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User / Baz Richardson - often away / St Giles RC Church, Cheadle, Staffordshire - by Pugin
Baz Richardson / 12,122 items
The mid-nineteenth century Roman Catholic Church of St Giles in Cheadle, Staffordshire, is reckoned to be Augustus Pugin's finest building. The red sandstone was quarried in the area. The 200 feet tall spire can be seen from miles around.

In 1840 the celebrated architect Augustus Pugin (who designed much of the Houses of Parliament) was commissioned by John Talbot, the 16th Earl of Shrewsbury, to design and build a Roman Catholic church “that would have no rival”. The earl placed unlimited means at Pugin’s disposal. Known as Pugin’s Gem, the church remains one of the finest examples of Gothic Revival church architecture in the world today.

The church was finally completed in 1846, although the style of architecture reflects early Gothic buildings such as Salisbury Cathedral, which dates from 1220. Pugin was born in 1812, the son of a French family, and died tragically young at the age of 40. Yet by that time he had designed a substantial number of churches and other buildings. However, the church at Cheadle must surely be his finest memorial.

Simon Jenkins considers this to be among England's hundred best churches. For more photos of St Giles, please see my photostream or my set entitled "Pugin's Gem....".

All photos are hand-held HDR shots.
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Dates
  • Taken: Nov 29, 2012
  • Uploaded: Dec 1, 2012
  • Updated: Nov 15, 2016