St Leonards-on-Sea was conceived and built as a new town by
James Burton, a builder, property developer and speculator. In 1828, he bought a large area of wooded, sloping land (formerly part of the
Manor of Gensing) which had a long shoreline facing the
English Channel. He spent the next few years laying out a high-class planned community with houses, shops, hotels, markets,
an Anglican church and facilities suitable for a fashionable seaside resort. Within a few years, it rivalled its ancient neighbour
Hastings in size and popularity. A Roman Catholic place of worship was soon provided in the growing town. Rev. John Jones, the Honorary Chaplain of the Bavarian Embassy in London, received from the will of Lady Barbara Stanley a bequest of £10,000, of land and a house in St Leonards-on-Sea, all to be used for "religious purposes" for the benefit of Roman Catholics. He planned to build a
convent for
Jesuits, and extended the house for their use. They declared it unsuitable, and the proposed chapel and convent—large, intricately designed buildings in the
Italianate style, conceived by
Charles Parker—were not built. Work on less ambitious
Gothic Revival-style buildings began in 1837, overseen by
A.W.N. Pugin, and a newly founded order of nuns—The Society of the Holy Child Jesus—moved in. Relations between the convent sisters and the parish were difficult, and in 1866 The church was designed by Charles Alban Buckler, a Roman Catholic convert and "one of the most distinguished early to mid-Victorian Roman Catholic architects". The church was destroyed by fire on 3 January 1887. Within two months, a
tin tabernacle had been erected on the site to allow worship to continue while a new church was designed and built. Charles Alban Buckler was again asked to design the replacement church. Construction started on 30 March 1888, although the
foundation stone was laid on 21 July of that year. Builder Edmund Boniface executed Buckler's design, and the new Church of St Thomas of Canterbury and English Martyrs opened to the public on 6 July 1889. Between 1908 and 1911,
Nathaniel Westlake painted the interior with a range of vivid
murals depicting scenes from the Bible. Much of this was
stencilled, but the work is unusually extensive and it is unusual for such designs to have survived in churches. Weather damage necessitated repairs in the 1950s, but by 1981 the murals' condition was so poor that
whitewashing over them appeared to be the only course of action. Enough money was raised for a full restoration to take place; artist Charles Camm was responsible for this. ==Architecture==