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Our Lady Star of the Sea
Broadstairs
Kent
CT10 2RH
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Who we are
Our Lady Star of the Sea is a Roman Catholic church in Broadstairs, Kent.
We are a fellowship of believers, made in God's image and called as disciples of Christ to share the Good News with everyone through learning, listening, praying and working together actively to reach out to our communities.
We are a place to believe, belong, and become!
We are a fellowship of believers, made in God's image and called as disciples of Christ to share the Good News with everyone through learning, listening, praying and working together actively to reach out to our communities.
We are a place to believe, belong, and become!
Church Address
Broadstairs Road
Broadstairs,
Kent
CT10 2RH
United Kingdom
Phone: 01843 861627
Download Our Lady Star of the Sea vCard with Mass Times
Church Pastor
Father Daniel Weatherley
Parish Priest
Broadstairs Road
Broadstairs,
Kent
CT10 2RH
United Kingdom
Phone: 01843 861627
Download Parish Priest Father Daniel Weatherley vCard
Quote of the Day
2 Thessalonians 2:15
Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle.
Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle.
Denomination
Roman Catholic
Roman Catholic churches in Broadstairs, Kent, United Kingdom
Roman Catholic churches in Kent, United Kingdom
Roman Catholic churches in United Kingdom
All churches in Broadstairs, Kent
Affiliations:
Archdiocese of Southwark
Website:
Social Media
Leadership
Leader Name:
Father Daniel Weatherley
Leader Position:
Parish Priest
Formal Title:
Leader Address:
Tel:
Fax:
Leader Email:
Leader Bio:
Other Church Leaders:
Father Daniel Weatherley on Social Media:
Our Lady Star of the Sea Leadership Photos
Administration
Admin Name:
Simone Clifford
Admin Position:
Parish Secretary
Admin Address:
Telephone:
Fax:
Admin Email:
Mailing Address
Driving Directions to Our Lady Star of the Sea
Travel/Directions Tips
Parking
Our Lady Star of the Sea Broadstairs Mass Times
Saturday Vigil:
There is no Saturday Vigil
Sunday Mass:
10am
6pm
Weekday Masses:
For the times of weekday Masses please go to the relevant weekly Newsletter posted under the heading Newsletters.
Mass Times last updated on the 16th of December, 2024
There is no Saturday Vigil
Sunday Mass:
10am
6pm
Weekday Masses:
For the times of weekday Masses please go to the relevant weekly Newsletter posted under the heading Newsletters.
Mass Times last updated on the 16th of December, 2024
Worship Languages
Dress code:
Children and Youth Activities
Under 12s:
Under 18s:
Local outreach & community activities:
Other activities & ministries
Special Needs/Accessibility:
Prayers and hymns:
Main Bible:
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Other information:
Average Adult Congregation:
Average Youth Congregation:
Additional Info:
Our Lady Star of the Sea Photo Gallery
Our Lady Star of the Sea History
There is something special and unique about the parish of Broadstairs, stemming from the long-standing devotion to our Blessed Lady. This dates back at least to the tenth century, when pilgrims from all over England and the continent flocked to the shrine of St Mary’s Chapel, in what is now Albion Street, and which is the oldest building in Broadstairs. Mariners who rounded the point would reverently lower their topsails in salute. St Mary’s was destroyed in the violence accompanying the religious upheavals of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: for three hundred years Broadstairs had neither chapel nor priest.
Just as the little chapel in Gladstone Road had been so full at Mass that the congregation overflowed into the garden and the road, so before long the tin chapel was proving much too small. Efforts were made to acquire a new site for a permanent church. Just like today many events were held to gather funds. Fortunately, in 1928, the magnificent site of the present church was given to the parish. In May 1930 the foundation stone was laid by the Bishop of Southwark.
Designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott om ra friba (the architect of the Anglican Liverpool Cathedral) the new church was begun in 1930. It is built of flint faced with stone, producing the effect of an ancient building. All nations were represented in its style. The campanile being typically Spanish, the sanctuary Celtic, as built by Irishmen throughout Italy in the Middle Ages, the nave Kentish and the wood British Oak. The building combined the Gothic with the Norman and although the first impression might be surprising the architecture was well thought out. It is reputed to have been said that Sir Giles designed the church to reflect the local environment, the sea and farmlands, the tower the lighthouse, the sanctuary an oast house and the nave a barn, and flints were used, the local stone. Sir Giles proudly described this as his ‘Thanet Gem’. At the time finances were only available for the sanctuary, tower and half the nave to be built, so the west wall was finished in wood until funds were raised to finish the building.
In the early 1950s the parish set about the task of completing the church. In 1962 the church was finished with only one variation from Sir Giles’ original conception in the form of a somewhat massive screen with stone dressings, mullioned windows and swing doors in ring-cupped oak at the west end, with a gallery overhead. The narthex thus formed providing an area for material affairs, helping to keep quiet the main body of the church.
In 1878 Captain and Mrs Arthur Rutt came to live in Broadstairs. They adapted and enlarged a brick building in the garden of their home at 2 Gladstone Road to make a public chapel under the title of Our Lady Star of the Sea. Here Mass was celebrated, by the monks of St Augustine’s Abbey, for the first time since the time of the Tudors. On moving to Ramsgate in 1888, Captain and Mrs Rutt, anxious that Mass should continue to be celebrated in Broadstairs, provided a plot of land in St Peter’s Park Road for a church to be built: a tin church was completed and furnished within six weeks.
While the Catholic community of Broadstairs now had a church to worship in, there was still no resident clergy, the parish being served directly by the monks of St Augustine’s Abbey who had arrived in Ramsgate in 1858. It was not until 1909 that the parish acquired its first fully resident priest who was duly provided with a presbytery opposite the church.
For nearly a century the Broadstairs parish was served by the Benedictine Fathers from Ramsgate, but the Abbot and Community of St Augustine’s Abbey were now obliged to hand over the parish to the Archbishop of Southwark. January 1969 marked a new chapter in the history of the parish with the arrival of the diocesan clergy. In the early 1970s there was a breathtakingly beautiful transformation of the Sanctuary, the installation of the magnificent bath stone altar of reservation, as well as that of the permanent marble altar so that Mass could be celebrated facing the people. The sanctuary floor was renewed and the redecoration of the church put underway, with the reredos in the Lady Chapel re-gilded in gold leaf, while the Sacred Heart Chapel was also decorated to blend in with the whole scheme.
During the 1970s after Vatican II the Catholic community in Thanet saw big developments. The laity became more involved in the running of the parishes. Councils were set up in the various parishes and delegates from these were sent to the Deanery Pastoral Council. The laity worked together with the priests and members of the religious communities. A deanery magazine was published a number of times a year with articles from the schools, and news from the parishes and Deanery. By the 1980s Our Lady Star of the Sea was busy playing its part.
During this time the rooms in Bradstowe House were knocked into one large hall. This served the parish for the next twenty years, or more, and many functions took place here.
In October 1994 Monsignor Matthew Dickens, was ordained priest at Our Lady Star of the Sea. Father Godfrey Holdstock was ordained in our church in December 2009, serving in Our Lady Star of the Sea and in St. Anne’s in Cliftonville until he retired in 2018.
In the twenty-first century it was decided that Bradstowe House had outlived its usefulness as a Parish Hall, and after many meetings and much discussion, plans were put in place for a new Parish Hall. It was designed to be in keeping with Sir Giles Gilbert Scott’s church and would face the main door of the church. In December 2011 the new parish hall was finished. It complements the church beautifully and is a wonderful asset for the parish.
This story began over a thousand years ago with the chapel of St Mary. After a break of over three hundred years, it continued with one room in 1878; now, over one hundred and forty years later, the parish has a magnificent church and gardens, and a wonderful parish hall. In our own time, much of the spread of God’s word depends on the laity; they are the power for the spread of God’s word in Broadstairs.
Just as the little chapel in Gladstone Road had been so full at Mass that the congregation overflowed into the garden and the road, so before long the tin chapel was proving much too small. Efforts were made to acquire a new site for a permanent church. Just like today many events were held to gather funds. Fortunately, in 1928, the magnificent site of the present church was given to the parish. In May 1930 the foundation stone was laid by the Bishop of Southwark.
Designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott om ra friba (the architect of the Anglican Liverpool Cathedral) the new church was begun in 1930. It is built of flint faced with stone, producing the effect of an ancient building. All nations were represented in its style. The campanile being typically Spanish, the sanctuary Celtic, as built by Irishmen throughout Italy in the Middle Ages, the nave Kentish and the wood British Oak. The building combined the Gothic with the Norman and although the first impression might be surprising the architecture was well thought out. It is reputed to have been said that Sir Giles designed the church to reflect the local environment, the sea and farmlands, the tower the lighthouse, the sanctuary an oast house and the nave a barn, and flints were used, the local stone. Sir Giles proudly described this as his ‘Thanet Gem’. At the time finances were only available for the sanctuary, tower and half the nave to be built, so the west wall was finished in wood until funds were raised to finish the building.
In the early 1950s the parish set about the task of completing the church. In 1962 the church was finished with only one variation from Sir Giles’ original conception in the form of a somewhat massive screen with stone dressings, mullioned windows and swing doors in ring-cupped oak at the west end, with a gallery overhead. The narthex thus formed providing an area for material affairs, helping to keep quiet the main body of the church.
In 1878 Captain and Mrs Arthur Rutt came to live in Broadstairs. They adapted and enlarged a brick building in the garden of their home at 2 Gladstone Road to make a public chapel under the title of Our Lady Star of the Sea. Here Mass was celebrated, by the monks of St Augustine’s Abbey, for the first time since the time of the Tudors. On moving to Ramsgate in 1888, Captain and Mrs Rutt, anxious that Mass should continue to be celebrated in Broadstairs, provided a plot of land in St Peter’s Park Road for a church to be built: a tin church was completed and furnished within six weeks.
While the Catholic community of Broadstairs now had a church to worship in, there was still no resident clergy, the parish being served directly by the monks of St Augustine’s Abbey who had arrived in Ramsgate in 1858. It was not until 1909 that the parish acquired its first fully resident priest who was duly provided with a presbytery opposite the church.
For nearly a century the Broadstairs parish was served by the Benedictine Fathers from Ramsgate, but the Abbot and Community of St Augustine’s Abbey were now obliged to hand over the parish to the Archbishop of Southwark. January 1969 marked a new chapter in the history of the parish with the arrival of the diocesan clergy. In the early 1970s there was a breathtakingly beautiful transformation of the Sanctuary, the installation of the magnificent bath stone altar of reservation, as well as that of the permanent marble altar so that Mass could be celebrated facing the people. The sanctuary floor was renewed and the redecoration of the church put underway, with the reredos in the Lady Chapel re-gilded in gold leaf, while the Sacred Heart Chapel was also decorated to blend in with the whole scheme.
During the 1970s after Vatican II the Catholic community in Thanet saw big developments. The laity became more involved in the running of the parishes. Councils were set up in the various parishes and delegates from these were sent to the Deanery Pastoral Council. The laity worked together with the priests and members of the religious communities. A deanery magazine was published a number of times a year with articles from the schools, and news from the parishes and Deanery. By the 1980s Our Lady Star of the Sea was busy playing its part.
During this time the rooms in Bradstowe House were knocked into one large hall. This served the parish for the next twenty years, or more, and many functions took place here.
In October 1994 Monsignor Matthew Dickens, was ordained priest at Our Lady Star of the Sea. Father Godfrey Holdstock was ordained in our church in December 2009, serving in Our Lady Star of the Sea and in St. Anne’s in Cliftonville until he retired in 2018.
In the twenty-first century it was decided that Bradstowe House had outlived its usefulness as a Parish Hall, and after many meetings and much discussion, plans were put in place for a new Parish Hall. It was designed to be in keeping with Sir Giles Gilbert Scott’s church and would face the main door of the church. In December 2011 the new parish hall was finished. It complements the church beautifully and is a wonderful asset for the parish.
This story began over a thousand years ago with the chapel of St Mary. After a break of over three hundred years, it continued with one room in 1878; now, over one hundred and forty years later, the parish has a magnificent church and gardens, and a wonderful parish hall. In our own time, much of the spread of God’s word depends on the laity; they are the power for the spread of God’s word in Broadstairs.
Our Lady Star of the Sea Historical Photos
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