Before the Church The first records of the site are property deeds from 1503 to 1531 when it was a waste strip of land. When
Archbishop James Beaton built his palace a short distance west of the church in 1509, he also purchased much of this waste land. Later
Mary Queen of Scots’ Italian servant Francisco de Busso owned part of it. The north part of the church sites was owned, in the late 16th to early 17th centuries, by Dr
John Naysmith, surgeon to
James VI. The judge Sir James Elphinstone of Logie built ‘Elphinstone Court’ here in the 1670s. The Episcopal Congregation then bought most of the land in 1770 for the construction of the Cowgate Chapel which was built in 1771.
Construction Designed by John Baxter, the original church was built from June 1772 to 1774 as a place of worship for the
Scottish Episcopal Church. In 1818, the church building became part of the
United Presbyterian Church. The Scottish Episcopal Church commissioned
Alexander Runciman to produce a series of murals for the church. These were installed but covered over by the Presbyterian congregation. The murals were then forgotten until
Duncan Macmillan discovered the murals' existence during the 1960s. In 1856, the church was bought by the
Apostolic Vicar of the Eastern District,
Bishop James Gillis. The cost of £4,000 was borne half by the local
congregation and half by the Catholic Church. On 3 August 1856, the church was opened in a
Mass presided over by Bishop Gillis.
Extensions In 1898, the
sanctuary for the church was remodelled and a new
high altar was installed. It was designed by
James Graham Fairley. In 1921, the mortuary chapel was built in memory of the parishioners who died in
World War I. From 1924 to 1925, two chapels were built in the church, the Lady Chapel and the Sacred Heart Chapel. In 1929, the front church facade was built. It was designed by
Reginald Fairlie and included statues of
St Patrick and
St Brigid. In September 2023, the church became home to a group of priests discerning community life in the
Oratorian tradition. == Archaeology ==