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St Dunstan's Church is a Roman Catholic Parish church in Woking, Surrey. At first it was built in 1899, replaced by a larger church in 1923 and its final form was built in 2008. The church was dedicated that year by the Bishop of Arundel and Brighton and Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor. It is set back in its own plot from Shaftesbury and ...
Brethren have a long history in the Woking area: the Victoria County History of Surrey (1911) records "a meeting-place of the Plymouth Brethren" in Woking parish. A new meeting room was built on Goldsworth Road near the town centre and was registered in February 1986, but it has since closed and become the Al-Asr Educational and Community ...
St Dunstan's Catholic Church in Woking holds masses in Italian. The Italian population in Woking, including second- and third-generation members, numbers between two and three thousand. [161] There is a large Pakistani population in Woking, centred on Maybury and Sheerwater. [162]
St. Dunstan's Episcopal Church (San Diego, California) Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title St Dunstan's Church .
St Mark's Church was originally built as part of a school for two hundred pupils. In 1924, the building became a known as 'The Mission', until in 1970, the church adopted its current name. [2] The church is unconsecrated, although eighty worshippers could comfortably fit into St Mark's. [3]
St Dunstan's may refer to: St Dunstan's Church (disambiguation) St Dunstan's School (disambiguation) Blind Veterans UK, a charity formerly known as St Dunstan's; St. Dunstan's Farm Meadows, a Site of Special Scientific Interest in East Sussex; St. Dunstan's Well Catchment a cave system in Somerset; St Dunstans railway station
The canal was also influential in the growth of the community. Due to the inconvenience of travelling to the nearest parish church (St Peter's in Old Woking), the vicar of St Peter's, Rev'd Charles Bowles, amassed £1,500 in order to serve the western end of the parish of St Peter's, i.e. the new community now known as 'St Johns'. [2]
St Dunstan's Church, also known as the Cathedral of the Weald, in Cranbrook, Kent, England, dates to the late 13th century.It is now Grade I listed. [2]Its 74 feet-high tower, completed in 1425, has a wooden figure of Father Time and his scythe on the south face.