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Christ Church

A Grade II Listed Building in Ashford, Kent

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.1397 / 51°8'22"N

Longitude: 0.8699 / 0°52'11"E

OS Eastings: 600855

OS Northings: 141739

OS Grid: TR008417

Mapcode National: GBR RWW.JQG

Mapcode Global: VHKKN.1M65

Plus Code: 9F324VQ9+VW

Entry Name: Christ Church

Listing Date: 4 June 1976

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1071109

English Heritage Legacy ID: 179891

ID on this website: 101071109

Location: Christ Church, South Ashford, Ashford, Kent, TN23

County: Kent

District: Ashford

Electoral Ward/Division: Norman

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Ashford (Ashford)

Traditional County: Kent

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Kent

Tagged with: Church building Gothic Revival

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Description



750/3/169 CHRISTCHURCH ROAD
04-JUN-76 SOUTH ASHFORD
(Southwest side)
CHRIST CHURCH

II
1866-7, designed by Hubert Austin (1841-1915).

MATERIALS: Uncoursed Kentish ragstone with Bath stone dressings. Internal walls plastered and painted white.

PLAN: Aisled, clerestoried nave, chancel, south porch (which was intended to support a tower), north vestry/organ chamber. Slate roofs.

EXTERIOR: Built in a lancet and Geometrical style of the C13. The side windows are lancets, either paired on the lean-to aisles or single in the clerestory. The east and west window are Geometrical, the west window having four uncusped lights and the east three cusped ones. The projected south-west tower never having been built there is a small bell-turret near the west end. The most distinctive feature is the bold hipped roof on the vestry/organ chamber.

INTERIOR: The interior continues the C13-style architecture of the exterior. Five-bay arcades with round piers and double chamfered arches with a hood-moulding over. Chancel arch of similar type. Arch-braced nave roof with tie-beams and king-posts.

PRINCIPAL FIXTURES: The fixtures are modest as a result of the limited funding and are of standard Victorian type, such as the square-ended seating in the nave and aisles.

HISTORY: Christ Church provided much-needed Anglican church accommodation in rapidly expanding Victorian Ashford. The population of the town tripled after the South-Eastern Railway sited its locomotive works here in 1845 and, although the medieval church was lengthened by a bay in 1860, more accommodation was thought necessary. The vicar of Ashford, the Rev J P Alcock, began fundraising in 1860, but it took until 1864 for matters to move sufficiently for a competition to be held. 48 entries were received and the winner was the young Hubert Austin, an assistant in the office of (later Sir) George Gilbert Scott, the most successful and prolific church architect of his day. Scott allowed Austin to accept the commission and it is thus his first work. In 1867 he went on to work with the Lancaster architect Edward Graham Paley (1823-95) whose partner he became in 1868. Austin was to become one of the greatest church architects of the later C19, recognised, for example, as having 'genius' by Nikolaus Pevsner.

Funding for Christ Church seems to have remained tight and building only took place in 1866-7. The funds were 'almost entirely provided by subscriptions from the shareholders of the South Eastern Railway Company' as it served mainly their workers. Hence Christ Church became known as 'the railwayman's church' (ref. newspaper cutting, 1917). All the seats were free. The cost was £4,219 and the site was given by G Jemmett, lord of the manor.

SOURCES
Builder, 22 (1864), 274.
Unprovenanced newspaper cutting among parish papers, dealing with the jubilee services in 1917.
Incorporated Church Building Society papers, Lambeth Palace Library, file 6268.
Kentish Express, 11 May 1867.
Pevsner, N, Buildings of England: South Lancashire (1966) 44.
Brandwood, G, K, 'Splendour in the North: the Churches of Paley & Austin', in Powerhouses of Provincial Architecture (London, Victorian Society, 2009).
Pevsner, N, Buildings of England: South Lancashire (1966) 44.

REASONS FOR DESIGNATION
Christ Church, Ashford, is designated Grade II for the following principal reasons:
* It is an imposing building of in 'muscular' mid-Victorian Gothic which adds to the character of the area.
* It is the first church by Hubert Austin who was to go on to be one of the greatest late Victorian church-builders.
* It has not been altered in any significant way since it was built.


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