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St John's Church, Rhyl

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NPRN163339
Map ReferenceSJ08SW
Grid ReferenceSJ0036581017
Unitary (Local) AuthorityDenbighshire
Old CountyFlintshire
CommunityRhyl
Type Of SiteCHURCH
Period19th Century
Description

St John's church is located on the north side of Wellington Street (A548) at its junction with River Street. The church had its origins in a congregation which was meeting in a school and in the skating rink of the nearby Winter Gardens before the church was built in 1885. The architect was David Walker of Liverpool. A striking and unusual design, perhaps conceived to provide a large and open plan for a church built to serve a rapidly growing area. It is constructed of random rubble stone with freestone dressings, slate roofs with red tile cresting and coped gables.
The plan is unconventional. A large octagonal nave with tall east and west arches opening out at the cardinal points onto a western one-bay clerestoried ante-nave, or narthex, transepts with clasping buttresses, and chancel, all linked across the angles by single-storeyed lean-to bays. Gabled organ chamber and vestries lie on the north and south of the chancel respectively, and a gabled porch projects from the lean-to south aisle of the western narthex. A bellcote is set above the chancel arch, and the octagon originally had a spirelet. The church is lit through a variety of window styles. Inside, the church opens into a large, spacious nave with ribbed octagonal roof surmounted by open-work timber lantern, the ceiling boarded and panelled, and the main ribs carried on wall-posts; coved ribbed and boarded roof over the chancel. The oak panelled reredos was originally at Saint Thomas's Church (NPRN 96042). The open-work panelled wood pulpit on stone base dates from c1890. Stained glass includes works by Goddard and Gibbs (east window 1970), Christopher Charles Powell (north-east angle of nave, 1932), and Alfred O Hemming (south-east angle of nave, 1906).
The church became redundant in 1999 and is now called Churchilll House.
Sources:

Cadw Listing description.
E.Hubbard, Buildings of Wales: Clwyd (1986), p.429-30.
Thomas Lloyd 2001, file 2001/03/02/RCAHMW/SLE.

RCAHMW, 10 November 2015