Worcester Cathedral

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A plan of Worcester Cathedral made in 1836.
A plan of Worcester Cathedral made in 1836.
Worcester Cathedral West Window
Worcester Cathedral West Window

Worcester Cathedral is the cathedral in Worcester, England; situated on a bank overlooking the River Severn. Its official name is The Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary.

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The Cathedral was founded in 680 with Bishop Bosel as its head. The first cathedral was built in this period but nothing now remains of it. The existing crypt of the cathedral dates from the 10th century and the time of St Oswald, bishop of Worcester. The current cathedral is 12th and 13th century. The Cathedral was a Benedictine Priory before the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and was then re-established as a cathedral of secular clergy. It was subject to major restoration work by Sir George Gilbert Scott and A E Perkins in the 1860s. Both men are buried at the cathedral.

Altar of Worcester Cathedral
Altar of Worcester Cathedral

The Cathedral has the distinction of having the tomb of King John in its chancel. Before his death in Newark in 1216, John had requested to be buried at Worcester. He is buried between the shrines St Wulstan and St Oswald (now destroyed). The cathedral has a memorial, Prince Arthur's Chantry, to the young prince Arthur Tudor, who is buried here. Arthur's younger brother and next in line for the throne was Henry VIII. Worcester Cathedral was doubtlessly spared destruction by Henry VIII during the English Reformation because of his brother's Chantry in the cathedral. An image of the cathedral's west face is currently featured on the reverse of the Bank of England £20 note. It accompanies a portrait of the composer Edward Elgar who spent the majority of his life in Worcester. The first performance of his Enigma Variations took place at the cathedral during the 1899 Three Choirs Festival.

South Transcept

 The Cathedral organ
The Cathedral organ

Worcester Cathedral has a long history of organs dating back to at least 1417. There have been many re-builds and new organs in the intervening period, including work by Thomas Dallam, William Hill and most famously Robert Hope-Jones in 1896.

The Hope Jones organ was heavily re-built in 1925 by Harrison & Harrison, and then regular minor works kept it in working order until Wood Wordsworth and Co were called in in 1978.

It is a large 4 manual organ with 61 speaking stops. It has a large gothic case with heavily decorated front pipes.


  • 1240 Thomas the Organist*
  • 1415 T. Hulet*
  • 1468 Richard Grene
  • 1484 John Hampton
  • 1522 Daniel Boyse
  • 1541 Richard Fisher
  • 1569 John Golden
  • 1581 Nathaniel Giles
  • 1585 Robert Cotterell
  • 1590 Nathaniel Patrick
  • 1595 John Fido
  • 1596 Thomas Tomkins
  • 1649 Vacant
  • 1661 Giles Tomkins
  • 1662 Richard Browne
  • 1664 Richard Davis
  • 1686 Vaughan Richardson
  • 1688 Richard Cherington
  • 1724 John Hoddinott
  • 1731 William Hayes
  • 1734 John Merifield
  • 1747 Elias Isaac
  • 1793 Thomas Pitt
  • 1806 Jeremiah Clarke
  • 1807 William Kenge
  • 1813 Charles Clarke
  • 1844 William Done
  • 1895 Hugh Blair
  • 1897 Ivor Atkins
  • 1950 David Willcocks
  • 1957 Douglas Guest
  • 1963 Christopher Robinson
  • 1974 Donald Hunt
  • 1996 Adrian Lucas

  1. ^ The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1968 p312

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