Church of St George, Chester Road, Hulme

Church of St George

Church of St George, Chester Road, Hulme
Basic information
Location Chester Road, Hulme, Manchester
Geographic coordinates 53°28′20″N 2°15′33″W / 53.4721°N 2.2593°W / 53.4721; -2.2593Coordinates: 53°28′20″N 2°15′33″W / 53.4721°N 2.2593°W / 53.4721; -2.2593
Architectural description
Architect(s) Francis Goodwin
Groundbreaking 1826
Completed 1828
Construction cost £15,000

The Church of St George, Chester Road, Hulme, Manchester, is an early Gothic Revival church by Francis Goodwin, built in 1826-8. It was restored in 1884 by J. S. Crowther. It was designated a Grade II* listed building on 3 October 1974.[1]

The church was a Commissioners' church, (built to celebrate the victory at the Battle of Waterloo) who allotted the sum of £15,000 for construction. Goodwin was an obvious choice for architect having already undertaken a number of churches in the Midlands and the North West, as well as the original Manchester Town Hall. Sir Nikolaus Pevsner considers that Goodwin's inspiration was Nicholas Hawksmoor's St Michael, Cornhill and that "the whole makes a lively and memorable picture". A six-bay nave with "high three-light Perpendicular windows" concludes with a tall tower at the west end, and two high pinnacles at the east. Porches are set at the northwest and southwest corners.[2]

Drawing from Pevsner, the English Heritage inspectors who listed the building in 1974, without an internal inspection, stated that the interior was "reported as having: galleries; Perpendicular arcades; [and a] wall monument to The Hon. George Berkeley Molyneux (d.1841), by Edward Physick, in form of soldier mourning beside urn."[1]

A declining inner-city population in the post-war period, combined with the increasing isolation of the church caused by major road construction in its vicinity, led to St George's closure in 1984.[3] A "twenty-year search for a use which would preserve the interior ... proved fruitless and the building was converted to flats (in) 2000–2. The interior can no longer be read as a whole."[2] In 2015, the flat occupying the church tower was on the market for £1 million.[4]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 Historic England, "Church of St George, Manchester (1208640)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 29 August 2012
  2. 1 2 Hartwell, Clare; Hyde, Matthew; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2004). Lancashire: Manchester and the South East. The Buildings of England. New Haven, CT; London: Yale University Press. p. 451. ISBN 0-300-10583-5.
  3. "St. George's Church – Hulme". A Manchester View. Retrieved 29 August 2012.
  4. "Dream Home: The £1m nine-floor flat in former Castlefield church which overlooks Manchester city centre". Manchester Evening News. 4 July 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2015.
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