Judy Middleton 2003 (revised 2022)
copyright © J.Middleton The former St Agnes Church, Hove |
The church of St Agnes occupied a
site on the corner of Fonthill Road and Newtown Road; it was the
daughter church of St Barnabas Church in Sackville Road.
copyright © D. Sharp St Agnes Church's banner (now in St Barnabas Church, Hove) |
The church was not built straight
away, in fact there was a Mission Room on the site at first. In May
1900 an appeal was launched to raise £2,500 to build a Mission Room,
and £700 to purchase the site.
Before any building work could
take place, the site had to be cleared. This meant the disappearance
of part of Hove’s rural past – two old semi-detached cottages
intended for farm workers. During the process of demolition, and
under the gable, the date 1750 was discovered. Latterly, the cottages
were occupied by Mrs Juden and Mrs Peacock, who sold sweets to local
children.
Originally, there were six
cottages for workers at Goldstone Farm, and the last of them, north
of St Agnes, was not removed until 1968.
On 2 January 1902 Hove Council
approved plans for the Mission Room submitted by F. T Cawthorn on
behalf of Revd H. W. Mayrick.
On 14 June 1902 the Bishop of
Chichester laid the foundation stone, and afterwards gave an address
at an open-air service.
The Mission Room was opened on 18
January 1903 – close to the Feast of St Agnes on 21 January. The
cost of the Mission Room came to £4,400, which was more than
anticipated. There were also some restrictions because the deeds did
not permit the ringing of a bell, or anything else that might annoy
the neighbours.
St Agnes
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Brighton Herald 6 June 1908 |
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An advert from Brighton Herald 23 October 1909 for a fund raising event in aid of St Barnabas Athletic Club at St Agnes Mission Room |
The New Church
When it was decided to build a more conventional church, the structure was erected on top of the Mission Hall, which then became a crypt. On 1 May 1913 Hove Council approved the plans submitted by the architect A. G. Humphry, who was a former pupil of the celebrated George Frederick Bodley (1827-1907).
copyright © J.Middleton The former St Agnes Church's south door |
The
church of St Agnes was dedicated on 18 October 1913, and the
following account was published in The
Church Times (24
October 1913):
‘Last Saturday the Bishop of
Chichester dedicated the new church of St Agnes, Hove, which was,
happily, opened entirely free of debt. Rarely have I attended a more
dignified or beautiful service. An outdoor procession, with the
Bishop of Lewes in the rear, was formed at St Barnabas Church, and
proceeded to St Agnes, where it was met by the Bishop of Chichester’s
procession, the Bishop being vested in the magnificent cope and mitre
presented by the diocese. The two processions then entered the little
Church just as the adjoining football ground discharged its thousands
of excited spectators. The reverence and interest of the huge crowd
made one realize the possibilities of the Church if only she will
shake off her deadly respectability and come out into the by-ways and
hedges. The doffed cap and bowed head were almost universal as
crosses and Bishops passed by, and many turned aside to try to enter
the Church, which was, however, already crowded.
copyright ©
Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove Brighton Herald 8 November 1913 |
One little incident was not without a touch of humour, though one hopes that it had another side as well as the humorous. As I stood near the door, one burly football enthusiast gained admission – and also a seat which had been reserved for me – on the strength of the somewhat ingenious statement that he came from The Church Times. After the service, he boarded the same bus as myself, and, should this meet his eye, he may be interested to know that the fellow-passenger to whom he related the incident, and also his own impression of the service, was none other than the representative of the paper under whose friendly wing he saw what he himself described as ‘more wonderful than all the football matches ever played’.
The church was consecrated after
this service, and on 24 January 1914 the Bishop of Chichester
consecrated the nave, font and altar.
copyright
© Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove An article from the Brighton Herald 5 August 1915 |
It is interesting to note that in
1927 Hove Council granted a theatrical licence to the crypt of St.
Agnes – at a cost of five shillings a month – subject to the door
leading to the yard on the north side being made to open outwards,
and there being a uniformed fireman in attendance at every
performance.
The
Sussex Daily News
stated that in order to enter the church, people had to walk over one
of two wooden bridges spanning the chasm. The congregation had
decided that these bridges were no longer safe and ought to be
demolished. Instead, a south aisle with two porches would be built
over the chasm – the foundations already having been laid because a
south aisle was part of the original plans.
Inside the church, the only vestry
for clergy, servers and the large number of choir members were two
tiny cubicles. On important occasions – such as when Father
Frostrick was inducted – the clergy, servers and choir had to robe
in the crypt, then ascend to road level, before entering the church
via the wooden bridges.
H. Milburn Pett, Diocesan
Architect, designed the south aisle and porches, which were added to
St Agnes in 1928. The final cost was around £2,000. Local artist
Harry Mileham executed a large painting at the west end of the
church.
Harry
Mileham (1873-1957) has been dubbed Hove’s lost Pre-Raphaelite, and
sadly by the time he died his style of painting was out of fashion.
But he created many beautiful works locally, in particular the
wonderful Stations of the Cross for St Thomas Church, Hove (now in St
Mary’s. Kemp Town) and the stained-glass Last Supper above the
altar, also for St Thomas. Mileham designed a window depicting David
playing his lyre for St Andrew’s Old Church, Hove, (still in
situ)
two stained-glass windows for St Anne’s, Kemp Town (since
demolished) and a triptych altar-piece for the Chapel Royal,
Brighton.
Football Troubles
When Brighton and Hove boys played
football at the Goldstone Ground on the same day the Albion were to
play a home game, boys and visitors changed into their football gear
in the crypt of St Agnes. A newspaper man asked the vicar if this
arrangement provided a good source of income, but the vicar replied
that they did not make a charge, saying, ‘My dear chap, we do try
to be Christian.’
On 26 December 1929 there was a
home match at the Goldstone, and the event was so well-attended that
the gates had to be closed because the ground was full. Frustrated
late-comers climbed on to the scaffolding that had been erected
against the west wall of the church, in order to be able to see the
match. But the scaffolding was not designed to hold so many men, and
collapsed, bringing down coping stones as well. It was a miracle
nobody was killed, although there were some injuries. However, all
the men involved managed to make a quick getaway before church
authorities could ascertain who was responsible for the damage.
Revd Walter George Frostrick
In 1917 Revd Frostrick arrived at
Hove, serving firstly as a curate at St Barnabas Church, In 1920 Father Frostrick attended the first ever Anglo-Catholic Congress at the Church of St. Alban, Holborn. In 1927
he became the first vicar of St Agnes. He was described as an
ever-smiling priest ‘with a sympathetic understanding of his people
and a charming personality’. He never had the slightest trouble in
recruiting volunteers for various projects, and indeed there was a
fine crowd of young people at St Agnes. For example, at the week-day
celebration of Holy Communion at 6.30. a.m., between 70 and 80 young
people would attend.
Father
Frostrick was a pioneer in the production of Church Pageants –
starting off in 1930 with a Missionary Pageant. Then there were
pageants at Christmas and during Holy Week, and there was a Pageant
of St Francis. The most successful pageant, The
Great Adventure, took
place at Hangleton in 1934, and all the local churches were
represented. The pageant was given a marvellous reception, and the
collection came to £63, although no charge had been made for entry.
In 1936 Father Frostrick
celebrated 21 years in the priesthood but he was also struck down by
a serious illness. He decided it was time for him to retire from the
onerous duties of a busy parish priest. But it was a wrench for him
to leave the area after twenty years of service at Hove. In 1937 he
became chaplain to St Francis Hospital, Haywards Heath.
In 1943 Father Frostrick became
rector of Storrington; he died in April 1966.
(Father Frostrick's scrap books and press-cuttings book relating to Anglo-Catholic affairs are held by East Sussex Record Office)
(Father Frostrick's scrap books and press-cuttings book relating to Anglo-Catholic affairs are held by East Sussex Record Office)
Decline
It is sad to record that after the
huge popularity of St Agnes during Father Frostrick’s tenure, after
he left there was a steady decline in church numbers. For example, by
the late 1950s Evensong was very sparsely attended.
The parish of St Agnes was a tiny
one, consisting of just 2,000 souls, and by its latter days the
average number of the congregation stood at thirty. The lack of a
vicarage was no help either. The last priest of St Agnes, Father Day,
lived with his mother at 28 Hove Park Villas, and after his sudden
death, she sold the property.
On 27 July 1977 the church of St
Agnes was declared redundant. Then came the sad task of dismantling
the church furnishing. There was a significant gift to St Nicolas Church, Portslade, consisting of the consecration stone from the
altar, some oak furnishings, and the large wooden crucifix. The
statue of St Agnes was taken to St Barnabas, while in 1984 it was
stated that the church organ had turned up in Hoeven, Holland.
copyright © St Barnabus Church Hove The statue of St Agnes, in St Barnabas Church, Hove |
In December 1979 Brighton &
Hove Albion purchased the building for £17,500 – it being only
around 100 yards from the Goldstone Ground. In 1980 work started to
turn the interior into a gymnasium.
By 1990 the old church building
was home to Brighton & Hove Gymnastics Club.
copyright © J.Middleton The former St Agnes Church, Hove in 2019 |
Vicars
1913-1916 – Revd H. E. V. Day,
priest-in-charge
1927-1937 – Revd W. G. Frostick,
first vicar
1938-1944 – Revd H. G. Ellam
1944-1948 – Revd Trimming
1949-1970 – Revd E. F. Day, son
of Revd H. E. V. Day, he died while still in office
Sources
Encyclopaedia of Hove and
Portslade
Forty
Years of St Barnabas, Hove. A Short History (1923)
Hove Council Minute Books
Macdonald,
T. J. The First
Century of St Barnabas’
(1983)
Sussex
Daily News (24
October 1923 / 27 August 1937)
The
Church Times (24
October 1913)
See the Church web-site of The Parish of St Barnabas & St Agnes website
See the Church web-site of The Parish of St Barnabas & St Agnes website
Copyright © J.Middleton 2019
page layout by D.Sharp