Sacred Heart Church, Hillsborough

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Sacred Heart Church seen from Ripley Street.
Sacred Heart Church seen from Ripley Street.
The main doors have a statue of the Sacred Heart between them. The tympanum above features scenes from a pilgrimage to Lourdes. All sculptured by Philip Lindsay Clark
The main doors have a statue of the Sacred Heart between them. The tympanum above features scenes from a pilgrimage to Lourdes. All sculptured by Philip Lindsay Clark

Sacred Heart Church is located in Forbes Road in the Hillsborough district of the city of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England at grid reference SK333894. It is a Roman Catholic church in the Diocese of Hallam and is a Grade II listed building. The church is situated in an elevated position and its tower is a prominent landmark in the area.

[edit] History

The parish of Sacred Heart Hillsborough was created in 1920 with R.J. Dunford as priest. At that time the parish had no church and Father Dunford initially conducted Mass in the Sacred Heart School on Ripley Street which had been founded in 1903. A temporary church was eventually established and opened in February 1921 at a cost of £3,000. It was not until May 1935 that work started on the parish’s permanent church and on July 7th of that year the foundation stone was laid by the Bishop of Leeds Joseph Robert Cowgill. The cost of construction of the church was £13,000 and £10,000 of that was donated by a Mrs. Wake, the widow of a recipient of the Order of St. Gregory the Great. The church was opened on March 25th 1936 with a celebration of High Mass and sermon read by Richard Downey, Archbishop of Liverpool.

[edit] The Church

The church was designed by the architect C.M. Hadfield and was constructed from specially made thin red bricks with an unusual surface texture. It has been called “one of the best interwar churches in Sheffield”. The original church had just one large bell supplied by John Taylor Bellfounders of Loughborough. It weighs over one ton and is in the tone of “F”, in 1943 the bell tower was strengthened and a peel of smaller bell was added by the same company to compliment the large bell. The sculptor Philip Lindsay Clark (1889-1977) carved the 14 Stations of the Cross which are arranged around the internal walls, his other contributions are the statue of the Sacred Heart at the main door and the carvings in the tympanum above the door which is made of Portland stone.

Eric Newton created the mosaics for the reredos behind the altar, the most striking of which is a figure of the Sacred Heart with supporting angels in the apse. He added more mosaics in the side chapels shortly before his death in 1961, to commemorate the church’s silver jubilee. More changes were made to the altar in the late 1960s as a result of the Second Vatican Council. In 1983 a pitched roof replaced the flat one after the church had trouble with leaks for a number of years.[1][2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Sacred Heart Church 1936-1986 Golden Jubilee" (Booklet), Gives history and church details.
  2. ^ "Pevenser Architectural Guides - Sheffield", Ruth Harman & John Minnis, ISBN 0 300 10585 1 Gives architectural details and the quote: “one of the best interwar churches in Sheffield”.