St Mary le Port Church, Bristol

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St Mary le Port Church
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St Mary le Port Church, Bristol is located in Bristol
St Mary le Port Church, Bristol
Location within Bristol
General information
Town or city Bristol
Country England
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Completed 15th century
Demolished (partially) 24 November 1940

St Mary le Port is a ruined parish church in the centre of Bristol, England. It is said to have been founded in Saxon times after Anglo-Saxon foundations were found by archaeological excavation[1] and Saxon pottery found nearby,[2] and rebuilt and enlarged between the 11th and 16th centuries.

During the 19th and early 20th centuries the church was a very popular centre of evangelical, Protestant, and Calvinist teaching within Anglicanism.

File:St Mary le Port Church, Bristol, BRO Picbox-3-Blitz-4a, 1250x1250.jpg
Black and white photograph from c.1940 showing the remains of St Mary le Port church, Bristol, UK, taken from the south east, following the Bristol Blitz bombing raid on the area now known as Castle Park. All that is left of the church is the tower, and nearby bombed buildings can be seen behind. Beyond the bombed buildings can be seen the tower of All Saints' Church.

The church was bombed in the Second World War on 24 November 1940 during the Bristol Blitz. John Piper painted an evocative picture of the bombed St Mary le Port. This image appears on the 1/6 British commemorative stamp, part of a set of four paintings by British artists issued in 1968. All that remains of the church is the 15th century tower, a Grade II listed building,[3] and a Scheduled Ancient Monument[4] which during the latter years of the 20th century was surrounded by the buildings of Norwich Union and the Bank of England.

After the bombing in 1940 the congregation and their rector, William Dodgson-Sykes, moved to St John on the Wall Church, where the congregation remained, in gradually declining numbers, till this church building was closed for worship by the Church Commissioners in 1984 (after a protracted struggle by the congregation). The remaining congregation then moved to the Chapel of Foster's Almshouses, and joined the Church of England (Continuing) in 1995.[5] The C of E (Continuing) no longer lists a congregation in Bristol; some of the congregation joined with the new Free Presbyterian Church (Ulster) congregation in Horfield, Bristol.

Clergy of St Mary-le-Port church

The church's clergy have included:

  • William Waite, rector, born 1764, died 1842, dates at St Mary le Port unknown[6]
  • William Tandey, curate 1784 - 1799 (lived 1750-1832)[7]
  • James Marshall, rector 1842 - (born 23 February 1796, died 29 August 1855)[8]
  • Mr Thomas, rector, resigned 1857
  • Samuel Abraham Walker, rector 1857 - 1879 (born Dublin, 1809, died 30 November 1879) (source, The Gospel Magazine, January, 1880)
  • James Ormiston, rector 1880 (and as at the 1901 census) (previously at Old Hill, West Midlands; editor of The Gospel Magazine from 1895–1916)
  • William Dodgson Sykes, rector (as at 1940) (editor of The Gospel Magazine from 1964–1975)
- son of William Sykes (first President of the Sovereign Grace Union)
- Principal of the Bible Churchmen's Missionary and Theological College, later part of Trinity College, Bristol
(Bible Churchmen's Missionary Society, now Crosslinks[9]
- Head of the Irish Church Missions

See also

References

  1. M Q Smith, The Medieval Churches of Bristol, University of Bristol (Bristol branch of the Historical Association), 1970, p. 4.
  2. Bristol in the Early Middle Ages, University of Bristol (Bristol branch of the Historical Association), 1971, p6.
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  5. C of E (Continuing) Journal
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External links

Historic building

2005 development proposal