. All sculptured by Philip Lindsey Clark The church was designed by the architect C. M. Hadfield (of
Hadfield & Son) and was constructed from specially made thin red bricks with an unusual surface texture. The external brickwork facing is unusual in that it employs
Monk bond coursing which is rarely used. It has been called "one of the best interwar churches in Sheffield". Originally, the church had just one large bell supplied by
John Taylor Bellfounders of
Loughborough. It weighs over one ton and is in the tone of "D". In 1948 the bell tower was strengthened and a peal of smaller bells was added by the same company to complement the tenor bell. The bells are played in the manner of a
carillon. The sculptor
Philip Lindsey Clark (1889–1977) carved the 14
Stations of the Cross which are arranged around the internal walls, his other contributions are the statue of the Sacred Heart at the main door and the carvings in the
tympanum above the door which is made of
Portland stone. The tympanum depicts scenes from a pilgrimage to
Lourdes and the figure in the water may be that of Alfred Wood, a parishioner who was cured of his paralysis during a pilgrimage in 1930. Canon Dunsford and the architect are depicted in the tympanum among the pilgrims.
Eric Newton created the
mosaics for the
reredos behind the
altar and above each of the two side chapels, the most striking of which is a figure of the
Sacred Heart with supporting angels in the
apse. He added more mosaics in the side chapels in 1961 to commemorate the church’s silver jubilee. More changes were made to the sanctuary in the late 1960s as a result of the
Second Vatican Council. The altar was moved forward to enable Mass to be celebrated
versus populum and at the same time it was shortened, the left-over stone being used to form a table for the
tabernacle which remains in its original position at the rear of the sanctuary. In 1983 a slightly pitched roof replaced the flat one after the church had trouble with leaks for a number of years. The roof was once again replaced in the late 2000s. ==References==