Christ Church, High Harrogate was the first permanent church building in Harrogate, as Harrogate did not previously have a church of its own. Originally a chapel of ease to St John's, Knaresborough, the bulk of the present building was erected in 1831 to designs by the architect
John Oates and consecrated as the first parish church in the town. The transepts and chancel were added in 1862 by
Henry Francis Lockwood and William Mawson. The carving on the extensions and a previous reredos were executed by
Mawer and Ingle in 1862. There have been significant changes to the building in the 1920s (many major internal changes), the 1930s (the installation of the
Comper reredos) and the 1980s (the building of the attached parish centre.). Christ Church has in turn planted a series of other churches across the town including
St. Peter's (1870), St Luke's (1898), and
St Andrew's Starbeck (1911). Like Christ Church itself, all of these are thriving Christian communities today.
Present day Christ Church is home to a thriving Christian community of 300+ adults and 170+ children and young people. It stands in the mainstream of the Anglican (Church of England) tradition. ==List of Vicars==