All Saints for All People: 150 Years of All Saints Clifton

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John Hudson is the author of more than thirty books of social and local history and biography, while spending his working life as a writer and editor on various newspapers and magazines. His Bristol books include commemorative histories of the Bristol Hippodrome, the Savages art club, the Mansion House and St. Monica Home, as well as biographies of the City footballer John Atyeo, the musicians Adge Cutler and Fred Wedlock and the businessman Philip Bollom.

‘Enjoy this account, the story of three churches and of one people’. Fr Charles Sutton

A church in the Bristol suburbs is 150 years old; a common enough occurrence, yet the story of All Saints, Clifton is anything but simple and straightforward. A product of the High Church Oxford Movement, it came into being at a time when reaction against ‘ritualism’ was growing ever more strident and threatening, and it was through sheer passion and commitment that it persevered to become a much-loved centre of Anglo-Catholicism for people from well beyond the parish boundaries.

The Luftwaffe’s devastating raid on Bristol on December 2, 1940 and its move to more makeshift premises brought an end to that, and by the time the spectacular new All Saints was taking shape in the late 1960s the form of worship it had helped to pioneer had become so widespread that it turned happily towards catering for the more local community – while committing itself, as it always had done, to good causes near and far.

More than one church building, then – but through the years there has been just one church family, which has remained true to the original intention of the founders while constantly interpreting that brief in a way fitting to the world into which it commits itself at every service to go out and spread the word.

John Hudson is the author of more than thirty books of social and local history and biography, while spending his working life as a writer and editor on various newspapers and magazines. His Bristol books include commemorative histories of the Bristol Hippodrome, the Savages art club, the Mansion House and St. Monica Home, as well as biographies of the City footballer John Atyeo, the musicians Adge Cutler and Fred Wedlock and the businessman Philip Bollom