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St Francis de Sales
Wolverton
Northamptonshire
MK12 5LJ
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Who we are
We are a parish with two churches, two presbyteries, two parish gardens and a parish hall with an average attendance of 300 people who serve the People of God in Wolverton and Stony Stratford.
The parish of St Francis de Sales and St Mary Magdalene has been served by Father Bernard Barrett since 1995. If you’re new to the area, or want to know more about our parish, reach out to Fr Barrett who would love to speak with you.
The parish of St Francis de Sales and St Mary Magdalene has been served by Father Bernard Barrett since 1995. If you’re new to the area, or want to know more about our parish, reach out to Fr Barrett who would love to speak with you.
Street Address
Radcliffe Street
Wolverton,
Northamptonshire
MK12 5LJ
United Kingdom
Phone: 07761 583307 / 01908 842701
Download St Francis de Sales vCard with Mass Times
Church Pastor
Rev Bernard Barrett
Parish Priest
Radcliffe Street
Wolverton,
Northamptonshire
MK12 5LJ
United Kingdom
Phone: 01908 321746
Download Parish Priest Rev Bernard Barrett vCard
Quote of the Day
Psalms 26:2
Examine me, O LORD, and prove me; try my reins and my heart.
Examine me, O LORD, and prove me; try my reins and my heart.
Denomination
Catholic Church
Catholic Churches in Wolverton, Northamptonshire, United Kingdom
Catholic Churches in Northamptonshire, United Kingdom
Catholic Churches in United Kingdom
All churches in Wolverton, Northamptonshire
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Rev Bernard Barrett
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Parish Priest
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St Francis de Sales Leadership Photos
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St Francis de Sales Wolverton Mass Times
To book to attend Mass on any Sunday, including the Vigil Mass on a Saturday evening, click here:
https://www.stfrancisandmary.org/mass-bookings
St Francis de Sales
Wolverton
Radcliffe Street, MK12 5LJ
Saturday
6:30 pm Vigil Mass
Sunday
11:30 am Mass
Holy Days
7:30 pm Mass
Open for private prayer 9 am to 6 pm Monday - Friday.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
St Mary Magdalene
Stony Stratford
105 High Street, MK11 1AT
Saturday
-
Sunday
9:15 am Mass
Holy Days
10:30 am Mass
Open for private prayer 9 am to 6 pm Monday - Friday.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Christmas Mass Times
To book to attend any of the Masses below, click here:
https://www.stfrancisandmary.org/mass-bookings
and select the December Mass Booking Form.
Christmas Eve
Friday 24th December
St Mary Magdalene
Children’s Mass at 6 pm
Early Midnight Mass - 8:30 pm
St Francis de Sales
Midnight Mass - 11:30 pm
Christmas Carols followed by Mass at Midnight
Christmas Day
Saturday 25th December
St Mary Magdalene
09:15 am Mass
St Francis de Sales
11:30 am Mass
Mass Times last updated on the 29th of November, 2021
https://www.stfrancisandmary.org/mass-bookings
St Francis de Sales
Wolverton
Radcliffe Street, MK12 5LJ
Saturday
6:30 pm Vigil Mass
Sunday
11:30 am Mass
Holy Days
7:30 pm Mass
Open for private prayer 9 am to 6 pm Monday - Friday.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
St Mary Magdalene
Stony Stratford
105 High Street, MK11 1AT
Saturday
-
Sunday
9:15 am Mass
Holy Days
10:30 am Mass
Open for private prayer 9 am to 6 pm Monday - Friday.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Christmas Mass Times
To book to attend any of the Masses below, click here:
https://www.stfrancisandmary.org/mass-bookings
and select the December Mass Booking Form.
Christmas Eve
Friday 24th December
St Mary Magdalene
Children’s Mass at 6 pm
Early Midnight Mass - 8:30 pm
St Francis de Sales
Midnight Mass - 11:30 pm
Christmas Carols followed by Mass at Midnight
Christmas Day
Saturday 25th December
St Mary Magdalene
09:15 am Mass
St Francis de Sales
11:30 am Mass
Mass Times last updated on the 29th of November, 2021
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St Francis de Sales Photo Gallery
St Francis de Sales History
The parish of St. Francis de Sales & St. Mary Magdalene has its origins in the Catholic Church’s two-fold response to the Act of Catholic Emancipation and the Industrial Revolution - which enabled the Restoration of the Catholic Hierarchy (1850) and which gave us the thriving Railway town of Wolverton by 1860.
It was the heart of a mission to proclaim the fullness of the Gospel and to minister to Catholics living in this wide field.
With the arrival of the Third Millennium, Wolverton stands to the North of the new town of Milton Keynes and because of the above mission, the other parishes of Milton Keynes came into existence so that the Parish of St. Francis de Sales is rightly called the mother church of the Catholic churches in Milton Keynes.
The 19th Century gave us the First Vatican Council (1870), whilst the 20th Century gave us the Second Vatican Council (1963-65) and both these councils have formed the character of St. Francis de Sales.
As early as 1836 Wolverton had been selected as mid-point between the London-Birmingham railway line. Wolverton was just a little village, but by 1860 it had become an important railway town and according to Local Historian Sir Frank Markham, it was thriving. During its development Catholics in Wolverton were served by a Priest from Aylesbury or they had to walk to Weston Underwood for Sunday Mass (9 miles away). It is clear that as early as 1844 pastoral care was being extended by the church at Weedon to ‘Wolverton Station’.
The 19th Century gave us the First Vatican Council (1870), whilst the 20th Century gave us the Second Vatican Council (1963-65) and both these councils have formed the character of St. Francis de Sales.
1864-1884
Fr. Francis Cambours arrives in 1864 and within a short time raises £1,000 towards the establishment of the ‘Mission’.
Fr. Blackman replaces Fr. Cambours and builds presbytery and church. The Church opened on Trinity Sunday 1867; although original accounts refer to it as a school. The total cost was £855. Eventually, an old organ (200 years old) was acquired from Northampton Cathedral
The Presbytery was built in 1871. A large amount of the cost, between £200-300, was donated by Sarah Dunn, the housekeeper to the priests between 1865-1884. Priests were expected to be fit and energetic as they rode on horses to cover Aylesbury, Buckingham, Hockcliffe and Leighton Buzzard.
A Society of Vincent de Paul group (SVP) was set up in Wolverton in 1884; a mere 50 years after the original Paris group was formed by Frederick Ozanam (died 1853). The essence of the Society is to see Christ in those in need.
1902 - 1948
Fr. Garnett installs new altar and antique oak reredos or screen. In the reredos are statues of St. Gregory the Great, St. Peter, St. Paul and St. Thomas Becket. The lower statues depict St. Francis de Sales and St. Edmund the Martyr (Fr. Garnett’s Patron saint). Fr. Garnett begins the diaries that now have become a tradition for Parish priests to continue and make up the archives of the Parish. Clear indications of good relations with other Christians in the parish diaries; Ecumenism starts early in the Parish.
Entries in the parish diaries of only Mass counts and collections; little information about how the First World War affected parishioners. But records speak of Fr. Walker tending Catholics who were among the Belgium refugees and the soldiers who attended Easter celebrations in 1915.
World War II took its toll, with Wolverton men serving in many branches of the armed forces. The local regiment, the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry played decisive and heroic roles in the 1939 BEF landings and Dunkirk embarkation. (See the role of honour in St. George’s Anglican Church).
New stained-glass windows were installed as a memorial to parishioners killed on active service in World War II; they were made by Catholic artist Earnest R. Twining of Joseph Bell & Son.
1954 - 1977
Fr. Wilf Johnson was parish priest of Wolverton. In 1954, he began the building of the Church of St. Mary Magdalene in Stony Stratford which was completed in 1957 and blessed on 25th September 1958. He moved to Wellingborough where he stayed until his death.
Fr. Paddy Connolly became parish priest of Wolverton In 1973 he moved to Stony Stratford which was now a parish in its own right.
Wolverton came under the CRIC fathers - Canons Regular of the Immaculate Conception. As resident priests in Wolverton, they began their mission to the New City of Milton Keynes that was in the process of being built. Thus the parish of Wolverton continued to serve as the Mother Church from which many of the new churches in Milton Keynes were built, supported, or supplied.
1979 - 1995
Fr. John Koenig moves from Wellingborough where he was a curate to become, for the first time, parish priest of St. Francis de Sales. Wolverton was un-clustered to return to parish status.
At last, the Church of St. Francis de Sales was consecrated by Bishop Charles Grant on Wednesday 23rd September 1981. Fr. Richard Moroney moves from St. Elthebert’s in Slough where he was curate to become for the first time parish priest of Wolverton.
Fr. Bernard Barrett moves from Wellingborough where he was a curate to become, for the first time parish priest of St. Francis de Sales.
1998 - 2002
In 1998, asbestos was removed from the walls of the Church and Fr Bernard commissioned an artist, Peter Yourell, to paint a mural on the Sanctuary wall.
The design and theological content were worked out between the Artist and Fr. Bernard P.A. Barrett. Mr. Paul Gleeson (Art Teacher at St. Paul’s School) was commissioned to paint a Jubilee painting for the porch.
New marble for re-construction of the altar from the Reardos was completed and installed by Milo Molloy. Mr. Paul Gleeson was commissioned to paint panels for the back of the altar.
In 2002, the parishes of St. Francis de Sales and St. Mary Magdalene were amalgamated thereby returning to their pre-1976 status.
It was the heart of a mission to proclaim the fullness of the Gospel and to minister to Catholics living in this wide field.
With the arrival of the Third Millennium, Wolverton stands to the North of the new town of Milton Keynes and because of the above mission, the other parishes of Milton Keynes came into existence so that the Parish of St. Francis de Sales is rightly called the mother church of the Catholic churches in Milton Keynes.
The 19th Century gave us the First Vatican Council (1870), whilst the 20th Century gave us the Second Vatican Council (1963-65) and both these councils have formed the character of St. Francis de Sales.
As early as 1836 Wolverton had been selected as mid-point between the London-Birmingham railway line. Wolverton was just a little village, but by 1860 it had become an important railway town and according to Local Historian Sir Frank Markham, it was thriving. During its development Catholics in Wolverton were served by a Priest from Aylesbury or they had to walk to Weston Underwood for Sunday Mass (9 miles away). It is clear that as early as 1844 pastoral care was being extended by the church at Weedon to ‘Wolverton Station’.
The 19th Century gave us the First Vatican Council (1870), whilst the 20th Century gave us the Second Vatican Council (1963-65) and both these councils have formed the character of St. Francis de Sales.
1864-1884
Fr. Francis Cambours arrives in 1864 and within a short time raises £1,000 towards the establishment of the ‘Mission’.
Fr. Blackman replaces Fr. Cambours and builds presbytery and church. The Church opened on Trinity Sunday 1867; although original accounts refer to it as a school. The total cost was £855. Eventually, an old organ (200 years old) was acquired from Northampton Cathedral
The Presbytery was built in 1871. A large amount of the cost, between £200-300, was donated by Sarah Dunn, the housekeeper to the priests between 1865-1884. Priests were expected to be fit and energetic as they rode on horses to cover Aylesbury, Buckingham, Hockcliffe and Leighton Buzzard.
A Society of Vincent de Paul group (SVP) was set up in Wolverton in 1884; a mere 50 years after the original Paris group was formed by Frederick Ozanam (died 1853). The essence of the Society is to see Christ in those in need.
1902 - 1948
Fr. Garnett installs new altar and antique oak reredos or screen. In the reredos are statues of St. Gregory the Great, St. Peter, St. Paul and St. Thomas Becket. The lower statues depict St. Francis de Sales and St. Edmund the Martyr (Fr. Garnett’s Patron saint). Fr. Garnett begins the diaries that now have become a tradition for Parish priests to continue and make up the archives of the Parish. Clear indications of good relations with other Christians in the parish diaries; Ecumenism starts early in the Parish.
Entries in the parish diaries of only Mass counts and collections; little information about how the First World War affected parishioners. But records speak of Fr. Walker tending Catholics who were among the Belgium refugees and the soldiers who attended Easter celebrations in 1915.
World War II took its toll, with Wolverton men serving in many branches of the armed forces. The local regiment, the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry played decisive and heroic roles in the 1939 BEF landings and Dunkirk embarkation. (See the role of honour in St. George’s Anglican Church).
New stained-glass windows were installed as a memorial to parishioners killed on active service in World War II; they were made by Catholic artist Earnest R. Twining of Joseph Bell & Son.
1954 - 1977
Fr. Wilf Johnson was parish priest of Wolverton. In 1954, he began the building of the Church of St. Mary Magdalene in Stony Stratford which was completed in 1957 and blessed on 25th September 1958. He moved to Wellingborough where he stayed until his death.
Fr. Paddy Connolly became parish priest of Wolverton In 1973 he moved to Stony Stratford which was now a parish in its own right.
Wolverton came under the CRIC fathers - Canons Regular of the Immaculate Conception. As resident priests in Wolverton, they began their mission to the New City of Milton Keynes that was in the process of being built. Thus the parish of Wolverton continued to serve as the Mother Church from which many of the new churches in Milton Keynes were built, supported, or supplied.
1979 - 1995
Fr. John Koenig moves from Wellingborough where he was a curate to become, for the first time, parish priest of St. Francis de Sales. Wolverton was un-clustered to return to parish status.
At last, the Church of St. Francis de Sales was consecrated by Bishop Charles Grant on Wednesday 23rd September 1981. Fr. Richard Moroney moves from St. Elthebert’s in Slough where he was curate to become for the first time parish priest of Wolverton.
Fr. Bernard Barrett moves from Wellingborough where he was a curate to become, for the first time parish priest of St. Francis de Sales.
1998 - 2002
In 1998, asbestos was removed from the walls of the Church and Fr Bernard commissioned an artist, Peter Yourell, to paint a mural on the Sanctuary wall.
The design and theological content were worked out between the Artist and Fr. Bernard P.A. Barrett. Mr. Paul Gleeson (Art Teacher at St. Paul’s School) was commissioned to paint a Jubilee painting for the porch.
New marble for re-construction of the altar from the Reardos was completed and installed by Milo Molloy. Mr. Paul Gleeson was commissioned to paint panels for the back of the altar.
In 2002, the parishes of St. Francis de Sales and St. Mary Magdalene were amalgamated thereby returning to their pre-1976 status.