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All Souls, Blackman Lane

All Souls Church
All Souls Church - Blackman Lane - geograph.org.uk - 411550.jpg
Location Leeds, West Yorkshire
Country England
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Liberal Catholic
Website Parish website
History
Dedication All Souls
Architecture
Architect(s) Sir George Gilbert Scott
Administration
Parish Leeds All Souls
Deanery Allerton
Archdeaconry Leeds
Episcopal area Leeds
Diocese Diocese of Leeds
Province Province of York
Clergy
Priest in charge Fr Nicolas lo Polito
Deacon(s) The Revd Warwick Turnbull
Laity
Organist(s) Keith Senior
Churchwarden(s) Dave Horsman , Anne Nichol

All Souls' Church, Blackman Lane, in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England is a large Victorian Church of England parish church.

All Souls' Church was built by public subscription in one of the poorest districts of Leeds, the Leylands, as a memorial to Dr W. F. Hook, Vicar of Leeds for some 22 years and later Dean of Chichester. A new parish was formed from parts of the parishes of St Matthew, St Mark, and St Michael (Buslingthorpe) extending up to Woodhouse Lane, where it was intended the church should be sited. However, this could not be managed and it was placed on Blackman Lane, which was, however, convenient for the parish inhabitants.

It was designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott, and is the last church he designed before his death in 1878: his son, John Oldrid Scott, took over the supervision of the building. The foundation stone was laid in September 1876; the church was consecrated on 29 January 1880.

The design is simple and impressive in scale: 134 ft in length with aisles both to the nave and chancel, a southwest porch and a baptistery under the northwest tower. Southowram stone with Meanwood dressings was used for the exterior, Harehills stone for the interior. The column supports for the nave arcades are of Park Spring stone. The interior walls are of ashlar stonework.

Between 1968 and 1974 Tennant Hall, formerly the church's Sunday Schools, was used as the BBC Leeds TV studios, primarily for the nightly local news programme Look North. In 1974 the BBC moved to new, purpose-built studios nearby at Broadcasting House, Woodhouse Lane.

The ornate wooden font cover was donated by the artist Emily Ford in thanksgiving for her own baptism as an adult. She decorated the cover with biblical scenes in which the characters have the faces of her friends and fellow campaigners. The West Yorkshire branch of the Victorian Society raised £6,000 in 2013 to enable Ford's eight painted panels to be cleaned and restored by David Everingham.


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