19 October 2025

Saint Clement’s Church was
the first church built in Oxford on
a new site since the Middle Ages

Saint Clement’s Church, built in the 1820s, was the first church in Oxford on a new site since the Middle Ages (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Patrick Comerford

In recent weeks, I have been walking around the St Clement’s area, just east of central Oxford, and I have written about two of the pubs, the Port Mahon and Oranges and Lemons, as well as Saint Ignatius Chapel, the first post-Reformation Roman Catholic place of worship in Oxford, which I was discussing yesterday (18 October 2025).

Saint Ignatius is also associated with John Henry Newman (1801-1890). But for two years Newman was a curate in Saint Clement’s parish, and he was one of the key figures for raising a new Saint Clement’s Church, built in the 1820s and the first church in Oxford built on a new site since the Middle Ages.

Despite these links with Newman, who became a leading figure in the Tractarian or Oxford Movement and was later one of the most prominent Roman Catholics thinker in England, Saint Clement’s Church is now, ironically, one of the prominent evangelical churches in Oxford.

Saint Clement’s Church church dates from the 1820s, but replaced a much older building demolished in 1829 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

The present church dates from the 1820s, but replaced a much older building that was demolished in 1829. Saint Clement’s Church originally stood at what is now the Plain roundabout, where the roads from London and Henley cross the River Cherwell at Magdalen Bridge. It served both the small community of Bruggeset (‘Bridge Settlement’) that surrounded it as well as the largely rural area that eventually became East Oxford.

The first written record mentioning the church was in 1122 when it was one of the royal chapels given to Saint Frideswide’s Priory by Henry I. One source thinks the church may have been built in connection with a Danish garrison sometime between 1016 and the 1050s. This would explain its location close to a bridge and its dedication to Saint Clement which was unusual at inland sites at this time.

Saint Clement’s was one of the royal chapels given to Saint Frideswide’s Priory by Henry I in 1122. The Abbot of Oseney afterwards claimed that Saint Clement’s belonged to his church of Sain George in Oxford Castle, but renounced those claims. The Abbot of Eynsham also claimed Saint Clement’s Church at one time.

Almost nothing is known of the appearance of the earliest church, but recent studies suggests a stone head now in the Ashmolean Museum may have originally been a brightly painted stone corbel from the 13th century church, suggesting a church that was rich in colour and carved stonework.

Funds were granted in 1323 to rebuild ‘the Church of Saint Clement beyond Petty Pont’ (Magdalen Bridge). From 1122 to ca 1534, clergy were presented to Saint Clement’s by Saint Frideswide’s Priory, and from the late 15th century the rectors were usually graduates.

Following the Tudor Reformation in the 1530s, the patronage passed briefly to Cardinal College, now Christ Church, Oxford. The patronage of Saint Clements’s has then held by the crown until the mid-19th century. In 1540 it was reported that the benefice had long been vacant and the parishioners without divine offices. Most of those instituted by the Crown were fellows of Oxford colleges.

John Henry Newman was appointed curate in 1824 to help raise money for a new Saint Clement’s Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

During the Siege of Oxford (1644-1646) in the English Civil War, the church and parish were on the front line between the Parliamentarian forces on Headington Hill and the Royalists in the city. It was reported that ‘no parish suffered more severely’, with whole streets being demolished to facilitate the building of fortifications. Yet, the 17th century Black Horse Inn and the church were among the few buildings to survive.

Later rectors included Humphrey Prideaux (1679-1682), later Dean of Lincoln; Robert Harsnett (1682-1696), a nonjuror dismissed for not swearing allegiance to William and Mary; and John Conybeare (1724-1734 ), later Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, and Bishop of Bristol.

John Peshall, writing in 1773, describes a church composed of one aisle 13 yards long (exclusive of a chancel) and six yards and 20 inches broad. There were galleries in the north-east and west side and small capped tiled tower with three bells. The churchyard was extended in 1781, and the capped tower was replaced by a square tower in 1816.

With slum clearances in Oxford in the early 1800s, St Clement’s expanded rapidly, with over 300 new houses were built between 1821 and 1824. The old church, with seating for 250, became too small, and plans was drawn up to build a new church on a new site.

, The rector at the time, the Revd John Gutch (1746-1831), the editor of Anthony Wood's History of Oxford University was by then approaching his 80s; he was also chaplain of All Souls College and still holding on as the Registrar of Oxford University. A curate was needed to help him to raise money for a new church.

John Henry Newman, later Cardinal Newman and then Saint John Henry Newman, was the curate in 1824-1826. Although Newman was only at Saint Clement’s for two years, he had an enormous impact on the parish. He visited every home in the parish, started a Sunday school and preached regularly to a packed church. Some suspected him of being a Methodist, but others were happy that at last they had ‘a proper minister’.

Newman added a gallery to accommodate a new Sunday school in 1825, and his friend and later a fellow Tractarian Edward Pusey (1800-1882) provided a stove for the children.

The liturgical east end of Saint Clement’s Church, Oxford, built in 1825-1828 on land donated by Sir Joseph Lock (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Thanks to Newman’s fundraising, a new church was built by John Hudson of Oxford in 1825-1828 on land in Hacklingcroft Meadow, given by Sir Joseph Lock (1760-1844), a local banker and goldsmith. The subscribers to the new building included Keble, Pusey, Heber and Peel.

Initially, a design along the lines of Salisbury Cathedral or a Grecian temple was suggested. But the parish settled on an Anglo-Norman design for reasons of cost.

The architect was Daniel Robertson, who also designed the Clarendon Press buildings on Walton Street. Saint Clement’s is an early example of the Anglo-Norman or Romanesque Revival style. It has been described ‘as an interesting example of an abortive Romanesque revival’. It did not appeal to contemporary taste, and one critic called it ‘the boiled rabbit’. The architectural historian Sir Niklaus Pevsner has described it as ‘patently Georgian Norman’.

Robertson planned the new church could seat up to 1,024 people, and the site was chosen in the hope that new housing would expand along Marston Lane, now Marston Road. The original plans placed the church on Marston Lane, but it was moved to its current location as part of a revised plan, subsequently abandoned, to build streets and houses in the form of a square.

The south porch of Saint Clement’s Church … Niklaus Pevsner describes the church as ‘patently Georgian Norman’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Saint Clement’s was the first church in Oxford built on a new site since the Middle Ages. The foundation stone was laid in 1825 by the vice-chancellor of Oxford University, Richard Jenkyns (1782-1854), later Dean of Wells, and the church was consecrated on 14 June 1828.

An unforeseen consequence, however, was that Saint Clement’s did not automatically become the parish church when it was consecrated. This was not realised at the time, and a special Act of Parliament had to be passed in 1836 to ensure the legality of all the marriages in the new church.

Although I was unable to see the inside of Saint Clement’s, I understand the east window (geographical north) shows 10 scenes from the life of Christ. It was commissioned in 1846 and is the work of Isaac Hugh Russell, who lived and worked in St Clement’s. The four north windows (geographical west) depict scenes on the theme of faith. They were made in memory of James Morrell (1810-1863) by A and WH O’Connor for Saint Martin’s Church, Carfax in 1865, and were moved to Saint Clement’s in 1896, when Saint Martin’s was demolished.

The ‘Seven Churches’ window (1908) in the north-west corner was given by Morrell family and is based on the letters to the Seven Churches of Asia (see Revelation 1: 12 to 3: 22). It was designed by Powell & Sons of Whitefriars Glassworks, London, who were closely associated with William Morris and the Arts and Crafts movement.

The interior had a major refurbishment in the 1870s. The original Georgian box-pews and benches were replaced in 1871 by ‘Neo-Norman’ pews, arranged in four blocks divided by a newly tiled nave and two newly positioned side aisles. The West Gallery was taken down in 1876.

The refurbishment was carried out by Edward George Bruton (1826-1899), an Oxford-based architect who specialised in church commissions in Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire and were largely funded by the Morrell brewing family of Headington Hill Hall.

The liturgical west door of Saint Clement’s … the church has been described ‘as an interesting example of an abortive Romanesque revival’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Saint Clement’s first organ was bought in 1846 and installed in the west gallery. It was moved to the south-east corner of the church next to the chancel in 1876 when the gallery was demolished.

A new organ was built by Martin and Coate in 1897-1899, and the old organ was sold to Saint Paul’s Church, Walton Street, later Freud’s nightclub. The new organ was first used at the service for Queen Victoria’s diamond jubilee in 1897, and was rebuilt by Nicholson’s of Worcester in 1952.

The patronage passed to a series of trustees belonging to the evangelical tradition. With a radical change in liturgical style, the organ fell into disuse in the late 20th century and was removed in early 2020. Many of the pipes were installed at the Basilica of Saint Dominic in Valletta, Malta, earlier this year (2025).

Saint Clement’s has three bells, all brought from the old church in the 1820s. One was cast in the 13th century and is the oldest bell in Oxford.

At first, the churchyard at the new church was small, but the Morrell family added 556 sq m of land in 1879, and a further 0.4 ha in 1920, partly to provide a setting for a war memorial erected in 1921.

The old churchyard at the Plain was still in use until the 1870s and it was taken over by the City Council in 1939. The last traces of the old churchyard were destroyed in 1950, when a roundabout was made on the Plain.

The planting scheme of limes along the drive continues into Headington Hill Park where they lined the carriageway up to Headington Hill Hall.

Saint Clement’s Mission Hall at 57A St Clement’s was designed by HW Moore and built in 1887-1891 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Saint Clement’s was reordered several times in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, with the addition of a crèche and kitchen, a dais in the chancel area and disabled access. The organ and several pews were removed in 2020-2022 to create a different layout.

Saint Clement’s Church is linked to two charities, both chaired by the rector. The Dawson Trust or Dawson’s Charity, established in 1521, owns property in St Clement’s used to relieve poverty and to maintain the church. The Parochial Charities of Saint Clement Oxford was formed in 1958 and recently merged with Dawson’s Charity. It was formed through the consolidation of three earlier charities, including John Pyke’s Charity and William James’s Charity.

Saint Clement’s Mission Hall at 57A St Clement’s was designed by HW Moore and built in 1887-1891. St Clement’s Community Property, formerly St Clement’s Parish Property (1903-2021), owns and maintains a small number of properties including Saint Clement’s Centre, Cross Street, and the Old Mission Hall and former Victoria Café at the corner of St Clement’s Street and Boulter Street.

The parish bought a former Baptist chapel in George Street (now Cave Street) in 1839 and converted it into schools that later moved to Bath Street.

The last traces of the old Saint Clement’s churchyard were destroyed in 1950 when a roundabout was made on the Plain (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

• Sunday services at Saint Clements’s are at10:30, with ‘All-Age Worship’ on the first Sunday, Holy Communion on the second and fourth Sundays and Morning Worship on the third and fifth Sundays, and an informal service at 18:30, with Communion on the first and third Sundays. The staff includes the Revd Mark Hay, who has been the Rector since April 2024, and the Assistant Curates, the Revd Dr Joanna Tarassenko and the Revd Dr Oliver Wright.

The planting scheme of limes along the drive of Saint Clement’s Church continues into Headington Hill Park (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Daily prayer in Ordinary Time 2025:
160, Sunday 19 October 2025,
18th Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XVIII)

‘The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends towards justice’ … a quotation from Martin Luther King in the foyer of Bloomsbury Baptist Church, London (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Patrick Comerford

We are continuing in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar, and today is the Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XVIII, 19 October 2025).

I spent some time yesterday at the AGM and annual conference of Christian CND (Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament), which took place online. Later today, I hope to sing with the choir at the Parish Eucharist in Saint Mary and Saint Giles Church, Stony Stratford.

But, before the day begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, and for reflection, prayer and reading in these ways:

1, today’s Gospel reading;

2, a short reflection;

3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;

4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.

‘Grant me justice against my opponent’ (Luke 18: 3) … the old courthouse in Kuching (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Luke 18: 1-8 (NRSVA):

18 Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart. 2 He said, ‘In a certain city there was a judge who neither feared God nor had respect for people. 3 In that city there was a widow who kept coming to him and saying, “Grant me justice against my opponent.” 4 For a while he refused; but later he said to himself, “Though I have no fear of God and no respect for anyone, 5 yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will grant her justice, so that she may not wear me out by continually coming”.’ 6 And the Lord said, ‘Listen to what the unjust judge says. 7 And will not God grant justice to his chosen ones who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long in helping them? 8 I tell you, he will quickly grant justice to them. And yet, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?’

An emphasis on justice is found in this morning’s readings … the scales of justice depicted on the Precentor’s Stall in the choir in Lichfield Cathedral (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Today’s Reflections:

The lectionary readings this morning (Jeremiah 31: 27-34; Psalm 119: 97-104; II Timothy 3: 14 to 4: 5; Luke 18: 1-8) offer an opportunity to reflect on what we mean by law and justice.

In the first reading, the Prophet Jeremiah speaks on behalf of God, when the people have been restored and know about justice and mercy, and he says: ‘I will put my law within them, and I will write it on their hearts’ (Jeremiah 31: 33).

The portion of Psalm 119 we read talks about love of the Law, and declares:

‘Lord, how I love your law!
All the day long it is my study
Your commandments have made me wiser than my enemies,
for they are ever with me’ (Psalm 119: 97-98).

In the Epistle reading, Saint Paul reminds Saint Timothy that they are ‘in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead’ (II Timothy 4: 1).

The Gospel reading tells us the well-known parable of the ‘Unjust Judge,’ a judge ‘who neither fears God nor has respect for people,’ and how he is forced to grant justice to a widow who keeps coming to him, saying, ‘Grant me justice against my opponent.’

Does the judge abandon his sense of impartiality when it comes to the administration of justice?

Or is he forced to realise the difference between what is legal and what is just, and the difference between justice and mercy?

The parable in the Gospel reading is well-known. We often know it as the ‘Parable of the Unjust Judge.’ But we might also call it the ‘Parable of the Persistent Widow,’ for we are told to take this woman and not the judge as our example: an example of how to pray to God, as opposed to an example of how to prey on people.

And yet, let us take some time first to look at the judge.

Are we asked to think that God behaves like an unjust or capricious judge?

Is this a judge who exercises his office without fear or favour?

Is justice about that?

Is justice about seeing that the law is enforced?

Or is it about seeing that justice is done, and is seen to be done?

How many judges implement the law without dispensing justice?

How many judges implement the law without dispensing mercy?

Is this not what happened in Nazi Germany, in apartheid South Africa, in racist states in the American ‘Deep South’, is happening in many courts in Trump’s US today?

How many judges in Nazi Germany and apartheid South Africa merely applied the law?

Could a Jewish widow expect justice from a judge in Nazi Germany?

Could a black widow expect mercy from a judge in apartheid South Africa?

A Latina woman lifted off the streets of Chicago by ICE, or a protesting woman beaten to the ground in Portland?

The woman in this parable is not asking for what is her legal right. She is not asking for her neighbour to be punished. But she may be asking for something she is not entitled to: justice.

When we find ourselves saying we cannot accept a judgmental God, is that because our image of a judge is of a distant figure who applies the full rigour of the law, rather than an accessible figure who dispenses justice and mercy?

These contrasting images of God are found too in the first reading (Jeremiah 31: 27-34); it concludes:

No longer shall they teach one another, or say to one another,
‘Know the Lord,’
for they shall all know me,
from the least of them to the greatest,
for I will forgive their iniquity,
and remember their sin no more. – (Jeremiah 31: 34)

Who is ‘the least of them’ in the readings this morning?

Certainly, a widow would fall into that category at the time of Christ. She would have no man to argue her case for her, and so would go unheard. All other cases – commercial, civil and criminal – would take priority in the courts before her request came to be heard.

Who is the widow in this story?

The first part of the reading from Jeremiah might suggest parallels between this widow and the chosen people who have turned their back on God: a people whose covenantal relationship with God has died, and a woman whose covenantal relationship, her marriage, has come to an end with death.

Without love, there is no covenant. Without love there is no true religion, and no true marriage.

We are reminded this morning that a true relationship with God is marked by love – God’s love for us, our love for God, and our love for others.

If that love is the foundation of our Christianity, then justice becomes more important than law, and mercy more important than rules, and God the Judge becomes a loving rather than a tyrannical image.

‘Because this widow keeps bothering me, I will grant her justice’ (Luke 18: 5) … the sign at the Wig and Pen near the courthouse in Truro, Cornwall (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Today’s Prayers (Sunday 19 October 2025, Trinity XVIII):

The theme this week (19 to 25 October) in Pray with the World Church, the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘Advancing Theological Education for Young Women in Africa’ (pp 48-49). This theme is introduced today with reflections from Esmeralda (Essie) Pato, Chair of the Communion-Wide Advisory Group for USPG; she is based in Johannesburg, South Africa:

USPG is committed to energising Church by investing in future Anglican leaders through theological education. We’re thrilled to introduce the Young Women’s Theological Education Scholarship, which empowers young women across Africa to become effective leaders and serve their communities.

Back at the start of term, Essie joined the students on the first day at the College of the Transfiguration, a globally recognised Anglican theological college in Makhanda, South Africa. Here she met three scholarship recipients: the Revd Rachel Moshanah, Diocese of Namibia, Miss Sinesipho Zokhwe, Diocese of Mbhashe (Southern Africa) and Mrs Maponoane Ponoane, Diocese of Lesotho. All three were very excited for the start of the new term.

‘I felt honoured to represent USPG as a partner of the college. After an address from the Rector, Dr Percy, returning students welcomed the newcomers by helping them put on their cassocks. This act showed what the message of Jesus is to clergy in the making – that you come to serve and not to be served. The reassurance given to the new students was that they belong and have all the support they need for the year ahead.

In my conversations with students, I was struck by their optimism and eagerness. Many seemed hopeful and ready to learn. It was clear that the seminary isn’t just a place of learning; it’s a space where faith, service, and leadership grow – shaping leaders of tomorrow’s Church.”

The USPG Prayer Diary today (Sunday 19 October 2025, Trinity XVIII) invites us to pray as we read and meditate on Luke 18: 1-8.

The Collect:

Almighty and everlasting God,
increase in us your gift of faith
that, forsaking what lies behind
and reaching out to that which is before,
we may run the way of your commandments
and win the crown of everlasting joy;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

The Post Communion Prayer:

We praise and thank you, O Christ, for this sacred feast:
for here we receive you,
here the memory of your passion is renewed,
here our minds are filled with grace,
and here a pledge of future glory is given,
when we shall feast at that table where you reign
with all your saints for ever.

Additional Collect:

God, our judge and saviour,
teach us to be open to your truth
and to trust in your love,
that we may live each day
with confidence in the salvation which is given
through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Yesterday’s Reflections

Continued Tomorrow

In those days they shall no longer say: ‘The parents have eaten sour grapes, and the children’s teeth are set on edge’ (Jeremiah 31: 29) … summer grapes on a vine in Lichfield a few weeks ago (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicised Edition copyright © 1989, 1995, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org