History
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St. Alban's is a Catholic Community in
the Splottlands area of Cardiff which has a history dating back to the 1890's.
Here are some images of the past to test your memories or intrigue you. The
text selections are taken from the history of the Parish produced for its 200th
Anniversary.
The Beginning of the Splott Mission
In the year 1880 the flat land
just outside the town of Cardiff, known as the East Moors, was, with the
exception of a few cultivated fields belonging to the farms of Pengam and
Splott, a marshy waste stretching its dreary length along the shores of the
Bristol Channel, the monotony of the scene being broken only by ditches and
gates. During the eighteen eighties this low-lying wilderness fell prey to the
building contractors, who mapped out a small section of it into streets and
planned what seemed to the people of those days a bewildering maze of houses,
shops, taverns and Board Schools. Soon the various denominations provided
places of worship, and the Catholics were not lagging behind the others. In the
middle eighties land was secured for the erection of a Catholic School-Chapel.
Fr. Hayde gave Fr. Bailey the task of collecting funds for the new building,
which opened in 1891. The building, the present parish elementary school, was a
very substantial one situated in the uncompleted Swinton Street, on the very
margin of the advancing tide of house building. The site of one and a half
acres was given by Lord Tredegar for 99 years. The subscription list was headed
by the Marquess of Bute with a donation of £350. Among the subscribers we
find the names of Alderman Jones, Mayor of Cardiff, and a Mr. Thomas, M.P. It
would appear that a sum of £1,900 was spent on the new School-Chapel.
The upper story of the new building was used as
a chapel and was blessed by Bishop Hedley on 24th June 1891. At this opening
service the Bishop celebrated the first Mass in the new St. Alban's Mission,
and offered it up for the welfare of those who aided in the establishment of
the Mission. The Marquess and the Marchioness of Bute were present at the
Blessing of the new chapel. In the chapel the altar and reredos were those
which used to be in the Lady Chapel at St. Peter's. On the wall over the back
of the altar were the Crucifix and the figures of Our Lady and St. John the
Evangelist, which originally graced the old church of St. David, the original
Catholic foundation in Cardiff.
The ground floor of the building was
used as an Infants' School under the direction of the Headmistress, Mrs.
Sullivan, aided by a young girl of about 14 years of age, a pupil teacher named
Miss Byrne
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The Iron Church
In
August , 1897, the upper floor had to be given up to school purposes, and it
was no longer convenient to hold Church Services there. Not only that, but
there were now 1,000 Catholics resident in the Moors (owing to the opening of
the Cardiff Dowlais Works), whilst the seating capacity of the School-Chapel
was only 80. With the consent of the Bishop, Father Bailey made an appeal for
funds for a new church. The Marquess of Bute, in his ever great generosity,
provided the new Iron Church, which was opened on Tuesday, November 30th, 1897.
From this time onwards two Masses were said at St. Alban's, one at 8.30 as
previously, and a second one at 10.30. In the afternoon there was Children's
Catechism and Benediction at 4 o'clock, and Evening Service as in other
churches.
Father Bailey died on March 12th, 1898, only a few months
after seeing this further advancement of the Mission he had served so well. He
had been a member of the Institute of Charity for forty-six years. |
The First Resident Priest
Father T. Nolan succeeded Fr. Bailey as
Priest-in-Charge of the Splott district, and in July, 1898, he had the
happiness of seeing the first Confirmation of St. Alban's children in their own
church on the occasion of the Bishop's first official visitation of the
Mission.
The work of consolidation went on apace, and on September
13th, 1898, Father Nolan took up residence in a couple of rooms in the house of
Mrs. Kranz, 37 Moorland Road. Conditions were not satisfactory from a parochial
point of view, and in a few weeks Fr. Nolan went to live with the Belt Family
at 212 Carlisle Street. Fr. Nolan remained as the sole Resident priest for a
twelvemonth. Fr. Hayde was then appointed as Rector, with Fr. Nolan as
assistant, and the Presbytery was established at 177-179 Carlisle Street. Here
the priests lived, except for a brief sojourn at 104 Splott Road, until the new
Presbytery was built next to the Church in 1927. |
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 School Group 1921
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The Permanent Church
After two years Fr. Hayde returned to St.
Peter's. A year later Fr. Nolan left and was succeeded as Rector by Fr. Palmer,
who had the great courage and vision to build the present grand church in 1911.
We must pay a tribute of great praise to Fr. Owen McCusker for the energy and
zeal with which he collected money for the erecting of the new church. It was
his able support which enabled Father Palmer to execute his noble design. In
planning the church Mr. F.R. Bates, A.R.I.B.A., of Newport, designed a building
which ranks among the most imposing in the city. It is designed in the purest
perpendicular style. The contract for this building to seat 600 was secured by
Mr. James Allan, of Cardiff.
Externally the walls are of dressed blue
pennant stone, with Bath stone dressings, the roof of green Llantilo slates.
There is a tower containing eight tubular bells, and an octagonal tower stands
at the south of the west entrance. A cleristory containing fifteen lights
stands over an arcade of five bays spaced by octagonal columns. Outside the
arcade is an exceptionally wide ambulatory. The High Altar, the gift of Lord
Ninian Crichton-Stuart, is of Bath stone, panelled with green Cippolino marble.
The two statues at the Chancel Arch, of Our Lady of Lourdes and of St. Alban in
Roman uniform, are the gift Father Fennell made to the parish in exchange for
the old Iron Church. (The Iron Church was removed to the Heath and became the
new St. Joseph's.) The pulpit was given by the men of the Blast Furnace Dept.,
G.K.B. Cardiff Dowlais Works. The Lady Altar is a valuable piece of work by
Pugin, and comes from St. Marie's, Rugby. The statue of Our Lady in the Lady
Chapel was given by Fr. Bailey to Fr. Nolan, and the Pieta by Bishop Hedley to
Fr. Palmer. The large Crucifixion Set on the West Wall is the one referred to
above and came from old St. David's. Bishop Hedley opened the new St. Alban's
on Sunday July 16th, 1911, the spacious lay-out of the sanctuary and
chancel-choir lending a dignity to the Pontifical Mass which was an
unaccustomed spectacle for those who assisted. St. Alban's has ever since
maintained the fullest splendour of the liturgical ceremonies.
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Later Developments
Since that time the outstanding events have been the
building of the new Presbytery and a new wing to the school during the
Rectorship of Fr. Mason: the gift of a winning ticket in the Irish Sweepstakes
to the parish during the rectorship of Fr. Ottway, so that the enormous debt of
some £10,000 could be wiped out: the installation of a central heating
apparatus, stations of the cross, and stained glass windows, all during Fr.
Ottway's Rectorship. During the war slight damage was done to the parish
buildings, and they gradually fell into disrepair. Government controls have
hampered the progress of recovery, but it has been possible during the last
couple of years to put the church and school buildings into as good a condition
as ever they were. Two new temporary class-rooms have been added to the school
buildings. As soon as possible a Parish Hall will be erected for the
accommodation of the various parish societies, especially the large Youth
Movement, at present housed in the local Labour Party Hall. What a vast change
has come over the East Moors since those days of the early eighties, when it
was a mixture of farm and tide-fields. The parish has a Catholic population of
4,000 souls served by four resident priests and possesses a magnificent Church
as well as the substantial school built by Fr. Bailey, the pioneer of the
parish. Let us of this generation pray for the souls of those great
forebears who built the parish, and in meeting the difficulties of the future
take courage and hope from recalling their valiant sacrifices so wonderfully
crowned with success.
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 Fr. O'Leary
 Fr. Ken Casey
The SVP in 1996
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More Recent
Events As Father Grimshaw pointed out in 1949,
vast changes have come over East Moors since the early 1880's. He would surely
be astounded if he were alive today to see the changes that have taken place
since 1949. Lower Splott, as it came to be known, no longer exists, and neither
does the steel works. The population of the parish has shrunk from 4,000 to
just over 2,000. But the parish history did not cease in 1949 and it is still
very much alive. The Parish Hall referred to by Fr. Grimshaw was indeed built
in 1954 in Tremorfa and served as a centre for parish activities until it was
demolished in 1969 when work started on the building of the Infants School.
From 1954 it also accommodated a class of school children. This was necessary
due to the overcrowding in the parish school while Lady Mary was under
construction and not yet ready to take over our senior boys and girls. In
1971, the Infant School transferred to its new premises in Tremorfa, and
modifications were carried out to the old school. In 1984, the old parish
school finally closed its doors and moved to Tremorfa with the amalgamation of
the Infant and Junior Schools. One great benefit which has accrued to the
parish as a consequence of this move has been the erection of a new parish
hall. A great drawback of the old hall was its distance from the church, but
now the hall is adjacent to the church, it is proving to be a hive of parish
activities. |
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