Holy Cross Church, Port Talbot Explained

Holy Cross Church
Other Name:Chapel of Ease
Coordinates:51.5912°N -3.7691°W
Country:Wales
Language(S):English
Denomination:Church in Wales
Former Names:-->
Functional Status:Redundant
Heritage Designation:Grade II listed
Designated Date:28 April 2000[1]
Architect:Edward Haycock Sr.
Years Built:1827
Closed Date:2008
Capacity:500
Bells Hung:-->
Parish:Margam

Holy Cross Church, Port Talbot, also known locally as the "Chapel of Ease", is a Victorian church located centrally in the Taibach district of Port Talbot, Wales.[2] Prior to the building of the M4 motorway flyover through the centre of the town in the 1960s, it was in the centre of a residential area, but it is now dominated by junction 40 of the motorway. The land was originally donated by C. R. M. Talbot, MP, the owner of the Margam Abbey estate, as a church for local people who could not get to the abbey itself to worship.

The church was built in 1827 by the Shrewsbury architect Edward Haycock Sr., with William Bruce Knight as its first vicar,[3] and fell within the parish of Margam, as a chapel of ease to Margam Abbey.[4] It had a capacity of 500.

After the building of St Theodore's Church, Port Talbot, Holy Cross became a subsidiary of the new parish of Taibach.[5] In 1903 Holy Cross was upgraded, with G. E. Halliday as architect, to bring it up to the standard of a parish church, and a rood screen was added.[1]

The parents of the actor Anthony Hopkins were married at the church in 1936.[6]

Closure

The church closed at the end of December 2008 after part of the ceiling collapsed. It was declared redundant by the Archbishop of Wales, Barry Morgan, in 2009.

The cemetery contains several war graves in the care of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.[7]

A proposal to turn the church into a private residence met with opposition from those with relatives buried in the churchyard. It was then proposed to convert the building into a chapel of rest instead.[8] The chapel was taken over by a local funeral director in 2016.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Holy Cross Church, Port Talbot. British Listed Buildings. 5 October 2020.
  2. Book: Geoffrey R. Orrin. Church Building and Restoration in Victorian Glamorgan: An Architectural and Documentary Study. 2004. University of Wales Press. 101.
  3. Web site: The National Library of Wales, Knight, William Bruce (1785–1845), Welsh scholar, ecclesiastic, and administrator: Dictionary of Welsh Biography. 17 September 2020.
  4. Book: Port Talbot Historical Society. Transactions. 1965.
  5. Web site: History. The Parish of St Theodore, Port Talbot. 18 September 2020.
  6. Book: Michael Feeney Callan. Anthony Hopkins: In Darkness and Light. 1993. Sidgwick & Jackson. 19.
  7. Web site: Port Talbot (Holy Cross) Churchyard. CWGC. 18 September 2020.
  8. Web site: Holy Cross Church, Taibach, near Margam. Jenny Hunt. trysor.net. 5 October 2020.
  9. Web site: Chapel of Rest. Port Talbot Funeral Service. 5 October 2020.