Latitude: 53.5795 / 53°34'46"N
Longitude: -2.4074 / 2°24'26"W
OS Eastings: 373125
OS Northings: 409293
OS Grid: SD731092
Mapcode National: GBR CWM1.MK
Mapcode Global: WH97V.Z9S6
Plus Code: 9C5VHHHV+R3
Entry Name: Church of St Chad
Listing Date: 9 May 2003
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1390493
English Heritage Legacy ID: 490372
ID on this website: 101390493
Location: St Chad's Church, Tonge Fold, Bolton, Greater Manchester, BL2
County: Bolton
Electoral Ward/Division: Tonge with the Haulgh
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Bolton
Traditional County: Lancashire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Greater Manchester
Church of England Parish: Bolton, Tonge Fold St Chad
Church of England Diocese: Manchester
Tagged with: Church building
797-1/0/10010 TONGE FOLD ROAD
09-MAY-03 Tonge Fold
Church of St Chad
II
Church. 1937. By R. Nickson. Red brick with high blue brick plinth and low pitch copper roofs. Modern style with Scandinavian influences. Tall chancel, east vestries and rooms, nave with aisles, west baptistery and north west campanile. Mainly tall narrow metal-framed windows. The east end is blank with incised cross high in the gable. Tall triple windows to sides of chancel with much lower vestries and rooms surrounding it. The aisles also have tall windows and there is a narrow clerestory above, which has a long row of small windows emphasising the horizontal line. The aisles project beyond the west end where there are four tall windows to the gable wall. The baptistery is below. There is an entrance in the south west corner and in the north west corner is the campanile. This has an entrance on the west side then an arched window above and then tall blank walling up to the bell stage which is stepped-in, white-washed, and has tall bell openings.
INTERIOR. The high soaring chancel is lit from either side and has a round arch to the nave. The long nave was partitioned at halfway in 1987 but the square nave piers all survive supporting the clerestory and nave roof. This has massive partly decorated tie beams and the roof is partly shallow canted. Some contemporary fittings survive.
This fine and impressive design remains effective although the partition has divided the nave. It was published in 50 Modern Churches.
50 Modern Churches, Incorporated Church Building Society, London, 1945, p.70-3.
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