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St James the Less and St Helen Church, Colchester

1837 establishments in England19th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in the United KingdomChurches in Colchester (town)Roman Catholic churches completed in 1837Roman Catholic churches in Essex
Romanesque Revival church buildings in England
Catholic church of St James the Less and St Helen, Colchester geograph.org.uk 189284
Catholic church of St James the Less and St Helen, Colchester geograph.org.uk 189284

St James the Less and St Helen Church is a Roman Catholic Parish church in Colchester, Essex, England. It was built in 1837 and designed by Joseph John Scoles. It is situated on Priory Street between the junction with East Hill and St Thomas More Catholic Primary School in the city centre. Next to it is the church hall which was built in 1911 and designed by Alexander Scoles.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St James the Less and St Helen Church, Colchester (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St James the Less and St Helen Church, Colchester
Priory Street, Colchester Hythe

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N 51.889355 ° E 0.908454 °
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Address

St. James the Less and St. Helen

Priory Street 51
CO1 2QB Colchester, Hythe
England, United Kingdom
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Website
stjamesthelessandsthelen.org

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Catholic church of St James the Less and St Helen, Colchester geograph.org.uk 189284
Catholic church of St James the Less and St Helen, Colchester geograph.org.uk 189284
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Nearby Places

Hollytrees Museum
Hollytrees Museum

Hollytrees Museum is a free to visit, publicly owned museum in the centre of Colchester and close to Colchester Castle. It is situated in an eighteenth-century house ("Hollytrees"), which was used as a private residence until 1929, when it became a museum.The first house on the site, known as "Symnells" after its owner, was later bought by the Shaw family, and passed from John Shaw to John Shaw III and John Shaw IV. When he died a minor, the house passed into chancery; his mother Jane Lessingham bought it but soon died. The modern house was constructed in for Elizabeth Cornelisen, who had bought the site from Lessingham's executors and promptly tore down the existing structure in poor condition. Construction commenced on 10 May 1718 at a cost of £630 plus brickwork and tiling; the total refurbishment was estimated to have cost £2,000. She died soon after, bequeathing the house to her niece, Sarah Creffeild (née Webster), who left it to her second husband Charles Gray. It was, at that time, known as "Esqr Creffield's [sic]". Possession of the house reverted to the Creffeilds; through Thamer Creffeild to James Round, who left to his brother Charles, who left it to his son Charles Gray Round, who left to it to his nephew James Round. The Rounds finally sold it to the Corporation of Colchester in 1922, a purchase paid for privately by Viscount Cowdray and his wife. It became a museum in 1929.The house is known as Hollytrees after two holly trees planted in the grounds by Charles Gray in 1729 and is now a free to visit museum serving the centre of Colchester and specialising in local history. It is a grade I listed building.