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Latitude: 55.9788 / 55°58'43"N
Longitude: -3.2062 / 3°12'22"W
OS Eastings: 324829
OS Northings: 676858
OS Grid: NT248768
Mapcode National: GBR 8L4.18
Mapcode Global: WH6SD.QZFG
Plus Code: 9C7RXQHV+GG
Entry Name: Christ Church Episcopal, 118 Trinity Road, Edinburgh
Listing Name: 118 Trinity Road, Former Christchurch Episcopal Church
Listing Date: 15 July 1983
Category: C
Source: Historic Scotland
Source ID: 363714
Historic Scotland Designation Reference: LB26850
Building Class: Cultural
ID on this website: 200363714
Location: Edinburgh
County: Edinburgh
Town: Edinburgh
Electoral Ward: Forth
Traditional County: Midlothian
Tagged with: Architectural structure Church building
John Henderson, 1854. Simple gothic church (converted as private house by Gordon and Dey, 1980) with 3-bay aisleless nave, 1-bay chancel, S-facing entrance porch and small spired tower to SW. Projecting organ chamber added at SE in 1882. N aisle and vestibule to NE added 1889 by Thomas Leadbetter. Grey Fife sandstone squared and snecked rubble with Craigleith ashlar dressings.
S ELEVATION: 3-bay:- chamfered pointed-arched doorway to gabled porch at left, with hoodmould and label stops carved as male and female masks. Projecting gabled S transept (organ chamber) to right; pointed arched opening now reveals floors of modern house. Central bay has cusped mullioned bipartite window in Tudor-arched opening.
W ELEVATION: 3-light window with circle of mouchettes in gable; small tower on square base continuous with gable wall, rising to octagonal belfry with trefoil openings to louvred bell chamber; winged animals under cornice of finialled stone spire, carved male mask at intersection of roof and tower.
N ELEVATION: flat-roofed projecting N aisle in paler sandstone; 3 rectangular tripartite openings with trefoil cusped windows, 1 smaller on return to W. Projecting additional building with butressed chimney to left.
Grey slate roof, scalloped on entrance porch. Cross-finialed sawtooth stone coped skews with gabletted terminations to porch and S transept.
Ecclesiastical building no longer in use as such. Built by Walter Mitchell Goalen as a proprietary chapel, of which he was both incumbent and owner. Goalen was the son of a Leith ship builder. He had resigned his charge at Holy Trinity, Laurencekirk in 1852, and lived at Starbank House (Laverockbank Road). The church was opened in 1854. Because it was a private venture there was no constitution and no board of management, and therefore no records for this period. When Goalen retired in 1875 he sold the church to the congregation.
Groome's Gazeteer (1882-5) describes it as 'a pretty Episcopal Church.' Carved label stop at intersection of gable and tower said to be a portrait of the mason.
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