St Paul's Square (Sheffield)

United Kingdom / England / Sheffield
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By 1700, Sheffield's population had reached 5000, a second Anglican place of worship was required to house a growing congregation. A site on the southern edge of the town was selected, facing on to Pinstone Lane (later redeveloped as Pinstone Street). A public subscription was raised, and St Paul's was largely completed by 1721. The church was built in the Baroque style, with the street frontage dominated by an Italianate tower. The chapel had seating for 1,200 people.

A dispute over patronage prevented the chapel from opening until 1740. Robert Downes, a local goldsmith, had paid £1,000 towards its construction and promised a further £30 a year, on condition that he and his descendants would have the right to appoint its minister. However, the Vicar of Sheffield objected that, as St Paul's was a chapel of ease to his own church, he had the right to appoint a minister. In 1739, angered by the stand-off, Downes threatened to open the building as a chapel for Dissenters. A compromise was finally reached that the Vicar would have the right to choose the minister, but that the first minister would be a relative of Downes. This required an Act of Parliament, following which, it was consecrated to Saint Paul on 22 May 1740.

A John Snetzler organ was installed in 1755. A dome was added to the chapel's tower in 1769.[1] In 1824, the church was placed in its own parish. A memorial to Reverend Alexander Mackenzie, designed by Francis Legatt Chantrey, was added around this time.

Following slum clearance in the 1930s, the church's congregation slumped, and Saint Paul's closed in 1937. It was demolished the following year and the St Paul's Gardens were laid out on the site. These were later replaced by the Peace Gardens at the turn of the millennium, although the St Paul's name lives on in the nearby St Paul's Square and St Paul's Place redevelopment.
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Coordinates:   53°22'45"N   1°28'7"W

Comments

  • Deletion request added - St Paul's Gardens ARE the Peace Gardens. Information about St Paul's Church and the old St Paul's Gardens should go in the Peace Gardens article.
  • Deletion request readded for same reasons as above. ^^^^
  • Reverted George's deletion request. The remodelled Peace Gardens now only fill a portion of Saint Paul's Gardens. The Peace Gardens are a memorial to the deaths in both nuclear bomb attacks on Japan. The Saint Paul's Garden is the public place bordered by the stone walls at all four corners with public right of way signs. Bless you George for trying to be clever.
  • Learn to spell! It's Gardens, not Garden
This article was last modified 9 years ago