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St Mary's Roman
Catholic Church
Dale Street, Bacup
In the late 11th
century the Cistercian monks of Whalley Abbey were assigned a part
of the Forest of Rossendale and made a settlement at Brandwood, and
it was these monks who administered to the spares population of the
area. In 1507 King Henry VII decreed that the area should be
deforested and made open to settlement and cultivation. This led to
an increase in the population and in 1511 the chapel of Our Saviour
was built at Newchurch. With the reformation of the church in the
reign of Henry VIII the chapel became part of the Established
Church. Those who refused to attend the reformed church were subject
to heavy taxes and fines and even death. For the next three hundred
years very few Catholics remained in the area and those that did
depended on the Towneley family of Burnley for spiritual
ministration.
The 1778 and 1791
Acts of Tolerance gave more freedom to Catholics and the Catholic
Emancipation Act of 1829 once more gave Catholics complete freedom
worship openly.
The first Catholic
mission in the area was at Sunnyside, Crawshawbooth. The Sunnyside
print works had endured a long strike and John Brooks the owner
recruited labourers from Manchester, which included Catholic
families. These Catholics were provided with a building to worship
in in Pinner Lane and were served by the priests of Towneley fron
1828 until 1836 when Father James Carr became the resident priest.
By 1842 the congregation was growing rapidly and so land was
obtained at Constablee to build a church and in 1845 St James the
Less was opened. In 1849 Father Thomas Unsworth, the priest at St
James the Less established mission centres at Bacup and Haslingden.
In 1852 Father
Henry Mulvany was sent by the Bishop of Salford to further the
mission. He became the first Catholic priest to live in the town
when he rented a room over Mr. Pilling's ironmongers shop in Market
Street which could seat over 300 people and was used for services
and as a school. With the help of the parishioners a new church was
constructed on Dale Street in 1857. The school was moved to Wesley
Place in 1862 and a new school was built at the side of the church
in 1872. In 1871 the Catholic portion of Bacup Cemetery was
consecrated and a mortuary chapel was dedicated to St Joseph.
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