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St Marie's Church, Rugby

19th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in the United KingdomAugustus Pugin buildingsBuildings and structures in Rugby, WarwickshireGothic Revival church buildings in EnglandGrade II* listed churches in Warwickshire
Roman Catholic churches in Warwickshire
St Maries Church, Rugby 3.19
St Maries Church, Rugby 3.19

St Marie's Church is the main Roman Catholic church in Rugby, Warwickshire, England, located to the south of the town centre on Dunchurch Road, one of the main roads into the town. It is one of the town's most well-known landmarks as it is quite dominant on the skyline. The church came about because Captain Washington Hibbert of Bilton Grange, married Julia Tichborne, a Catholic woman in 1839. As there was no provision for Catholics in Rugby, Hibbert bought a plot of land off Dunchurch Road and commissioned Augustus Pugin to design a church. It was first opened in 1847, designed in the Gothic revival style. It was enlarged in 1864 by Pugin's son Edward Welby Pugin, and in 1872 the current tall and slender spire was added, designed by Bernard Whelan, which is nearly 200 feet (61 metres) tall. The church has been Grade II* listed since 1949.The church is part of the Rugby Deanery in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Birmingham.

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

St Marie's Church, Rugby
Churchill Road,

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Wikipedia: St Marie's Church, RugbyContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 52.366485 ° E -1.263718 °
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St Marie

Churchill Road
CV22 6BT , Overslade
England, United Kingdom
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St Maries Church, Rugby 3.19
St Maries Church, Rugby 3.19
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Nearby Places

Rugby Art Gallery and Museum
Rugby Art Gallery and Museum

The Rugby Art Gallery and Museum is a combined art gallery and museum in central Rugby, Warwickshire, in England. The purpose-built building housing it is shared with Rugby library; it was opened in 2000 and was built in the place of Rugby's previous library.The art gallery holds "The Rugby Collection", over 170 items of 20th century and contemporary British art, including prints, drawings and paintings by artists such as L. S. Lowry, Stanley Spencer, Paula Rego and Graham Sutherland. The collection was built up by Rugby Borough Council from 1946 onwards and still collects "works by British artists of 'promise and renown' ". There is also a "Local Art Collection".The museum hosts a collection of Roman artefacts, excavated from the nearby Roman town of Tripontium. It also has a display of the social and industrial history of Rugby, and the "Redding Collection" of some 25,000 mid-20th-century photographic negatives taken at the Rugby photographic studio of George Redding. In December 2006, the Rugby World Cup was exhibited at the museum. The facility became the permanent physical home of the World Rugby Hall of Fame in November 2016. However this was closed in 2021, due to financial pressures on the local council, and lower than expected visitor numbers.The building also houses the town's visitor centre.As part of a national venture called Get it Loud in Libraries, the building has played host to gigs of various music artists such as Plan B and British Sea Power.