St Andrew's Church, Westland Row, Dublin Explained

St. Andrew's Church
Location:Westland Row
Dublin
Country:Republic of Ireland
Denomination:Roman Catholic Church
Website:https://www.standrews.ie/
Dedication:St. Andrew
Consecrated Date:2 January 1834
Architect:John Bolger, based on plans by James Leeson, with input from Francis Johnston and James Lever. Roof by Richard Turner.
Architectural Type:Classical (Baroque)
Style:Church
Parish:Westland Row Parish
Deanery:South City Centre
Diocese:Dublin
Organist:Aleksandre Nisse

St. Andrew's Church is a Roman Catholic church located in Westland Row, Dublin, Republic of Ireland. Construction started in 1832, it opened for public worship in 1834 but was not completed until 1837.[1]

History

The architect appointed to design the church was John Bolger. However, he used the plans for a previous church, in Townsend Street, which had been designed by James Leeson.[2] Assistance was received from Francis Johnston and James Lever. The roof was by Richard Turner. The exterior of the church has a Doric portico with a statue of St. Andrew, sculpted by John Smyth (1776-1840), son of Edward Smyth (d.1812), sculptor of the Riverine heads at the Custom House.[1]

On 7 January 1940 ornamentation fell from the ceiling, which prompted an investigation and refurbishment. This started in 1942 when the interior was renovated and painted. All sculptures were restored at the same time.[3]

Dominic Corrigan (1802-1880), a noted physician, is buried in the crypt of the church.

Organ

The organ of St. Andrew's was built by John White of Dublin in 1872. It is a large three-manual instrument which originally contained many ranks of orchestral Cavaille-Coll pipework. However, during the 1976 rebuild a large number of these were lost in favour of more neo-classical stops.

The organist of St. Andrew's since October 2011 is Aleksandre Nisse.

References and sources

Notes
Sources

Notes and References

  1. Watson, p. 23
  2. Casey, p. 9
  3. Watson, p. 31