Church of the Holy Name of Jesus, Manchester

Holy Name Church
Church of the Holy Name of Jesus, Chorlton on Medlock

View of the entrance
Holy Name Church

Location with Manchester

Coordinates: 53°27′52″N 2°13′52″W / 53.4645°N 2.2311°W
OS grid reference SJ8475796438
Location Manchester
Country UK
Denomination Roman Catholic
Website http://www.holyname.co.uk/
History
Founded October 15, 1871
Founder(s) Bishop William Turner
Dedication Holy Name of Jesus
Consecrated 1923
Architecture
Status Chapel of ease
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Grade I
Designated 18 December 1963
Architect(s) J. A. Hansom and Son
Architectural type Church
Style Gothic Revival
Groundbreaking 1869
Completed 1928
Specifications
Capacity 800
Length 186 ft (57 m)
Width 122 ft (37 m)
Spire height 185 ft (56 m)
Materials

Moulded Terracotta

Warwick Bridge stone
Administration
Parish St. Augustine Church[1]
Deanery Chorlton-on-Medlock
Diocese Salford
Province Liverpool
Clergy
Bishop(s) Rt. Rev. Terence Brain
Rector Fr Ian Tomlinson SJ
Priest in charge Fr Tim Byron SJ
Priest(s) Fr William Pearsall SJ
Laity
Director of music Mr Luke Mather
Organist(s) Mr Simon Leach
Music group(s) Mrs Sarah Insall
Parish administrator Br Ken Vance SJ

The Church of the Holy Name of Jesus on Oxford Road, Manchester, England was designed by Joseph A. Hansom and built between 1869 and 1871.[2] The tower, designed by Adrian Gilbert Scott, was erected in 1928 in memory of Fr Bernard Vaughan, SJ. The church was granted Grade I listed building status in 1989, having being Grade II* since 1963.[3]

History

Fr Bernard Vaughan SJ

In 1860, William Turner, the first bishop of the Salford, invited the Jesuits to make a home in Chorlton-on-Medlock, at the time a middle-class suburb.

As well as the growing middle-classes, Manchester was home to a large and expanding population of Irish immigrants who migrated to work in cotton manufacturing, especially after the Great Irish Famine. In the area known as Little Ireland, the Parish of St Mary's, Mulberry Street was unable to cope; in twenty years, thirteen priests had succumbed to typhus whilst working amongst the city's poor.[4]

The Jesuits had a formidable record of outreach and missionary work, and this was put to good use. Whilst he was rector from 1888 to 1901,[5] Fr Bernard Vaughan SJ took part in a series of debates with the Anglican Bishop of Manchester, James Moorhouse, over rival claims of the Catholic Church in England and Wales and the Church of England to be the Catholic Church in England and successor of St. Augustine. In their jubilation at Vaughan's triumph, the young men of the Holy Name pulled his carriage from the city centre all the way to the church.[6]

Construction

Main altar

Bishop Turner was keen to have a church in Chorlton-on-Medlock staffed with priests who could meet the demands of intellectual, apologetic and controversial needs of Manchester. Jesuits from St Helens came to settle, at first in a temporary church (now the site of the Holy Name Hall, which has since been sold). Holy Name was made a parish church to serve the growing populations of the parishes of Longsight and Chorlton-on-Medlock, as villas were replaced by streets as the population of industrial Manchester grew. The construction of the building re-inforced the power of the Jesuit order and the revived confidence of the English Catholics. It is the largest church in Manchester, and dominates the surrounding area.

The church's's dimensions and proportions are on the scale of a 14th-century cathedral; it is 186 feet long east to west and 112 feet wide. The architect Joseph Aloysius Hansom (who gave his name to the Hansom Cab) based the building on Frankish Gothic styles of France. Sir Nikolaus Pevsner described it as

"...a design of the very highest quality and of an originality nowhere demonstrative; ... Hansom never again did so marvellous a church."[7]

Although mediaeval in appearance, it is a counter-Reformation church, designed to teach the faith through its external liturgical and devotional manifestation. It gives maximum exposure to the solemn celebration of the Mass (a raised altar near the congregation with no rood screen, and a shallow, broad sanctuary), the cult of the Eucharist (the eye is first carried to the tabernacle and the expositon throne above), preaching (a large pulpit to place the preacher intimately in the congregation), and the hearing of confessions (the whole north side is taken up with confessionals designed for long hours of priestly ministration). Consequently, the pillars in the church are unusually slender, accomplished by making the roof of the church from hollow terracotta tubes, manufactured by Gibbs and Canning Limited.[8]

Built in brick, it is clad in brushed Warwick stone. It has been suggested that Hansom's original design called for a broad steeple 73 feet high. In 1928 the tower was built, designed by Adrian Gilbert Scott.

The nave can accommodate 800 worshippers. Small chapels adorn the left hand side, along with the baptistery towards the west. On the north side are confessionals, each with a fireplace. Between the confessions and the chapels are the Stations of the Cross. Throughout the church there are devotional statues and images.

Liturgy

Nave

At the Holy Name Mass is celebrated in English. The celebration of the liturgy is designed to be catechetical, with solemn ritual, music, hymns and a familiar preaching style. Sunday Mass lasts about an hour. Weekday Masses are designed to suit the student timetable at 1.05pm in the church and 6.00pm in the chaplaincy - the latter during term time only. Each lunchtime there is exposition of the Blessed Sacrament at noon, during which confessions are heard.

Music

The organ is located at the west end of the nave. Built in 1871 by William Hill & Son of London,[9] it has 48 speaking stops over three-manuals and pedals.[10] It was completely rebuilt in 1926 by Messrs Wadsworth Ltd and restored in 2004. It is maintained by David Wells of Liverpool. The lead pipes on the front of the case are ornately diapered and were restored to their original colour scheme of lighter shades of red and green with gold motifs. Above the organ and choir loft are two gilded angels.

Music for the Solemn Mass follows the decrees of the Vatican, and utilises Gregorian chant and polyphony on Sundays (with congregational English hymns), and for major solemnities there are classical organ and orchestral settings from the 17th to the 21st century.

Clergy

The Jesuits were invited by the bishop to close the church in 1985. By then the congregation had dwindled because of local shifts in housing and demographics and the church was closed for most of the day. The diocese did not want it, and so the major superiors of England and Wales were asked to consider its viability. A community of secular priests and lay brothers (an Oratory of St Philip in Formation) came to Manchester in 1992 and since then the church has been in the process of massive renovation project. It is open daily and congregational numbers have increased.

In September 2012, it was announced that the Jesuits would return to Manchester to take over the chaplaincy to the Universities and Royal Northern College of Music and the church. The Oratory community at the Holy Name under Fr Raymond Matus would be relocated to St Chad's, Cheetham Hill where Bishop Terence Brain had granted them permission to establish a Congregation of the Oratory of Saint Philip Neri.[11]

The Smiths

Manchester popular music band The Smiths referred to the Holy Name church in one of the lyrics in Vicar in a Tutu, "I was minding my business lifting some lead off the roof of The Holy Name church".

See also

References

  1. Directory, Diocese of Salford Retrieved 29 January 2013
  2. Harris, Penelope, The Architectural Achievement of Joseph Aloysius Hansom (1803-1882), Designer of the Hansom Cab, Birmingham Town Hall and Churches of the Catholic Revival (The Edwin Mellen Press, 2010).
  3. British Listed Buildings Retrieved 29 January 2013
  4. History, Hidden Gem Church, Manchester Retrieved 29 January 2013
  5. Holy Name Church, Oxford Road, Manchester History Retrieved 29 January 2013
  6. Vaughan's Sermon a Paean of Praise, New York Times Archive Retrieved 29 January 2013
  7. Pevsner, Nikolaus, Lancashire: Manchester & the South-East (2004) ISBN 978-0-300-10583-4
  8. Pevsner Architectural Guides - Manchester, Clare Hartwell, 2001, ISBN 0-300-09666-6
  9. "Holy Name of Jesus, Manchester - The Organ".
  10. "The National Pipe Organ Register - Holy Name of Jesus, Manchester".
  11. "The Manchester Oratory by Holy Name". Retrieved 2 September 2012.

External links

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