The Portal October 2013 | Page 7

THE P RTAL October 2013 Page 7 The bells of St Agatha, Portsmouth by Alan Pink In 1882 a small mission church, funded by Winchester College, was established in Landport, then a slum area of central Portsmouth, described by its first missioner as “the very centre of the influences of Satan”. This was the first St Agatha’s. The present church dates from 1895 and was made famous by its first Vicar, Fr Dolling, one of the great AngloCatholic social reformers of the late 19th/early 20th case with most of the bells. centuries. a single bell The Church was never completed due to a shortage of funds: the north aisle was not built and the tower was intended to be twice its height, as the architect’s drawing shows. Although it was always intended to house a ring of bells only a single bell hung in the tower – a small Warner bell cast in the 1880s. sold for 30 pieces of silver On the night of 23 December 1941, the parish was virtually destroyed by enemy bombing. The vicarage and church hall were lost but the church miraculously survived, although it lost its glass and was closed for 3 months while it was patched up. When the Vicar, Fr Coles, suffered a severe stroke in 1954 and had to give up, the Church of England promptly closed the church. Later that year it was sold for 30 pieces of silver (actually £30,000!) and became a naval store. The vultures of the Portsmouth Diocese stripped the church of all its treasures and the bell is now in St Francis, Leigh Park. reopened 40 years later Since the church was reopened 40 years later in 1994, the St Agatha’s Trust has been restoring the interior of the church. Some of the original features have returned, though others have been destroyed, and many are still with the vultures. Many fittings have been acquired from redundant churches and this is the The first bell to arrive The first bell to arrive was the bell from St. John’s, Rudmore, at the entrance to Portsmouth at the end of the M275. That church is now an apartment block and its bell was rescued by the priest of St Agatha’s from a builder’s skip. It was cast around 1925 by Taylors and weighs a little over 1 cwt. It was hung at the top of the tower in 2005 and fitted with an electric hammer for use as the Sanctus bell and to ring the Angelus every day. financial crisis For a brief period there were hopes that the area round the church would be redeveloped. Talks with the developers who wished St Agatha’s to be a significant feature of the new development were very positive and ideas were produced to build the north aisle, finish the tower and to reinstate the Lady Chapel which had been destroyed to make way for a road that now goes only to a car park. However, the financial crisis soon stopped that idea. Three new bells were cast A more modest plan to hang a light ring of eight in the tower gathered momentum when the Keltek Trust found four bells that were suitable for the “back four” and Matthew Higby had a 5th that would fit in too. Three new bells were cast by Higby Bowditch in 2012 and the installation completed at the end of January 2013.