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St Michael's Church, Brighton

1862 establishments in England19th-century Church of England church buildingsAnglo-Catholic church buildings in East SussexAnglo-Catholic churches in England receiving AEOChurch of England church buildings in Brighton and Hove
Churches completed in 1862George Frederick Bodley church buildingsGrade I listed buildings in Brighton and HoveGrade I listed churches in East SussexWilliam Burges church buildings
St Michael and All Angels Church, Victoria Road, Montpelier, Brighton (NHLE Code 1381083) (March 2014) (4)
St Michael and All Angels Church, Victoria Road, Montpelier, Brighton (NHLE Code 1381083) (March 2014) (4)

St. Michael's Church (in full, St. Michael and All Angels Church) is an Anglican church in Brighton, England, dating from the mid-Victorian era. Located on Victoria Road in the Montpelier area, to the east of Montpelier Road, it is one of the largest churches in the city of Brighton and Hove. The church is a Grade I listed building.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Michael's Church, Brighton (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Michael's Church, Brighton
Victoria Road, Brighton Prestonville

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Latitude Longitude
N 50.827477777778 ° E -0.14981111111111 °
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Address

St Michael and All Angels

Victoria Road
BN1 3FS Brighton, Prestonville
England, United Kingdom
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St Michael and All Angels Church, Victoria Road, Montpelier, Brighton (NHLE Code 1381083) (March 2014) (4)
St Michael and All Angels Church, Victoria Road, Montpelier, Brighton (NHLE Code 1381083) (March 2014) (4)
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Nearby Places

Montpelier, Brighton
Montpelier, Brighton

Montpelier is an inner suburban area of Brighton, part of the English city and seaside resort of Brighton and Hove. Developed together with the adjacent Clifton Hill area in the mid-19th century, it forms a high-class, architecturally cohesive residential district with "an exceptionally complete character". Stucco-clad terraced housing and villas predominate, but two of the city's most significant Victorian churches and a landmark hospital building are also in the area, which lies immediately northwest of Brighton city centre and spreads as far as the ancient parish boundary with Hove. Development was initially stimulated when one of the main roads out of Brighton was turnpiked in the late 18th century, but the hilly land—condemned as "hideous masses of unfledged earth" by John Constable, who painted it nevertheless—was mostly devoted to agriculture until the 1820s. The ascent of Brighton from provincial fishing town to fashionable resort prompted a building boom in the next quarter-century, and Montpelier and Clifton Hill were transformed into districts of architecturally homogeneous streets with carefully designed, intricately detailed housing. Little demolition, infilling or redevelopment has occurred since, and hundreds of buildings have been granted listed status. The whole suburb is also one of 34 conservation areas in the city of Brighton and Hove. Historic buildings include The Temple—local landowner Thomas Read Kemp's house, now a private school—the former Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, currently being redeveloped, and large mid 19th-century houses such as Montpelier Hall. The area also has several set-piece residential squares and crescents such as Clifton Terrace, Powis Square, Vernon Terrace, Montpelier Crescent and Montpelier Villas. The architectural partnership of Amon Wilds, his son Amon Henry Wilds and Charles Busby—the most important architects in Regency era Brighton and Hove—designed many of these. Montpelier's range of churches includes some of the city's finest, but others have been demolished in the postwar period.