Benson Memorial Church

The Benson Memorial Church, dedicated to St Richard of Chichester, is an English Roman Catholic church in the Hertfordshire town of Buntingford. Its name derives from the notable priest and author Robert Hugh Benson who lived locally at Hare Street House and helped fund construction of the church. Benson laid the foundation stone[1] but died before the building was completed. The parish currently shares a parish priest with the Catholic churches in Puckeridge and Old Hall Green.

St Richard of Chichester, Buntingford
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitercdow.org.uk
History
DedicationSt Richard of Chichester
Consecrated5 June 1940
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade II
Architect(s)Arthur Young
StyleModern Gothic
Specifications
Capacity160
Tower height45 feet (14 m)
Spire height35 feet (11 m)
Administration
DeaneryLea Valley
DioceseWestminster
Clergy
Priest(s)Cyril Chiaha

History

The church was built in 1914 by Arthur Young in the Gothic style and is Grade II listed[2] as a building of special architectural or historic interest. It was opened in January 1915. The Lady chapel was added in 1916 and the porch in 1934. The 45-foot tall tower, surmounted by a 35-foot copper spire was added in 1939. The church was consecrated in 1940[3] by the auxiliary bishop of Westminster, Edward Myers.

Interior of the church
gollark: Stuff is seemingly not magically self-computing. At least, I haven't seen algorithms somehow run themselves.
gollark: That is a good question. "I think therefore I am" and all, but that really only implies that in some form "I" am running on some kind of processing hardware which can do consciousness, whether it is my foolish mortal brain in a universe with quarks and everything or a simulation of that on, I don't know, some kind of massive cellular automaton.
gollark: Well, the computer and jar have to physically exist in some form.
gollark: Besides that, the bee-image is quite clearly distinguishable from a bee in many ways.
gollark: The simplest and most sensible explanation is the non-jar thing.

References

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