St Matthew's Church, Manchester

St Matthew's Church, Campfield,[1] was an Anglican parish church in Manchester, England, that was designed in 1822-25 by the architect Charles Barry in a Gothic style. Built on Liverpool Road, it was a Commissioners' church and was demolished in 1951-52.[2] The associated Sunday school building survives and has been converted into offices known as Gunn House.[3]

History

Until some changes in ecclesiastical administration in 1839, St Matthew's was one of three churches that had been assigned a formal district within the parish of Manchester, which itself fell under the control of Manchester Collegiate Church. A further 23 churches had no such areas assigned to them.[4]

A proposal had been made in 1914 to merge the parish of St Matthew's with that of the nearby St John's Church, citing the transient and largely Roman Catholic population of the St Matthew's parish as a reason. This did not happen and, instead, St John's was subsumed by St Matthew's in the 1920s. Falling attendances due to the commercial nature of the St John's parish, and also a sense that there was some redundancy of provision given the proximity of St Matthew's, caused the Manchester diocese to review the situation, which resulted in a formal proposal of merger in 1927. The relative modernity of the St Matthew's building was among the reasons that influenced the decision.[5][6] St John's Church was demolished in 1931.

gollark: They do have lots of memory bandwidth.
gollark: And are optimized for simple number-crunching workloads and not complex branchy things like CPUs.
gollark: IIRC they mostly have quite bad latency in doing anything ever, but make up for it by switching between a lot of threads while waiting on memory accesses etc.
gollark: They aren't really constrained by binary compatibility, so each GPU architecture can randomly change the instruction set round.
gollark: And people often prefer paying more for a GPU to no GPU.

See also

References

  1. Campfield is an older name for the part of Manchester which is now known as Castlefield
  2. Fleetwood-Hesketh, P. (1955) Murray's Lancashire Architectural Guide. London: John Murray; p. 160
  3. "Castlefield and its buildings today". Manchester City Council. Retrieved 2014-08-23.
  4. Shaw, William Arthur (1894). Manchester Old and New. II. Cassell. pp. 127–129.
  5. "Manchester Canonries: Point of View of the Rectors". The Manchester Guardian. 5 July 1919. p. 8.
  6. "Passing of City Churches: St. John's Deansgate "Sentenced"". The Manchester Guardian. 18 July 1927. p. 12.

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