St Thomas Cathedral, Acton

St Thomas Syriac Orthodox Cathedral Acton is a Syriac Orthodox Cathedral in Acton, London, England, formerly known as St Saviour's Centre for the Deaf Anglican church, which was a social centre for deaf people, and the first and only purpose-built church for deaf people as such.[1] St Saviour's was the central location for the London Diocesan Chaplaincy among Deaf and Deafblind people. The church and social centre closed in 2014 following a loss of funding, and insufficient financial reserves to maintain the premises.[1] The final church service was held on Wednesday 24 September 2014, at which the Bishop of Willesden officiated.[2]

St Thomas Syriac Orthodox Cathedral
Saint Thomas Syriac Orthodox Cathedral London
LocationActon, London
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationSyriac Orthodox
History
Former name(s)St Saviour's Centre for the Deaf
StatusChurch

History

The foundation stone

St Saviour's Church, Oxford Street

The congregation was first established at a site in Oxford Street, where the original building was constructed from 1870 to 1874. The architect was Arthur Blomfield.[3] The Duke of Westminster had provided the site on a lease for sixty years. The foundation stone was laid by Edward, Prince of Wales and Princess Alexandra, who had a hearing impairment.[4]

The first service there was held in 1873. The building became a great symbol for deaf people of their rights to play a full part in church and society.[5]

St Saviour's Church, Acton

The church moved to a new site in Acton in 1925, when the Oxford Street location was required for redevelopment into the present Selfridge's.[6] The congregation worshipped in the church continuously for 90 years. The building included many features specially designed for the deaf, which included dual pulpits (one for the speaker and one for a sign language translator), clear lines of sight (with no pillars or visual obstructions), and a sloping floor to ensure that even those near the back can clearly see the signers.

Deaf ministry

Another view of the church

Although St Saviour's Church has now closed, the congregation continues to meet. The Chaplaincy among Deaf and Deafblind people has four other meeting locations,[7] although St Saviour's was the only dedicated premises, and the only church with specially designed facilities for the deaf. The closure of St Saviour's corresponds with the appointment of a new full-time Chaplain for the Chaplaincy service.[8] Chaplains are ordained priests appointed to specialist ministries, in this case the provision of worship and social activities for the deaf and deafblind community in London.

The church building

In September 2014 the Diocese of London announced that St Saviour's Church building had been sold to the Syriac Orthodox Church community in west London, who have developed it for continuing use as a church within their own tradition, reopening it as St Thomas Cathedral in November 2016.[9]

Documents and archives associated with the church are currently being researched by the History of Place project,[10] and will feature as part of a display at the Victoria and Albert Museum during 2018.[11]

gollark: I can sometimes be *slightly* evil with them, hence why potatOS uninstallation requires you to solve the incredibly simple problem of factorizing a 10-digit semiprime.
gollark: You should send him the potatOS magic DRM blob.
gollark: b
gollark: Oh, in that case it's just network bees.
gollark: Possibly. It might be configured differently somehow.

References

  1. Tracey, Emma (27 April 2014). "UK's only deaf church to close". BBC News. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  2. "The Consecration of St Thomas Syriac Orthodox Cathedral in London and Britain's historic relationship with Religious Refugees". Tide Project. 16 April 2017.
  3. "Oxford Street: The Rebuilding of Oxford Street". Survey of London: volume 40: The Grosvenor Estate in Mayfair, Part 2 (The Buildings). British History Online. 1980. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  4. "1875 – St. Saviours Church for the Deaf & Dumb, Oxford Street, London". Archiseek.com. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  5. "History part 1". Royal Association for Deaf People. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  6. "St Saviour's history". Diocese of London Deaf Church. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  7. Details on the service's official webpage at the Diocese of London.
  8. Details of appointment
  9. Drake, Gavin (2016-11-25). "Britain's first Syriac Orthodox Cathedral consecrated". ACNS. Retrieved 2016-12-22.
  10. St Saviour's Deaf church timeline http://historyof.place/location/st-saviours-deaf-church/
  11. History of Place exhibition at the V&A http://historyof.place/events/exhibition-at-the-victoria-and-albert-museum/
  • Image of the Oxford Street church, British Museum

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.