St Frideswide's Church | |
Fullname: | The Parish Church of St Frideswide |
Style: | Gothic Revival |
Years Built: | 1870–2 |
Consecrated Date: | 10 April 1872 |
Architect: | Samuel Sanders Teulon |
Denomination: | Church of England |
Churchmanship: | Anglo-Catholic |
Diocese: | Oxford |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Vicar: | Revd Clare Sykes |
Website: | osneybenefice.org.uk |
St Frideswide's Church is a Church of England church on the south side of the Botley Road in New Osney, west Oxford, England.[1] The church is in a district originally part of the parish of St Thomas the Martyr.[2]
The church is dedicated to the patroness of Oxford, St Frideswide.[3] It was designed by the 19th-century Gothic Revival architect Samuel Sanders Teulon of Westminster, London and built by the local firm of Honour & Castle. The foundation stone was laid in 1870 and the church was consecrated on 10 April 1872 by John Mackarness, the Bishop of Oxford.[4] It was originally intended for the church tower to have a spire.
In the nave is the "Alice Door", carved by Alice Liddell, a daughter of Henry Liddell, the Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, made famous through Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
Immediately to the west is Osney Ditch. The church was the setting of a Morse detective story, Service of All the Dead by Colin Dexter.
St Frideswide's stands in the Anglo-Catholic tradition of the Church of England.[5]