small for the expanding parish and the present church of St Philip & St James was built around the existing one by partly rebuilding and extending it. This work took three years. In May 1882 the present building was consecrated by the Bishop of Gloucester, but the building had no spire - the proposed one had been found to be beyond the bearing capacity of the foundations. In 1903 the saddleback tower was built in place of the spire and dedicated.
The church is in the Victorian Gothic style, with a fine carved stone reredos in the chancel and a mural of the supper at Emmaus in the side chapel. The pews in the nave and aisles have carved end panels, some of which were ingeniously incorporated into a new vestry at the back of the church. There is a movable nave altar on a dais, though the high altar is still in occasional use. The font was recently moved to the centre of the back of the church, having spent some years in the north-west corner.
In 1963 a columbarium was built in the crypt of St Philip & St James where ashes of the departed can rest, the first of its kind in the United Kingdom.
[edit] Church Community
Worship at St Philip & St James is a mixture of formal and less formal styles. There is a pipe organ and a robed adult choir, occasionally supplemented by a music group with acoustic instruments. The preaching mainly reflects a moderate liberal tradition. The incumbency is currently vacant, following the death of Canon Peter Chicken on 6 June 2006.