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The Cathedral Church of St Mary is a Catholic cathedral in Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, England. It is the mother church of the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle and seat of the Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle. The cathedral, situated on Clayton Street, was designed by Augustus Welby Pugin and built between 1842 and 1844
In the Diocese of Hexham and Newcastle: St Mary's Cathedral, Newcastle upon Tyne; St Joseph's Church, Gateshead; Holy Name parish, Jesmond; St Dominic's Church, Newcastle; Sacred Heart Church, North Gosforth; St Bede's Church, South Shields; St Benet's Church, Sunderland; St Mary's Church, Sunderland; Our Lady and St Oswin Church, Tynemouth
In 2004, Kevin Dunn was appointed the 12th Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle by Pope John Paul II, and was consecrated on 25 May 2004 at St Mary's Cathedral, Newcastle upon Tyne. He appointed the man who would ultimately be his successor, Canon Seamus Cunningham, as vicar general .
St Mary's Cathedral, Newcastle upon Tyne; T. Church of St Thomas the Martyr, Newcastle This page was last edited on 26 September 2022, at 19:18 (UTC). Text is ...
St Mary's Cathedral: Place of Worship 68 222 N/A 1844 [9] 7 St James' Park: Football Stadium 64.5 213 N/A 2000 Originally opened as a ground in 1880; it is the largest cantilever structure in Europe. [10] [11] 8 Bank House, Pilgrim St Office 63 208 14 2023 [12] 9 St Nicholas' Cathedral: Place of Worship 62 203 N/A 1448 [13] 10 All Saints' Church
As Newcastle continued to grow, so did its need for a diocese separate from Durham, and so in 1882 the Diocese of Newcastle was formed, with St Nicholas's as its cathedral. [7] The cathedral is notable for its unusual lantern spire, which was constructed in 1448. For hundreds of years, it was a main navigation point for ships using the River ...
In 1329 one William Heron founded a Chantry within St Thomas’, dedicated to St Anne and endowed with £4 17s per annum; [1] a second Chantry, dedicated to St Mary, had £4 3s 6d a year. In 1339 the chapel bridge was once more severely damaged, this time by flood, and it remained ruinous for much of the 14th century.
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