Building of the church started in 1879 and it was completed and consecrated in 1881. It cost £7,000 (equivalent to £890,000 as of 2023),[4] and provided seating for 460 people.[3][5]
Architecture
The church is constructed in red brick with Runcornsandstone dressings.[6] It has a slate roof. Its plan consists of a three-baynave with a north aisle and a south porch, a two-bay chancel with a north vestry, and a central tower. Along the sides of the church are two-light flat-headed windows with Decoratedtracery. The porch is gabled and has a niche for a statue above the doorway. The tower has buttresses, a three-light transomed window, and flat-headed bell openings. At the top of the tower is a parapet with an ashlarfrieze below it, and a pyramidal roof. The east and west windows have five and four transomed lights respectively.[2]
Inside the church the arcade between the nave and north aisle is carried on circular sandstone columns with mouldedcapitals. The stone reredos contains four niches with statues. The alabasterpulpit is large and elaborate; it was formerly in Manchester Cathedral. The stained glass in the east window dates from 1949 and is by Abbott and Company of Lancaster.[3] The font incorporates polygonal shafts of green marble.[6]
Brandwood, Geoff; Austin, Tim; Hughes, John; Price, James (2012), The Architecture of Sharpe, Paley and Austin, Swindon: English Heritage, ISBN978-1-84802-049-8