Our Lady Star of the Sea and St Winefride, Amlwch explained

Our Lady Star of the Sea and St Winefride
Native Name:Mair, Seren Y Mor a Santes Wenfrewi
Native Name Lang:cy
Pushpin Map:Wales Anglesey
Map Caption:Location in Anglesey
Location:Amlwch, Anglesey
Country:Wales, United Kingdom
Denomination:Roman Catholic
Founded Date:1932 (construction started)
Consecrated Date:1937
Dedication:St Mary (Our Lady, Star of the Sea) and St Winefride
Status:Parish church
Architectural Type:Church
Functional Status:Active
Heritage Designation:Grade II*
Designated Date:12 December 2000
Floor Area: -->
Materials:Reinforced concrete
Architect:Giuseppe Rinvolucri
Parish:Amlwch
Deanery:Caernarfon Deanery
Diocese:Diocese of Wrexham
Archdiocese:Archdiocese of Cardiff
Priest:Fr Frank Murray, Fr Joe Daly

Our Lady Star of the Sea and St Winefride (Welsh: Mair, Seren Y Mor a Santes Wenfrewi|links=no[1]) is a Roman Catholic church in Amlwch, a town on the island of Anglesey, north Wales. It was built in the 1930s to a design by an Italian architect, Giuseppe Rinvolucri, using reinforced concrete. The church is in the shape of an upturned boat, reflecting Amlwch's maritime heritage, and is dedicated to Our Lady, Star of the Sea (a title of St Mary) and St Winefride, a Welsh saint.

The church is a Grade II* listed building, a designation given to "particularly important buildings of more than special interest",[2] because it is a "remarkable inter-war church", built to "a highly unusual and experimental design".[3] The Twentieth Century Society has called it "a rare and unique church", and it has also been called "one of Britain's most avant-garde churches".

Location and history

The church is on the A5025 road, about 0.5miles to the west of Amlwch, a town on the north coast of Anglesey, Wales.[4] It is dedicated to St Mary (under the title Our Lady, Star of the Sea) and to St Winefride, a 7th-century Welsh noblewoman who is also venerated at St Winefride's Well, Flintshire. Construction of the church began in 1932, when the foundations were excavated. It was completed in 1937, and the church was consecrated in the same year.[4] The architect was Giuseppe Rinvolucri, an Italian engineer from Piedmont, who settled in Conwy, north Wales, because his English wife was suffering from tuberculosis. His specialist field was the design of Roman Catholic churches, and other – more conventional – examples of his work can be found in Abergele and Porthmadog, also in north Wales.[3] [5]

The church is part of Caernarfon Deanery within the Diocese of Wrexham.[6] The parish of Amlwch and Benllech also includes the church Our Lady of Lourdes, Benllech.[1]

Damage from the weather and deterioration in the concrete meant that the church closed for worship in 2004, requiring worshippers to attend services elsewhere on Anglesey. Demolition was a possibility in 2006.[7] An appeal launched raised the estimated £1.2 million to £1.4 million necessary for repairs, which included replacing the roof coverings, redecorating internally and externally, and repairing the steps.[8] An application for planning permission for the work was submitted in May 2008 to the Isle of Anglesey County Council.[9] An application for a grant of £840,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund was rejected on 18 March 2009, with the committee concerned about the proposed new extension (terming it "inappropriate"), although recognising the "high heritage merit" of the proposal.[10] Cadw (the Welsh Assembly Government body responsible for the built heritage of Wales) made a grant of £150,000 in 2007; the National Churches Trust made a grant of £10,000 in June 2010; and other bodies and individuals made donations to the appeal.[8] The church reopened after its restoration on 1 May 2011 with a Mass celebrated by the Bishop of Wrexham, Edwin Regan.[11]

Architecture and fittings

Built of reinforced concrete, the building is designed in the style of an upturned boat, and the design has a "nautical theme" with elements such as porthole windows.[3] [4] This is a deliberate reference to Amlwch's history as a port town and its position on the coast.[7] [12] The church has six concrete parabolic arch "ribs" along the outside, with portholes on the base plinth between each rib.[3] [5]

The main entrance is at the south end of the church at the top of some stone steps on either side. A window (shaped, like all the others in the church, like a star) set in mosaic is positioned above the door, and there is a stone cross at the top of the facade. The concrete of the church is dressed with stone on the south side, nearest the main road. The ribs on the outside are visible inside the building; in between them, there are patterns of lights and coloured marble panels on the lower parts of the interior walls. The vestry is to the rear of the church, and there is a parish hall, built from masonry, underneath the church.[3] [4] [5] The altar was replaced in 1995 and again on the reopening of the church in 2011, when a carved crucifix, which was brought to Amlwch from a former convent in Liverpool, was also dedicated.[5] [11] The porch houses a sepulchral slab, dating from the latter half of the 13th century.[5]

Assessment

The church is a Grade II* listed building – the second-highest of the three grades of listing, designating "particularly important buildings of more than special interest".[2] It was given this status on 12 December 2000, and has been listed as "a remarkable inter-war church".[3] Cadw describes it as "striking and individual", and "a highly unusual and experimental design which exploits the plastic qualities of its constructional material to create a powerfully expressive religious building."[3]

A 2006 guide to the churches of Anglesey describes it as "a very impressive building", that "must surely be the most unusual church in Anglesey."[4] A 2009 guide to the buildings of north Wales describes it as "a piece of Italian architectural daring".[13] Referring to the French structural engineer Eugène Freyssinet, who worked with concrete, the guide rhetorically asks, "What inspired this Futurist church, closer to Freyssinet's 1920s airship hangars at Orly, Paris, than to Catholic church design, and so unlike the conservatism of Anglesey building?"[13] Writing before the church reopened, the heritage writer and journalist Simon Jenkins has said that the church was worth a visit for the exterior alone, even though it was closed. He noted the "sweeping parabolic arches, perhaps inspired by airship hangars or by upturned boats in Amlwch harbour", as well as the "bold gable with sloping sides" at the west end, concluding "This church must be saved."[14] It has also been described as "one of Britain's most avant-garde churches".[7] The Twentieth Century Society has said that it is "by far [Rinvolucri's] best work", calling it "a rare and unique church".[15] It noted the "highly individual interpretation of its seaside setting", with a "strikingly modern" parabolic design and a "monumental almost pyramidal aesthetic" at the entrance.[15] A 2011 guide to religious buildings in Wales (written before the church reopened) described it as "most unusual", but added that the fittings were "not worthy of the building". It also noted one writer's words that "no Catholic church (nor any church of another denomination) built in Britain between the wars has the frankly radical character of Amlwch".[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Church of Our Lady Star of the Sea & St Winefride . Diocese of Wrexham . 18 October 2021.
  2. Book: What is listing?. PDF. Cadw. 2005. 1-85760-222-6. 6. 19 October 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20120417061200/http://cadw.wales.gov.uk/docs/cadw/publications/What_Is_Listing_EN.pdf. 17 April 2012. dead.
  3. (The church's name is spelt incorrectly on the Cadw document.)
  4. Book: Jones, Geraint I. L. . 2006. Anglesey Churches. Carreg Gwalch. 1-84527-089-4. 31.
  5. Book: A guide to the churches and chapels of Wales. University of Wales Press. 2011. 978-0-7083-2118-8. 76–77. Jonathan . Wooding . Nigel. Yates. Nigel Yates.
  6. Web site: Wrexham Diocese: Deaneries. Diocese of Wrexham. 26 June 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20111003145001/http://www.wrexhamdiocese.org.uk/ourstandard.asp?pageid=145. 3 October 2011. dead.
  7. News: Save Our Churches: lost without 'Our Lady' . The Daily Telegraph. Leach. Ben. 24 May 2008. 25 June 2010.
  8. News: Amlwch church gets funding boost for renovation project. Bangor and Anglesey Mail. Hearn. Elgan. 16 June 2010. 25 June 2010.
  9. Web site: List of Applications Received in the Week 12/5/08 – 18/5/08. PDF. Isle of Anglesey County Council. 26 June 2010. 4.
  10. Web site: Heritage Lottery Fund Committee for Wales Meeting on 18 March 2009. PDF. Heritage Lottery Fund. 26 June 2010. 3.
  11. News: Doors open at house of God. Daily Post (North Wales). Powell. David. 2 May 2011. 7 June 2011.
  12. Web site: Our Lady Star Of The Sea And St. Winefride RC Church. Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, Isle of Anglesey. 25 June 2010.
  13. Book: Haslam, Richard. The Buildings of Wales: Gwynedd. Anglesey: Amlwch. Yale University Press. 978-0-300-14169-6. 2009. 93. Orbach. Julian. Voelcker. Adam.
  14. Book: Jenkins, Simon. Wales: Churches, Houses, Castles. 2008. 978-0713998931. Penguin Books. 48. Simon Jenkins.
  15. Web site: The Italian Touch. Eva . Branscome. Twentieth Century Society. September 2005. 25 June 2010.