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The Encyclopaedia of Plymouth History |
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CHURCH OF OUR MOST HOLY REDEEMER
The Roman Catholic Church of Our Most Holy Redeemer
is situated in Ocean Street, Keyham, Plymouth.
The Church was designed by the Reverend Canon A J C Scoles and was built of limestone, in the Gothic style, dressed with Bath stone. There were seats of pitch pine for some 550 people and an oak altar. Mr R G Jenkin erected the building at a cost of £5,000. [1] A Presbytery was due to be ready in time for the formal opening of the Church in September 1902. It was expected to cost £1,200. [1] The priest was the Reverend Patrick Kent, the brother of the Reverend T P Kent, the priest at the Roman Catholic Church of Saint Michael and Saint Joseph at Devonport. [1] Our Most Holy Redeemer was reduced to a burnt out shell during the night raid of April 22nd-23rd 1941. Exactly a week later the Presbytery met the same fate. Two of the classrooms on the ground floor of the school were turned in to a temporary chapel. It was rebuilt in 1954 and re-consecrated on Wednesday April 10th 1957. During the ceremony of dedication, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Plymouth, the Right Reverend Cyril Restieaux, congratulated Monsignor Canon Gaynor, who had been the parish priest since 1924, on his development of the parish, part of which was transferred in 1935 to the Roman Catholic Church of Saint Paul at Saint Budeaux, and the erection of a secondary school at Keyham. The Bishop consecrated both the outside and inside walls of the Church and the High Altar, while Monsignor E Dewey, a former Royal Naval Chaplain, consecrated the Altar of the Sacred Heart and the Abbot of Buckfast, the Right reverend Dom Placid Hooper, did likewise with the Altar of Our Lady. In the evening they all attended a celebratory dinner at the Goodbody's Café in New George Street. [2] Attached to the Church is a house for the Sisters of Charity of Saint Paul. Sources:
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