Taking a Sunday walk, to explore the Catholic Heritage of Harringay, start in The Gardens, for this part of Harringay was built on land once owned by the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem based in Clerkenwell
Henry VIII’s marital problems leading to the split from Rome meant that the land was forfeited and the estate split up.
After the Reformation, few Catholics made their home in this part of the world; as late as 1767 there were only sixteen people recorded as Catholic in Hornsey Later, in 1783, the chaplain to the duke of Norfolk, Martin Hounshill, was buried at Hornsey. French émigrés under Father, later Cardinal, Cheverus opened a chapel in Queen Street, Tottenham in 1793, thereby starting the revival of Roman Catholic worship on the northern fringe of London
Crossing Green Lanes, which it appears may have been used by pilgrims making their way to Walsingham, head for St Augustine’s, Mattison Road where, from 1964 until 2009, many of Harringay’s Catholic population gathered.
During most of the 19th century, Catholics worshipped outside Hornsey trekking to Highgate Hill, then later to St Paul, Wood Green (1882), St. Peter-in-Chains, Stroud Green (1894) and St Ignatius, Stamford Hill, (1894)
By 1927 the Catholic population needed a new parish, but, as no suitable site was available in Harringay, the new mission was established at West Green. Originally called the parish of West Green and Harringay a wooden church was built at No. 370, West Green Road. The building was enlarged in 1953 and moved a few yards to the west in 1958 to make way for the brick and concrete church of St. John Vianney which was opened in 1959 and consecrated in 1964. The new church held 480 people, while the old wooden church served as a parish hall.
By 1958, St. John Vianney's was catering for a much larger Catholic population than had been foreseen in the earlier days, and eventually, in 1963, the church purchased the 400 seater Decorated brick church in Mattison Road, once the home of Harringay’s Primitive Methodists
Mass was celebrated in the adjoining hall in 1963, when a priest-in-charge of Harringay district was appointed, and the parish of St. Augustine of Canterbury was created in 1964; so named because the agreement to purchase the church was made on 26th May, the feast of St. Augustine of Canterbury.
The purchase was completed in 1964 and Mass was said in the Hall for the first time on the 22nd December, the 4th Sunday of Advent.
The parish served a congregation of about one thousand people composed of many nationalities but closed in 2009 forcing those worshippers to return to West Green or churches even further afield.
Harringay Parish boundaries
St Augustine's is now run by London Catholic Worker as Giuseppe Conlon House of Hospitality
Sources: St Augustine’s Parish site
Hornsey, including Highgate - Roman catholicism | British History Online
Tottenham: Roman Catholicism : British History online
UPDATED: 17 March 2011
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