St Joseph’s Catholic Church

Sketch of St Joseph’s Church

A brief history….

The date of the founding of St Joseph’s is given in the Diocesan Directory as 1792. At that point it was not yet St Joseph’s, but it was in that year that Father Toussaint Duval was appointed Missionary Apostolic to a French chapel in Southampton. Fr Duval received faculties from the Bishop to hear the confessions of English people, and it is known they would attend Mass. This ‘chapel’ was a room at 67 High Street, where Fr Duval lodged.

In 1824 Fr James Watkins was sent to Southampton, while there he found that the chapel was too small for the expanding congregation, and set about collecting money for a larger chapel in Bugle Street. The first church of St Joseph was small and covered only the space occupied by the sanctuary, side altars and sacristy of the present church. It was entered from Bugle Street by a door which was probably in the same position as the present door, now unused. It was also connected by a door in the side wall of the church into a passage still existing leading into the house, where the room on the ground floor facing Bugle Street was used as a sacristy. The altar was positioned in the present sacristy, where the piscina may still be seen. The opening ceremony was performed by Bishop Bramston on 28th of October 1830 and the sermon was preached by Conon Thierry, chaplain to the Duke of Norfolk.

This was the first Catholic church to be opened in Southampton since the Reformation, and the very first in England to be dedicated to Saint Joseph.

By 1842 this church was deemed too small, the congregation rising to over 600. A letter of the time states that “on Sundays, the chapel is so full that there is scarce standing room in the aisles, not to mention the number that cannot gain admittance”. It was then decided that it was necessary to build a larger church, and whilst it was being pulled down, the congregation went to the Pepper Alley Chapel.

Fr Sidden chose A.W.M. Pugin as the architect, a leader in the revival of gothic architecture. The first stone of the altar was laid in March 1843. During the process of building they advanced too much money to the builder and ran out of funds to finish the church, which meant the plans ended up being revised by a local surveyor and architect J.G. Poole.

St Joseph’s was the largest church in the South of England outside London until the Restoration of the Hierarchy in 1850, and remained the largest in the area covered by the Diocese of Portsmouth until the building of the Cathedral in 1882.

Previous Clergy

This list is incomplete, please get in touch if you feel you can help complete it!

 

Priests

1805-1811 Abbe L Alexandre

1812-1818 Abe F Langlois

1819-1820 Fr J Stapleton

1821 Fr W Hurst

1822 Abbe A C Danneville

1823 Abbe Pierre R Vergy

1824-1833 Fr J Watkins

1833-1842 Fr W Hunt

1843-1850 Fr J Sidden

1850-1855 Fr E Cox

1856-1884 Canon Mount

1844-1885 Fr L Hall

1885-1899 Canon J Scannell

1899-1904 Fr J Murtough

1904-1906 Fr F Kernan

1906-1913 Fr G Dolman

1913-1915 Fr A G Coughlan

1916-1946 Canon Connolly

1946-1959 Fr T Lynch

1959-1965 Fr Sandwell

1965-1970 Fr J Hickey

1970-1973 Fr B Fisher

1973-1976 Fr A Cashman

1976- Fr P Beaumont

Assistant Priests

1841 Fr J Bower

1842 Fr T Brogan

1850 Fr W Harris

1856 Fr E Sheridan

1857 Fr P Flannery

1858 Fr N Crispin

1859 Fr J Styles

1863 Fr R G Davis

1867 Fr H Van Doorne

1870 Fr W J Connolly

1872 Fr T Bromfield, Fr P Maloney, Fr T Donovan

1877 Fr W Alexandre, Fr W Stone

1879 Fr J Longinotto

1880 Fr D Spillane

1885 Fr B Lloyd

1888 Fr T Corrigan

1896 Fr J Hally

1898 Fr P Kelly

1902 Fr F Green

1905 Fr G Dennehy, Fr T O’Connor

1907 Fr J Doran

1915 Fr D McCarthy

1916 Fr F O’Rourke

1930 Fr R Scantlebury, Fr H Martin

1976 Fr D McMillan