St Joseph's Church, Stokesley

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The church, in 2005 St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Stokesley - geograph.org.uk - 28677.jpg
The church, in 2005

St Joseph's Church is a Catholic church in Stokesley, a town in North Yorkshire, in England.

In 1743, a Catholic chapel was opened in an outbuilding of Stokesley Manor House, but it was destroyed in anti-Catholic riots in 1746. The town was without a Catholic place of worship until 1860, when a mission chapel was established in a former hayloft at the Angel Inn. In 1870, Apollonia Bland donated £1,000 for the construction of a church. A building was designed by George Goldie and was constructed between 1872 and 1873. Together with the presbytery, the construction cost £1,500, and on completion the building could seat 252 worshippers. The church suffered a fire in the 1970s, and was then restored and reordered and a north aisle was added by F. Swainston & Associates. [1] [2]

The church is constructed of red brick, with black bricks above and between the windows, and has a roof of concrete tiles. It consists of a nave with a north aisle and sanctuary. There are buttresses on the south side, added in the 1970s, and the west end has a double bellcote. The altar consists of three blocks of sandstone, and the font of a single block, all installed in the 1970s. There is bench seating, and some stained glass installed in the 1940s, to designs by G. S. Walsh. [2]

References

  1. "Roman Catholic church building news". The Builder. 31 May 1873.
  2. 1 2 "Stokesley – St Joseph". Taking Stock. Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales. Retrieved 18 January 2026.

54°28′30″N1°11′14″W / 54.475137°N 1.187135°W / 54.475137; -1.187135