Some years ago I made a nuisance of myself querying the determination of the Diocese of Sheffield to demolish the attractive 1939 parish church of St Cecilia, Parson Cross:
- https://www.mikehigginbottominterestingtimes.co.uk/?p=2114
- https://www.mikehigginbottominterestingtimes.co.uk/?p=2506
- https://www.mikehigginbottominterestingtimes.co.uk/?p=2529
- https://www.mikehigginbottominterestingtimes.co.uk/?p=2615
- https://www.mikehigginbottominterestingtimes.co.uk/?p=2620
- https://www.mikehigginbottominterestingtimes.co.uk/?p=2800
- https://www.mikehigginbottominterestingtimes.co.uk/?p=4570
Last week I received a letter from the Church Commissioners (because I’d made a formal objection to the demolition in 2013) notifying me that St Cecilia’s has at last been closed and the daughter-church of St Bernard of Clairvaux is the parish church with effect from August 16th 2018.
St Bernard’s was completed, using recycled bricks from the demolished mansion at Clumber Park, Nottinghamshire, in 1954 as one of two mission churches in the vast Parson Cross parish.
The other church, Christ the King, Deerlands Avenue, was consecrated on the afternoon of the first Sheffield Blitz, December 12th 1940. It closed in 1970 and was sold: it became a Roman Catholic social club, St Patrick’s, and is now a showroom.
The notice of closure indicates that St Cecilia’s “shall be appropriate to use for residential purposes and for purposes ancillary thereto”, and “the contents of the old church building shall be disposed of as the Bishop shall direct”, in line with the Draft Pastoral Scheme about which I posted an article in 2016.
It’s probably the best possible outcome.
It saves the residents of Chaucer Close from the noise and mess of a brick-by-brick demolition.
It preserves an unobtrusive but attractive building on a housing estate that has few landmarks, having lost an outstanding but unlisted cinema in 2013.
I’ll be interested to see how this wide building, with a nave and two aisles, adapts to housing.
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