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Original St Martha's Church
built 1904 |
In the early history of Strathfield,
Catholics were few in number. By 1891 only 14% of the population of
Strathfield was Catholic, compared with over 30% recorded in the 2001
Census. While there were some prominent and wealthy Catholics who
resided in Strathfield such as John and James Toohey [of Toohey’s
Brewery], most were of Irish origin and worked as servants and domestics
in the wealthy homes of the district.
Until the opening of the first St Martha’s Catholic Church in 1904,
Catholics living in Strathfield attended Church at St Mary’s Concord.
Strathfield was declared a separate parish in 1916.
With the sale of land from the ‘Railway Station Estate’, blocks were
bought in the name of His Eminence Patrick Francis Cardinal Moran,
Catholic Archbishop of Sydney with the intention of building a Church.
This became the site of the first St Martha’s Church built in 1904 to a
design by architects Sheerin & Hennessy costing £2250. The choice of the
name of the Church, St Martha’s, is thought to reflect the occupation of
many of the Church’s first parishioners. St Martha is the patron saint
of servants and domestics.
This Church, which now serves as a Hall and Classrooms for the School,
celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2004. The foundation stone of the
first Church is dated 20 November 2004 and was laid by Cardinal Moran.
After the opening of the new Church, the old church was used as a school
and later a parish hall. In the 1970’s, classrooms were built on the
newly built mezzanine floor in the hall. The Church features Flemish
bond brickwork, brick buttresses, steeply pitched slate roof, pointed
arch windows with stone labels, stone copping and sandstone bracery.
The new St Martha’s Church was built in 1924 to a design by prominent
architect, John Bede Barlow. Barlow, like Sheerin & Hennessey before
him, was noted for his design of Catholic Churches. The church was
erected by builder Dan O’Curry of Bankstown. Archbishop Michael Kelly
laid the foundation stone in 1923. It was intended to have spires on the
Church but they were reduced to the existing turrets. The church
features colonial brickwork, brick portico, steeply pitched tile roof
and brick towers to both sides of the Churchill Avenue façade.
St Martha’s has many interesting features. The interior walls are brick
faced, when many Churches in this period were plaster-rendered.
Apparently, brick work was a particular characteristic of Barlow’s
designs. Of particular importance are the gold mosiac Stations of the
Cross, a 1927 gift from Miss Nellie O’Brien in memory of her mother
Ellen. The O’Brien family lived in Churchill Avenue Strathfield. The
Stations of the Cross were made in Italy and created from hundreds of
minute pieces of glass and stone, in various colours, joined together to
form a picture. Being a mosaic, they have not faded. They are extremely
rare and considered a very special feature of St Marthas.
St Martha’s Confessional Boxes were built in 1941-42, when construction
of St Martha’s School was also commenced. The architect for both
projects was Ernest Scott & Green. Ernest Scott & Green were prominent
Sydney architects. Other works in Strathfield include the Horse & Jockey
Hotel, Parramatta Road Homebush.
Bill Watson, a stonemason from Homebush, built the sandstone altar in
the 1960s. The erection of new altar followed a direction from Cardinal
Gilroy that church sanctuaries should be redesigned to face the people
at Mass, in line with liturgical thought. A small altar was built for
the tabernacle and the whole sanctuary was panelled in sandstone with
the words of Jesus: ‘I am the Way, the Truth and the Life’. There was an
exchange between the tabernacles on the main altar and the Lady Chapel
[see photograph], so the finer of the two occupied the position of
greater importance.
Father Geoff Davey, who prior to becoming a priest, was a civil
engineer, added the Church foyer and portico in the 1970s.
St Martha’s School
St Martha’s School is built on the site of the former home ‘Glencairn’,
Churchill Avenue, which was acquired by St Martha’s Church in 1922. In
July 1940 St Martha’s Parish Priest Monsignor Martin wrote to Archbishop
to demolish the cottage and build a new school with permission granted
in August 1940. An application was lodged with Strathfield Council to
build a new school building with five classrooms with an estimated value
of the building £4400. The architects engaged were prominent Sydney
architectural firm Ernest A. Scott, Green & Scott.
The St Martha’s complex of buildings, including the Churches and School,
are heritage listed on Strathfield Council’s Local Environment Plan. The
heritage inventory sheet states that this group of buildings are of
local significance for their architectural qualities, as representative
of the Catholic community in Strathfield and for their contribution to
the streetscape.
References
Fox & Associates, Strathfield Heritage Study, 1986.
Glass, G., The Stations of the Cross, c.2004.
St Martha’s Strathfield, 1916-1991 [Booklet]
Strathfield Council Building Application Records.
Strathfield Council Building Register Vol.6 [1940-48] and Building Plans
46/1941.
Vella, G., ‘A brief history of St Martha’s Church Strathfield’, St
Martha’s Church Strathfield Centenary Mass, 28 November 2004.
Copyright information
© Cathy Jones 2006. This article is subject to copyright and
may not be reproduced without permission of the author. |