Church building

Church of the Holy Redeemer

United Kingdom City of York Grade II listed building
Church of the Holy Redeemer
Church of the Holy Redeemer · Wikipedia

About

The Holy Redeemer Church lies on Boroughbridge Road, in the Acomb area of York, in England. The first church here was a simple brick building, completed in 1938. This is now used as the church hall, linked to the new church, behind.

Church of the Holy Redeemer

The new church was constructed between 1959 and 1965, to a design by George Pace. The church reuses parts of the demolished church of St Mary, Bishophill Senior. The south wall is constructed from stone from the building and includes Mediaeval windows, in a different arrangement to the original building.

Church of the Holy Redeemer

The remaining walls are brick, with the south wall including a 19th-century Gothic window. The clock tower is also of brick, and sits above a small chapel intended for weekday services. The church is entered through a late-12th century doorway.

Inside, the church has a wide nave and two narrow aisles. The south arcade is from St Mary, partly dating from about 1200, and partly from the late 13th-century. Above the altar is an iron cross, incorporating an Anglo-Saxon carved stone.

Church of the Holy Redeemer

Other Saxon carved stones, mostly cross fragments, are incorporated in the pulpit and walls. The York Civic Trust claimed that these were "all the interesting parts" of...