The Diocese of Middlesbrough was founded on 20 December 1878 out of the Diocese of Beverley. It consists of the boroughs of Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland, Stockton-on-Tees (south of the river), the cities of Kingston-upon-Hull and York, East Yorkshire and most of North Yorkshire. The cathedral is in Coulby Newham, Middlesbrough, and is dedicated to St Mary. 89 churches were visited for Taking Stock (2008).
A good Victorian church by a noted Sheffield firm of architects who designed much for Catholic clients. On a site with... Read More
The unremarkable external appearance of this early twentieth-century church conceals an interior of rich polychromatic... Read More
The significance of this building lies less in the architectural qualities of the chapel, which are modest, and more in... Read More
A late eighteenth century village Congregational chapel which underwent a liturgically advanced remodelling after... Read More
An economical design of the 192os, later extended in similar vein. On 9 July 1927 The Tablet reported the opening of... Read More
A modern church of fairly striking design, serving the northern suburbs of York.In 1977 a new parish was established... Read More
An important survival of a relatively unspoilt Georgian Catholic church. It is architecturally modest and discreetly... Read More
An attractive late-nineteenth century stone-built Gothic chapel, its gable, roof and picturesque bellcote prominent in... Read More
Post-war church of pre-war design. Attractive, albeit conventional in its planning, form and architectural... Read More
Highly important as an early private chapel built before the first Catholic Relief Act, most probably from designs by... Read More
The church is of some architectural merit and has a character redolent of the 1950s. The bold forms of the broad front... Read More
A modest and architecturally unexceptional Gothic church, unusual for being designed by a bishop.The parish was... Read More