St Luke's Church, Wallsend

St Luke's Wallsend
54°59′26″N 1°32′00″W / 54.9905°N 1.5334°W / 54.9905; -1.5334Coordinates: 54°59′26″N 1°32′00″W / 54.9905°N 1.5334°W / 54.9905; -1.5334
Location Frank Street, Wallsend
Country England
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Anglo-Catholic / High Church
Website www.achurchnearyou.com/wallsend-st-luke
History
Founded 1887
Dedication St Luke
Architecture
Status Active
Functional status Parish church
Administration
Parish Wallsend St Peter and St Luke
Deanery Tynemouth
Archdeaconry Archdeaconry of Northumberland
Diocese Diocese of Newcastle
Province Province of York
Clergy
Rector Fr David Sudron

The Church of St Luke is a Church of England Grade II* listed[1] church located in the centre of Wallsend, North Tyneside, next to Station Road.

History

The nave of St Luke's, Wallsend, looking east

Due to an increase of the population in Wallsend, supported by both coalmining and shipbuilding industries, the parish of St Peter, Wallsend was divided in 1887, with the western portion becoming the new parish of St Luke, complete with a new church.

The foundation stone was laid in 1885, and the building was consecrated in 1887, although construction was not completed until 1906.

One of the key donors to the new building was George B. Hunter, then managing partner of the Swan Hunter shipbuilding company.[2] The long association between the church and the company (whose yard is just down Station Road) saw St Luke’s nicknamed the ‘Shipyard Church’.[3]

In 2001 the parish was merged with that of St Peter, Wallsend, reuniting the original parish and the two sister churches.

Tradition

The Lady Chapel at the east end of the south aisle

The church was founded in the Anglo-Catholic mould. Indeed, during the incumbency of the second vicar, Fr William O'Brady-Jones, Anglo-Catholic practices were listed in evidence given to the Royal Commission on Ecclesiastical Discipline in 1904.[4] But after his departure 1908, with the then Bishop of Newcastle being unsympathetic to Anglo-Catholics, a Low Churchman was appointed. The High Church tradition lay dormant until Fr Colin Turnbull, who began his ministry as an assistant curate at St Peter's, Wallsend, was made vicar.

Notable Features

The east window, made by Miss Geddes as a First World War Memorial

The church’s architecture is in the Early English Gothic style, designed by Oliver & Leeson, and the tower is an easily recognisable landmark on the Wallsend skyline. Originally it was meant to be even taller, with a spire on top: however, quicksand below prevented this being carried out.[5]

Inside, the church's most striking feature is the magnificent east Window. It portrays the Crucifixion, and was unveiled in 1922 as a memorial to the men of the parish who died on active service during the First World War. Designed by the artist Wilhelmina Geddes, it has been widely lauded[6] and described by Nikolaus Pevsner as of ‘quite exceptionally high quality’[7] and is regarded as one of her finest works.[8]

The pipe organ is by Abbot & Smith of Leeds, and its specification is detailed at the National Pipe Organ Register.

Fr O'Brady-Jones's picture in the vestry of Wallsend St Luke

The vestries at the west end of the church are a memorial to Kathleen O'Brady-Jones, the eldest daughter of Fr O’Brady-Jones. She was accidentally shot during a rehearsal for an entertainment organised by the church in the nearby Co-op Hall, by a boy who had bought a revolver in the Bigg Market in Newcastle: whilst showing it to his friends the gun fired and Kathleen was killed.[9]

Clergy

Vicars of Wallsend St Luke

Rectors of Wallsend St Peter & St Luke


Assistant Curates

Today

Following large-scale alterations to the building in 2009-10, the church has become a home for many of the community gatherings which met in the old church hall. The west end of the church has been augmented and converted into halls and a kitchen that play host to a number of community groups. Also, the vestries are home to the Walking With Project, a charity set up by Wallsend Churches Working Together that supports asylum seekers and refugees in the North Tyneside area.

References

  1. http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-303417-church-of-st-luke-#.VWgdONJViko – Retrieved May 2015
  2. William Richardson, History of the Parish of Wallsend, Northemberland Press, Newcastle Upon Tyne, 1923 pp180-181
  3. http://www.achurchnearyou.com/wallsend-st-luke -Retrieved May 2015
  4. Minutes of evidence taken before the Royal Commission on Ecclesiastical Discipline, London, Printed for H.M.S.O. by Wyman and Sons, 1906, vol2, pp309-311
  5. Richardson, History of the Parish of Wallsend, p181
  6. Richardson, History of the Parish of Wallsend, p182
  7. N Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Northumberland, Penguin Books, 1957: Yale University Press, 1992, p605)
  8. M. Richardson and A. Moses, St Luke’s Church Wallsend: A Short History and Guide to the Church, Wallsend, 1975, p8
  9. Richardson, History of the Parish of Wallsend, p181
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