Roman Catholic Diocese of Clifton
The Roman Catholic Diocese of Clifton is a Roman Catholic diocese centred at Cathedral Church of Saints Peter and Paul in Clifton, England.
The diocese covers the City and County of Bristol and the ceremonial counties of Gloucestershire, Somerset, and Wiltshire, an area of. Thus it stretches from Stow in the Wold in the north to Minehead and Watchet in the South. The most north-westerly parishes are in the Forest of Dean, while Marlborough near Swindon is one of the most easterly. The City of Bristol, of which Clifton is a suburb, is the largest centre of population within the Diocese; Swindon is the next biggest. Other well-known cities and towns include Bath, Wells, Cheltenham, Gloucester, Salisbury, Taunton and Weston-super-Mare.
The Clifton Diocese makes up part of the Catholic Association Pilgrimage.
The diocese was erected in 1850; from then until 1911 it was in the ecclesiastical province of Westminster, and has been in the province of Birmingham since then.
Statistics
The Diocese has 107 Parishes, or the equivalent. Many have chapels-of-ease or other Mass centres, adding a total of 99 chapels. The parishes are run by a mixture of Diocesan priests, and priests who belong to Religious Orders such as the Benedictines, Franciscans and others.Diocesan boundaries
The diocese is divided into 13 deaneries, each of which contain a number of parishes:- Bath : Bath Our Lady and St Alphege; Bath St John; Bath St Mary; Batheaston; Combe Down; Peasedown St John; Stratton-on-the-Fosse.
- Bristol East : Chipping Sodbury and Yate; Downend; Easton; Fishponds; Frenchay; Kingswood; Redfield.
- Bristol North West : Bishopston; Filton; Henbury; Lawrence Weston; Patchway; Shirehampton; Southmead; Thornbury; Westbury-on-Trym.
- Bristol South : Bristol City Centre; Chew Valley; Clifton; Keynsham; Knowle; Knowle West; Whitchurch; Withywood.
- Cheltenham : Charlton Kings; Cheltenham St Gregory; Cheltenham St Thomas More; Chipping Campden; Kemerton; Stow-on-the-Wold; Tewkesbury; Winchcombe.
- Glastonbury : Chard; Glastonbury; Shepton Mallet; Somerton; Wells; Wincanton; Yeovil.
- Gloucester : Brockworth; Churchdown; Cinderford; Coleford; Gloucester; Matson; Newent; Tuffley.
- Salisbury : Amesbury; Salisbury Most Holy Redeemer; Salisbury St Osmund; Salisbury St Gregory and the English Martyrs; Tisbury.
- Stroud : Cirencester; Dursley; Fairford; Nympsfield; Stonehouse; Stroud; Tetbury; Woodchester; Wotton-under-Edge.
- Swindon : Malmesbury; Marlborough; Royal Wootton Bassett; Swindon Holy Family; Swindon Holy Rood; Swindon St Mary; Swindon St Peter; Wroughton.
- Taunton : Bridgwater; Dulverton; Minehead; Taunton St George; Taunton St Teresa of Lisieux; Wellington.
- Trowbridge : Bradford-on-Avon; Calne; Chippenham; Corsham; Devizes; Frome; Melksham; Trowbridge; Warminster.
- Weston-super-Mare : Burnham-on-Sea; Cheddar; Clevedon; Nailsea; Portishead; Weston-super-Mare Corpus Christi; Weston-super-Mare Our Lady of Lourdes; Weston-super-Mare St Joseph.
History
In 1830, in an attempt to ensure a supply of priests for the district, Bishop Peter Baines, the Vicar-Apostolic, had bought the Prior Park estate near Bath and had established there a school and a seminary, now Prior Park College. Although an academic success the college was a financial disaster. Bishop Hendren resigned in 1851 realising his inability to do anything about the huge debts on the college. His successor, Bishop Thomas Burgess, died in 1854 without doing anything to solve the problem.
A Decree of the Sacred College promulgated on 22 December 1855 prevented the appointment of a new Bishop of Clifton until the problems of the college had been solved. Instead, an administrator was appointed who would manage the affairs of the diocese until a bishop was appointed. He was Archbishop Errington, Co-Adjutor to Cardinal Wiseman the Archbishop of Westminster. He arrived at Prior Park at the end of October 1855, but was not able to do anything to preserve the college. A Court Order was enforced against the college for non-payment of rent, and the contents of the college were sold by auction, and the premises vacated.
The problem of Prior Park having been settled, a new Bishop of Clifton was appointed. William Clifford, the second son of Lord Clifford of Chudleigh in Devon, was consecrated by Pope Pius IX on 15 February 1857, and enthroned at the pro-cathedral on 17 March 1857. For the next 36 years he guided the diocese to prosperity.
The pro-cathedral had an unfortunate history. Work on the building started in 1834 but ceased the following year when the foundations failed. The half-finished building was abandoned in 1843 when a second attempt to reinforce the foundations again failed. Bishop William Ullathorne, Vicar-Apostolic from 1846 to 1848, had a roof placed on the half-finished building so that it could be used as a church, but Bishop Clifford, with the advice of the architect Charles Hansom, had it converted into a reasonable pro-cathedral. He also re-purchased Prior Park and re-opened the school and the seminary, much of the expense being found by the bishop's family. Bishop Clifford died in 1893. His successor, Bishop William Brownlow, was consecrated in 1894 and died in 1901.
Brownlow's successor, Bishop George Ambrose Burton, a priest of the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle, was Bishop of Clifton for the next 29 years. An outstanding scholar, he was an authority on ancient manuscripts and catalogued the documents which now form the basis of the Diocesan Archives. He saw the magnificent Benedictine Downside Abbey completed, and he welcomed a second Benedictine community when the convert community from Caldey Island came to the diocese to settle at Prinknash Abbey.
Bishop William Lee, who had been secretary to Bishop Burton, succeeded him in 1931. During his 16 years as bishop, he founded 72 new parishes and Mass Centres. His successor, Bishop Joseph Rudderham, a priest of the Diocese of Northampton, was consecrated at Clifton on 26 July 1949. The financial demands made on the people of the diocese to provide new schools to comply with the provisions of the 1944 Education Act resulted in expenditure of £332,000 between 1949 and 1960. In spite of these demands, the building of a new cathedral was undertaken in 1968. On the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul, 1973, in the presence of a vast gathering of religious and civic dignitaries, Bishop Rudderham took possession of the current Clifton Cathedral.
Bishop Rudderham resigned his See in August 1974 and died in retirement in February 1979. His auxiliary bishop, Bishop Mervyn Alexander was appointed eighth Bishop of Clifton in December 1974 and guided the diocese for the next 27 years. He then retired to Weston-super-Mare as parish priest at St Joseph's. In March 2001, Bishop Declan Lang was ordained as the eighth Bishop of Clifton.
Bishops
Ordinaries
The current bishop is the Right Reverend Declan Lang, who was born on 15 April 1950 in Cowes, Isle of Wight. Ordained in 1975, he was a priest in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth, serving as Vicar General from 1996. He was appointed the ninth Bishop of Clifton by Pope John Paul II on 27 February 2001.Vicars Apostolic of Western District
- Philip Michael Ellis, O.S.B. ; later appointed Bishop of Segni, Italy
- Andrew Giffard ; did not take effect
- Matthew Prichard, O.F.M. Rec.
- William Laurence York, O.S.B.
- Charles Walmesley, O.S.B.
- William Gregory Sharrock, O.S.B.
- Peter Bernardine Collingridge, O.F.M. Rec.
- Peter Augustine Baines, O.S.B.
- Charles Michael Baggs
- William Bernard Ullathorne, O.S.B., appointed Vicar Apostolic of Central District
- Joseph William Hendren, O.F.M. Rec. ; see below
Bishops of Clifton
- Joseph William Hendren, O.F.M. Rec., appointed Bishop of Nottingham; see above
- Thomas Lawrence Burgess
- William Joseph Hugh Clifford
- William Robert Bernard Brownlow
- George Crompton Ambrose Burton
- William Lee
- Joseph Edward Rudderham
- Mervyn Alban Alexander
- Declan Ronan Lang
Coadjutor Vicars Apostolic
- Peter Augustine Baines, O.S.B.
- Peter Bernardine Collingridge, O.F.M. Rec.
- Charles Francis McDonnel, O.F.M. Rec., did not take effect
- James Jerome Sharrock, O.S.B., did not take effect
- William Gregory Sharrock, O.S.B.
- Charles Walmesley, O.S.B.
- William Laurence York, O.S.B.
Auxiliary bishop
- Mervyn Alban Alexander, appointed Bishop here
Other priests of this diocese who became bishops
- Francis Edward Joseph Grimshaw, appointed Bishop of Plymouth in 1947
- Roger Francis Crispian Hollis, appointed auxiliary bishop of Birmingham in 1987
- Michael Joseph Lawrence McGrath, appointed Bishop of Menevia, Wales in 1935
- William Vaughan, appointed Bishop of Plymouth in 1855