Building » Wallasey (New Brighton) – St Peter and St Paul

Wallasey (New Brighton) – St Peter and St Paul

Atherton Street, New Brighton, Wallasey, Wirral, Cheshire CH45

An architecturally ambitious and little-altered Catholic church of 1935, designed by E. Bower Norris. Monumental in scale and baroque in its spatial conception, the building is modelled and ornamented with extreme simplicity. Attention internally is focussed on the high altar and side chapels, which are clad in sumptuous  marbles. Built on an elevated site, with its hemispherical dome, the church is a landmark seen from both land and sea, and is cited as a navigational reference point on the marine chart for the Liverpool Bay.

In 1879 a room was rented in Egerton Street where Mass was said for Catholics of New Brighton. In 1881 a church dedicated to St Peter and St Paul, and designed by Edmund Kirby was opened in Hope Street near the junction with Rowson Street. Shortly afterwards a school was erected close by. In 1909 Fr Thomas Mullins was appointed rector, whose vision was to build a great church that would serve as a beacon for Catholicism far and wide.

In the early twentieth century New Brighton was a rapidly-growing seaside resort and a commuter suburb for Liverpool. Early after his arrival in New Brighton, Fr Mullins established a new church fund, but his ambition was such that it took many years before he was able to embark on the building project. It is said that his initial brief brought him into conflict with the diocese, and original drawings show that he intended the church to be one bay longer than its present length, and the presbytery three storeys rather than two. He succeeded, however, in his desire for a great dome with a span of 86 feet, which had been opposed by the diocese on cost grounds. The site selected was in Atherton Street at the top of St George’s Mount, at 170 feet above sea level the highest point of New Brighton. It had previously been occupied by a mid-nineteenth century mansion, which had been acquired for a Cenacle Convent by nuns from France. It later became an emergency centre for the treatment of wounded soldiers in the First World War. E. Bower Norris of Sandy & Norris was appointed architect and was instructed by Fr Mullins to design a new church in the baroque style. The foundation stone was laid in July 1932, and the church opened in August 1935. The builder was James Milestone of Liscard, and the cost was £58,000.

The Kirby church in Hope Street was destroyed by bombing in the Second World War, and after the war the school was moved to Atherton Street, alongside the new church. In 2006 the church was threatened with closure, a prospect that met with local opposition and led  to  a successful application for  it  to  be listed.  Following closure in 2008, discussions were held with interested parties in order to identify a suitable use for the building. This has recently resulted in an agreement to lease the property for a period of twenty years to the Institute of Christ the King, a society dedicated to the celebration of the traditional (1962) Latin Mass. It will form a base for the Institute’s work in the North West Region.

Description

See list entry, below. The church is baroque only in its layout, which is cruciform and derives from the Roman Gesù type. The structure is of reinforced concrete, clad externally in brick. Roofs are concrete barrel vaults with asphalt coverings. Above the crossing is a copper-clad concrete shell dome set on a tall drum ringed by paired pilasters. The transepts progressively step down in height and width, creating spaces for chapels within the enclosure of the end gables.

The interior is grand and spacious, the nave measuring 40 feet long and 50 feet high to the barrel vault, whilst the dome rises to 86 feet above the sanctuary. At the west end is a narthex with choir gallery, and narrow processional aisles run to each side of the nave arcade with provision for six side chapels. Decoration is concentrated solely on the high altar, reredos and two main chapels, which are all clad in sumptuous coloured marbles. The sanctuary too is paved in marble, and the high altar and altar rails remain unaltered, for the church escaped post-Vatican II reordering. On the Lady  altar  is  a  late  seventeenth/early  eighteenth  century  polychrome  wooden sculpture of the Virgin and Child, probably Spanish or Portuguese. The Stations of the Cross are said in the listing description to be by George Thomas of Liverpool (the relief carving of the Baptism of Christ in the baptistery is probably from the same hand). The benches were introduced in the 1950s.

List description

II

Catholic Church. 1935. By E. Bower Norris of Sandy and Norris, architects of Stafford and London. Reinforced concrete shell with mixed red brick facings and ashlar limestone dressings. Copper sheet covering to dome. Classical Renaissance style. PLAN: Basilican plan, with porch to main entrance, side porches, nave, centre and side aisles, transepts , crossing below dome and sanctuary.

EXTERIOR: Single storeyed canted porch to main entrance, built against tall gabled end of nave with deep ashlar copings incorporating moulded cornice. Gable apex with keyed oculus . Entrances to side porches within setback corner towers with domed cupolas. Tall, barrel vaulted nave of 3 bays, each bay with a tall lancet in its upper walling. Lower side aisles extend on both sides, with a semi-circular headed lancet to each bay. North and south transepts are stepped, the taller rear gable truncated, the lower front bay with a gablet. Crossing with faceted base to tall central dome, the supporting brick-faced drum with paired pilasters breaking through a moulded circular cornice. Above the cornice, a shallow parapet pierced by oval oculi. Above, faceted hemispherical dome with cross finial. Sanctuary with advanced centre and set-back corners to gable wall. Single lancets to each side wall.

INTERIOR: Gallery and organ loft above inner doorway to west end. Centre aisle with flanking arcades of tall semi-circular arches beneath concrete barrel vault. Side aisles with transverse arches link side porches with transept chapels. Sanctuary with high altar with classical marble reredos, composed of columns and pilasters supporting semi circular arched head.. Transept chapels each with altar and marble reredos, and each with paired marble columns supporting pedimented heads. Stations of the Cross designed in art deco style by George Thomas, sculptor, of Liverpool.

A prominently-sited and little-altered Catholic church of 1935, designed by E Bower Norris. Monumental in scale, and with high quality interior detailing, the church with its hemispherical dome is a landmark on both land and sea, and is cited as a navigational reference point on the marine chart for the Liverpool Bay.

Heritage Details

Architect: Sandy & Norris

Original Date: 1935

Conservation Area: No

Listed Grade: Grade II