flying at
half mast the day after the death of
Pope John Paul II) St Aloysius' was founded as the
Jesuit (Society of Jesus) parish of central Oxford. The building was funded by £7,000 donated by the Catholic convert
Baroness Weld. Completed in 1875, the building of St Aloysius' was an important step in the ongoing refoundation of a Roman Catholic presence in Oxford. The parish was served by notable members of the society for many years, including
Gerard Manley Hopkins (December 1878 – September 1879). The church also housed a notable collection of relics bequeathed by
Hartwell de la Garde Grissell, many of which were destroyed in the 1970s. In the 1980s, the Jesuits left the church and the parish was taken over by the
Archdiocese of Birmingham. In 1990, the
Archbishop of Birmingham invited members of the
Birmingham Oratory to take over the running of the parish and found a new Oratorian community in Oxford. Two priests from Birmingham arrived in September 1990 and, in 1993, the Oxford Oratory was established as an independent Congregation.
Fr Robert Byrne then served as
provost from 1993 to 2011. From 2011 to 2019, Fr Daniel Seward served as provost. The incumbent is the Very Rev. Fr Nicholas Edmonds-Smith. ==Liturgy==