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St Agatha's, Landport

St. Agatha's Church
St Agatha's Landport 659113.jpg
St Agatha’s from Cascades Car Park
Basic information
Location Landport, Portsmouth, England
Geographic coordinates 50°48′8.22″N 1°5′31.87″W / 50.8022833°N 1.0921861°W / 50.8022833; -1.0921861Coordinates: 50°48′8.22″N 1°5′31.87″W / 50.8022833°N 1.0921861°W / 50.8022833; -1.0921861
Affiliation Roman Catholic Church
Rite Anglican Use
Country United Kingdom
Ecclesiastical or organizational status Parish Church
Leadership Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham
Ordinary: The Revd Msgr Keith Newton
Rector: The Revd Msgr Robert Mercer
Website www.stagathaschurch.co.uk
Architectural description
Architect(s) Joseph Henry Ball
Architectural style Italianate Romanesque
General contractor W.R Light and Son of Southsea
Groundbreaking 1838
Completed 1894
Construction cost £3,250

St Agatha’s Church is a parish church in the Landport district of Portsmouth. It is affiliated to the Roman Catholic Church through the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. It is situated on the Marketway next to the Cascades Shopping Centre. It was built in 1838 and is a Grade II* listed building.

Originally, the site had a small mission church situated in an area of extreme deprivation. The church was built because of the efforts of Father Robert William Radclyffe Dolling, an Irish Anglo-Catholic priest. He worked to alleviate the social ills of the area. At the same time he donations from the residents of Old Portsmouth to build a new church.

The formal opening of the church took place on 27 October 1895 with a ceremony involving mass being said at the old mission church followed by a procession to the new church, but the nature of the ritual led to a row with the Bishop of Winchester.

His successor Father Tremenheere continued to decorate the interior until 1914 when another long serving incumbent arrived. Work done during this time included the completion of the murals and the addition of a wooden pulpit. Tremenheere's successor Father C.W Coles was to serve the parish through two world wars until 1954 when the last service was held.

For the next 40 years it became a naval store until the Traditional Anglican Communion took it over for a form of worship very similar to that originally provided by Dolling. The church survived this time largely intact although the lady chapel was demolished in 1964.

The church is now also used for concerts. It has been described as a magnificent building, as having a sumptuous interior, and the “Cathedral of the car parks” in Portsmouth's shopping district.

Following the reception of the retired Bishop of Matabeleland, Robert Mercer, who worshipped at the church, into the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, and other members of the church's clergy, St Agatha's began to be used as a place of worship for the ordinariate.


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