St. Luke's Church (other)
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St. Luke's Church (other)
St. Luke's Church may refer to: Australia * St Luke's Church of England, Brisbane in Queensland * St Luke's Anglican Church, Boyne Island in Queensland * St Luke's Anglican Church, Toowoomba in Queensland * St Luke's Anglican Church, Liverpool in New South Wales Canada * St. Luke's United Church in Toronto, Ontario, Canada Denmark * St. Luke's Church, Aarhus * St. Luke's Church, Copenhagen England *St Luke the Evangelist Church, Brierfield, Lancashire * St Luke's Church, Brislington, Bristol * St Luke's Church, Bristol Street, Birmingham * St Luke's Church, Charlton * St Luke's Church, Chelsea, London * St Luke's Church, Derby * St Luke's Church, Dunham on the Hill, Cheshire * St Luke's Church, Farnworth, Widnes, Cheshire * St Luke's Church, Formby, Merseyside * St Luke's Church, Goostrey, Cheshire * St Luke's Church, Great Crosby, Merseyside * St Luke's Church, Hodnet, Shropshire * St Luke's Church, Holmes Chapel, Cheshire * St Luke's Church, Ilford, London * St Luk ...
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St Luke's Church Of England, Brisbane
St Luke's Church of England, Brisbane is a heritage-listed former church and now restaurant at 18 Charlotte Street, Brisbane City, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was designed by John Smith Murdoch and built in by John Steward & Co. It is also known as Pancake Manor. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992. History The site was purchased in 1903 by the Church of England for a new mission church. Prior to this, the mission had rented rooms throughout Brisbane and St Luke's provided its first permanent home. On 3 February 1904 the foundation stone of St Luke's Church was laid by His Excellency, Sir Herbert Chermside, Governor of Queensland. St Luke's served as a temporary cathedral between the demolition of St Johns Pro-Cathedral, 1904 and the opening of St Johns Cathedral in 1910. Architect, John Smith Murdoch, was commissioned to design a church which would utilise fully the limited site area. Murdoch, who was an architect for the Que ...
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St Luke's Church, Ilford
St Luke's Church, Ilford, is a Church of England parish church in Ilford, east London. It is dedicated to Saint Luke. It originated as a temporary mission built in the parish of St Clement's in 1909. E T Dunn designed its permanent stone and redbrick church building in a Neo-Gothic imitation of Perpendicular style - he also designed St Barnabas' Church, Woodford Wells. The permanent St Luke's was consecrated in 1915, consisting of an aisled nave and transepts - the planned chancel to complete its cruciform ground plan was never built. The church's mission district was upgraded to a parish the year after the permanent church's consecration, with the advowson vested in the Bishop of Chelmsford and the old mission church converted into the parish hall. The church was severely damaged in 1940 during the London Blitz and its reconstruction was only completed in 1954, with the congregation worshipping in the 1909 church hall in the interim. In 1983 it was re-orientated, moving th ...
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St Luke's Church, Redcliffe Gardens
St Luke's, Redcliffe Gardens, is an Anglican church in Redcliffe Gardens, bordering on Redcliffe Square, London. It was built in 1872–73 to designs by George and Henry Godwin. It has been Grade II listed since 2003. Pevsner describes it as "the last and the grandest of the three Kensington churches by the Godwins". The other two are St Mary, The Boltons (1849–50) and St Jude's, Courtfield Gardens (1870). It's chiefly remarkable for the quantity of sculptural embellishment, he says, including the celebration of Psalm 150 in the sanctuary.Pevsner, Nicholas. ''London 3: North West'' (1991) During the early 1950s composer Francis Routh Francis John Routh (5 January 1927 – 27 November 2021) was an English composer and author. Education Born in Kidderminster, Routh attended Malvern College and Harrow School before serving in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve (1945-8). He rea ... began holding new music concerts in the church that led to the Redcliffe Festival between 195 ...
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St Luke's Church, Queen's Park, Brighton
St Luke's Church is an Anglican church in the Queen's Park area of Brighton, part of the English city of Brighton and Hove. Occupying a large corner site on Queen's Park Road, it was designed in the 1880s by Sir Arthur Blomfield in the Early English style, and has been given listed building status because of its architectural importance. History Queen's Park was laid out as an ornamental park of in 1824. Charles Barry was hired to design decorative entrances and a villa for the park's owner. Housing development around the park had started in the 1810s and continued throughout the 19th century. The first Anglican place of worship in the area was built in 1875 and became a chapel of ease to St Mary's Church in Kemptown when that church was completed. The red-brick building was on the west side of Queen's Park Road. In 1880 a separate parish was established, and preparatory work on the new church started the following year on the opposite side of the road. The site was boug ...
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St Luke's Church, Preston
St Luke's Church is a redundant Anglican parish church in St Luke's Place, Preston, Lancashire, England. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building. History The church was built in 1858–59 and designed by E. H. Shellard at an estimated cost of £4,733. It opened on 3 August 1859, and provided seating for 800 people. The church was declared redundant on 1 January 1990, and passed into residential use on 24 February 1995. It was converted into flats. Architecture St Luke's is built in sandstone, has a slate roof, and is in Early English style. It consists of a six-bay nave with a clerestory, north and south aisles, a chancel with a north organ-house and a south vestry, and a southwest steeple. The tower is in five stages, and has a stair turret at the northwest corner. There is an arched doorway on the south side, and in the second and third stages are lancet windows. The fourth and fi ...
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St Luke's Church, Pendleton
St Luke's Church is an Anglican church that stands on raised ground in Liverpool Street, Pendleton, Salford. The church, in the parish of Weaste, Seedley and Langworthy, is part of the Salford All Saints Team Ministry in the Salford deanery and the Manchester diocese. It was designated as a Grade II* listed building in 1980. Architecture The church was designed in the Neo-Gothic style by the architect George Gilbert Scott and opened in 1865. In 1878 a chancel chapel was added to the east end of the north aisle in memory of Edward Tootal, an early benefactor. The church is constructed of coursed sandstone rubble with a plain tiled roof. The nave has a clerestory and aisles and the tower is supported by large circular columns with carved capitals. The chancel has a striking decorated roof and a semicircular apse and attached parallel chapels. The church is rich in stained glass, some by Charles Eamer Kempe. The organ was originally built in 1865 by the London-based firm, Wi ...
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St Luke's Church, Orrell
St Luke's Church is in Lodge Road, Orrell, Wigan, Greater Manchester, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Wigan, the archdeaconry of Warrington, and the diocese of Liverpool. History The three west bays of St Luke's were built in 1926–27, but the remainder was not completed until 1939. It had been planned to have a southwest tower, but this was never built. The church was designed by Henry Paley of the Lancaster firm of architects Austin and Paley. Architecture The church is designed mainly in Perpendicular style, and has a polygonal apse at the east end. Inside the church, the arcades are carried on octagonal piers. Under the chancel arch is a low wall with an integral pulpit. The sedilia and furnishings were designed by the architects, and include an octagonal font. External features The churchyard contains the war graves of a soldier and three airmen of World War II. See also *List of ecclesiastical works by Austin and Paley (1916 ...
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St Luke's Church, Oakhanger
St Luke's Church is in Church Lane, Oakhanger, Cheshire, England. It is an active Anglican mission church in the parish of Christ Church, Alsager, the deanery of Congleton, the archdeaconry of Macclesfield, and the diocese of Chester. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building. History The building was originally a school chapel with an attached master's house that was erected in 1870. Architecture St Luke's is constructed in red brick and stands on a blue brick plinth. It is roofed with blue tiles. The plan consists of a two-bay nave, a lower and narrower chancel, and a porch. On the ridge of the roof is a bellcote, set diagonally. The windows have pointed arches and contain intersecting glazing bars. Inside the church is an oak pulpit. The altar incorporates a panel containing the figures of Faith, Hope, and Charity. See also *Listed buildings in Haslington Haslington is a civil parish in Cheshi ...
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St Luke's Church, Matfield
St Luke's Church is a parish church in the village of Matfield, Kent, England. It is a Grade II listed building. The church is dedicated to Luke the Evangelist. Building Situated two miles north east of Royal Tunbridge Wells on the B2160, the church is on the southern outskirts of Matfield. The architect for the building was Basil Champneys. The church remains mostly original, apart from an extension built in 1965. Exterior The short tower at the west end has a steeply pitched roof of typical Kentish style. It contains a single bell, made in London by John Warner and Sons in 1877. The chancel at the east end is slightly narrower than the nave. On the north side of the chancel is a statue of Saint Luke, on which a garland placed round the neck on his feast day each year. The church is entered through the prominent porch, in which sandstone gives way to black and white work at waist height. Inside there is a large oak door, which is cut horizontally at the top to form a tympanu ...
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St Luke's Church, Lower Whitley
St Luke's Church is in the village of Lower Whitley, in the civil parish of Whitley, Cheshire, England. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building. It is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Chester, the archdeaconry of Chester and the deanery of Great Budworth. It is one of three parish churches in the parish of Aston-by-Sutton, Little Leigh and Lower Whitley. The other two being St Peter, Aston-by-Sutton and St Michael and All Angels, Little Leigh. The three were previously individual parishes in a united benefice with St Mark, Antrobus. History The church on this site was originally a chapel of ease in the parish of Great Budworth. Its date of foundation is not known but in the later part of the 16th century it was in a "very ruinous condition" and was rebuilt on its original foundations by Thomas Touchet. Alterations were made during the 19th century, the ...
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Church Of St Luke, Liverpool
St Luke's Church, more commonly known by locals as the bombed-out church, is a former Anglican parish church in Liverpool, England. It stands on the corner of Berry Street and Leece Street, at the top of Bold Street. The church was built between 1811 and 1832, and was designed by John Foster, Sr. and John Foster, Jr., father and son who were successive surveyors for the municipal Corporation of Liverpool. In addition to being a parish church, it was also intended to be used as a venue for ceremonial worship by the corporation and as a concert hall. The church was badly damaged by bombs during the Liverpool Blitz in 1941 and has been a roofless shell ever since, giving rise to its nickname. It now stands as a memorial to those who died in the war, and has also been hired as a venue for exhibitions and events. The church and its surrounding walls, gates, and railings are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated Grade II* listed buildings. History ...
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St Luke's Church, Kingston Upon Thames
St Luke's Church is a Grade II listed Church of England church on Gibbon Road in Kingston upon Thames, London. Designed by the Leeds architectural firm Kelly & Birchall, it was constructed between 1886 and 1887 by a local building firm, W. H. Gaze. History The church was built to serve the railway workers whose houses form the surrounding streets, situated to the north of the railway station in Kingston. The parish was poor but, through the well-connected wife of the first vicar, received sponsorship from society figures, most notably Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, granddaughter of George III and mother of Queen Mary, consort of George V. This allowed for the prominent church which stands today, the spire of which was completed in 1891 following a further donation of funds by Lady Wolverton. A painting showing the original design for the church survives. It shows that the building was constructed largely as it was intended by the architects, with only the design of the ...
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