Our Lady & St Ninian, Newton Stewart

Handsome late Victorian Gothic church, designed by Goldie & Child with a tall gabled belfry over its picturesque red-painted wooden porch.

A simple Early English Gothic style church, built of grey stone with red sandstone margins to its windows, from 1875-76 to designs of the firm of Goldie & Child of London, prolific builders of Roman Catholic churches across the British Isles, but built by W. & R.S. Ingram of Glasgow. It replaced an earlier smaller building on the same site.

The nave and chancel sit under a single continuous slate roof, the skyline is provided with further interest by the tall gabled stone belfry over the handsome red-painted wooden porch. There is a stained glass rose, window depicting the Virgin Mary as Our Lady Queen of Heaven, dated 1876, and two further late 19th century windows that contain roundels portraying Christ and Mary. There is also a small graveyard to the rear of the building.

Scotland's Churches Trust does not own any of the buildings listed in this directory and cannot assist with enquiries relating to any individual churches, these must be sent to the churches themselves. While we cannot be held responsible for any errors, do please let us know if you spot any and we will update the relevant page just as soon as we can.

Community Noticeboard

This is some community noticeboard copy.

Address
Windsor Road , Newton Stewart , DG8 6HP

Get Directions

Website
https://www.rckirkcudbright.org.uk/

Services
Sundays at 11.30am and Thursdays at 10am

Opening Arrangements
Open by arrangement

Denomination Roman Catholic
Local Authority Dumfries & Galloway
OS Reference NX 40910 65819
Listing B

Linked Churches

St Martin & St Ninian, Whithorn

Post-War church by Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendell, his only building in Scotland, with a distinctive double belfry

St Peter’s Catholic Church, Dalbeattie

St Peter's is the oldest post-Reformation Roman Catholic church in Galloway and oldest ecclesiastical building in the town.

St Andrew’s & St Cuthbert’s RC Church, Kirkcudbright

Designed by architect A. E. Purdie in 1886, built in a simple Gothic style. Built of whinstone with red sandstone dressings with slate roof.

Sacred Heart, Wigtown

Simple little cruciform shaped late-Victorian Gothic Church, one of only two buildings attributed to architect JG Garden Brown