Foundation After the
English Reformation, during the time of
recusancy, until the
Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829, some Catholics in Shefford were recorded as papists by the authorities. Great Shefford Manor (also known as West Shefford Manor) was owned by the
recusant George Browne from 1614 to 1664. In the 1700s, a priest was resident in nearby
Weston Underwood and he would travel to Shefford to serve the Catholic community there. In 1742, the
Apostolic Vicar of the London District,
Bishop Richard Challoner visited Shefford and wrote that there were twenty Catholics in the town. With the passing of the
Roman Catholic Relief Act 1791, a chapel, St George's, was built behind a house on the Shefford High Street. By 1830, the number of Catholics recorded in Shefford had grown to 200. Until 1874, St George' Chapel was the only Catholic place of worship in Bedfordshire. In 1869, a Catholic orphanage,
St Francis' Boys Home, was started in the building next door.
Construction With the increasing size of the
congregation, a larger church was needed. The priest, a Canon Collis, made efforts to get a new one built. The new church, St Francis of Assisi Church, built between the old chapel and High Street, was mainly paid for by
Pauline Duvernay. On 4 October 1882, the foundation stone of the church was laid. The architect was Samuel Joseph Nicholl (1826 to 1905) from
Kentish town, London. He was married to
Agnes Rose Bouvier Nicholl. He mainly worked with T. J. Willson. During his career,
Alexander Scoles was his student and
George Campbell Sherrin and
Henry Bloomfield Bare were his assistants. Other churches he designed included:
St Alban and St Stephen's Church, St Albans,
Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Church, Wellingborough,
St Catherine's Church, West Drayton and
St Charles Borromeo Church, Westminster. On 8 July 1884, the church was opened. Next door to it, and built at the same time, was a
seminary, St Thomas Aquinas, which closed in 1908. A
presbytery was also constructed next to the church. ==Parish==