Father Isidore extends a warm and heartfelt welcome to you at the parish of St Mary and St Paul. Whether you're a member of our congregation, a curious seeker, or someone looking for spiritual guidance, we're delighted to have you visit our online home.
Our Mission: At the parish of St Mary and St Paul, we are dedicated to fostering a community of faith, hope, and love. Our mission is to provide a place where people from all walks of life can gather, worship, and grow together in their spiritual journeys.
Reverend Father Isidore Chinedum Madueke, (B. Phil, B.Th), the priest-in-charge of the Parish of St. Mary and St. Paul Dukinfield and Hyde, Greater Manchester, was born in Nigeria. He celebrates his birthday on 2nd July. He was ordained for the diocese of Orlu, Nigeria on 24th August 2002
Before he came to the United Kingdom, he worked as Assistant Parish Priest, Parish Priest, Chaplain to Orlu Diocesan Youth Organization, Chaplain to Regina Pacis Regional Choirs’ Association, Orlu, and Cathedral Administrator.
He arrived in the UK in September 2014 for Pastoral Mission in the Shrewsbury diocese. Prior to his appointment as the priest-in-charge of the Parish of St. Mary and St. Paul Dukinfield and Hyde on 12th March, 2023, Fr. Isidore has served in many parishes around the diocese; namely, St. Joseph and St. Michael’s & All Angels Birkenhead; Holy Spirit Marple; St. Luke’s Frodsham; St. Columba and St. Theresa Chester; and Shrewsbury Cathedral Parish.
His hobbies include: prayer, singing, listening to religious music, catechesis, and badminton
Sunday Vigil Mass:
6:00pm St Paul’s
Mass 9:30am St Mary’s
Mass 11:00am St Mary’s
Monday
6:15pm St Mary’s Eucharistic Adoration; Mass at 7:00pm
Tuesday
8:30am St Mary's Eucharistic Adoration; Mass at 9:00 am
Wednesday
8:30am St Mary's Eucharistic Adoration; Mass at 9:00 am
Thursday
9:00am St Paul’s Eucharistic Adoration; Mass at 9:30am
Friday
9:00am St Paul’s Eucharistic Adoration; Mass at 9:30am
Every 3rd Friday, 1.30pm Mass for All Saints College (school terms only)
During term time, on the first Friday of each month, Mass is celebrated in St Mary's School; on the second Friday of each month, Mass is celebrated in St Paul's school both at 9am - all are welcome
St Mary’s parish can be traced to a private oratory dating back to the Middle Ages. At it's foundation in 1825 it became the Mother Church of the area.
In the early nineteenth Century- 1822 to be precise - the time in our history which is known as the period of Industrial Revolution when the whole face of our local countryside was being changed, we find that Catholics in Ashton-u-Lyne were meeting regularly to celebrate Mass and the Sacraments. The "Church" was in a narrow passage off Crickets lane near the market cross known as Harrop’s Yard. Ashton-u-Lyne was a convenient centre for the local Catholic population of Ashton, Oldham, Mossley, Stalybridge and Dukinfield. It is a point worth noting that these good Catholic people had quite considerable distances to travel in order to attend Mass, and most of them would have to travel across fields and very primitive roads- indeed the whole day would have been taken up with the journey to and from the Church. What a lesson for us! Unfortunately this room was soon found to be unsuitable in size and facilities afforded. There was no place in which the children could be instructed and no accommodation for the priest. Accordingly Father James Fisher set about finding a more suitable site and finally purchased a property across the River Tame on the Astley Estate in Dukinfield and there he laid the foundation for the new buildings which were to consist of a Chapel, School and Presbytery.
In November 1825 the new Chapel in Astley street, dedicated to the patronage of the Blessed Virgin, was solemnly dedicated and opened. A contemporary of the time described it as "a neat Chapel of the Grecian style" The first Church was later to be known as the Mother Church since from it many daughter parishes sprang. St Peter's Stalybridge (1839) St Paul's Hyde(1848) St Anne's Ashton (1859) St Mary's Ashton (1870) all sprang from St Mary's Dukinfield.
At this time in our history, living conditions for the average person were very difficult, in fact living itself was a very precarious business. Incredible as it may seem to us now, 75% of the population died before reaching the age of 12. Typhus fever struck regularly and relentlessly and in 1836, Father Fisher, the first Parish Priest of Dukinfield, died of the fever which he had contracted whilst attending parishioners who were dying from the same disease. The staple diet of the average person at this time consisted of oatmeal porridge, potatoes, boiled rice and skimmed milk. The repeated failure of the potato crops in Ireland resulted in many Irish immigrants coming to England, where they thought they would be able to eke out a better existence.
By the middle of the 1830's, the Catholic population in the area had reached 13,000 and there were 300 children attending the Sunday School. In 1847, disaster struck the flourishing parish when it was discovered that the Church had been built over a coal mine and it was in danger of collapsing. This was a great blow to the Catholics in the area and for the next ten years the Mass and the Sacraments were celebrated in a most unlikely place - The Old General Inn, situated at the corner of Astley Street and Crescent Road. Sadly there are no details to throw more light on this interesting development, except that at this time the priest who served the parish lived in Ashton-u-Lyne.
Important developments for the Catholic Church in England were taking place around this time. The Catholic Hierarchy was restored in 1850, permission was given to re-establish Dioceses, and Bishop John Brown was ordained the first Bishop of Shrewsbury.
In 1854 the foundations for a new church, school and presbytery were laid. Great care was taken in the selection of the site to avoid the possibility of problems at a later date and a plot of land in Zetland Street was chosen. The present Church and Presbytery were completed in 1856 and Bishop Brown visited the parish in that year.
The introduction of the Education Act of 1870 entitled all children to a free education and St Mary's Parish immediately set to work to offer this right to its own children. In 1872 St May's School was opened with an initial roll of 55 pupils. One year later, the number had increased to 120 and the school was then formally recognised by the Education Authorities.
The Church and School continued to flourish and in 1897 when Bishop Carroll, the third Bishop of Shrewsbury died, he had requested that he be buried in Dukinfield Cemetery.
Fifty years after its opening St Mary's Church was decorated at a cost of nearly £200 and at the same time a beautiful set of Stations of the Cross was erected, having been presented to the parish by a local Catholic family. In 1913 the school was enlarged at a cost of £1,200 and in 1917 ten of the Church windows were blown out by and explosion of T.N.T. and were replaced the following year at a cost of £90. In 1924-25 the Church was redecorated and a major innovation - electric lighting - was installed at a cost of £450.
St Mary's School ceased to be an all age-group school when St Peter and St Paul's Secondary School was opened on 5th September 1962. St Mary's continued as a primary school in the existing building in Zetland Street until November 1970 when a new open-plan primary school was opened in Cheetham Hill Road.
The interior of the Church was greatly altered in 1975 when the pulpit and the altar rails were removed and the sanctuary floor level raised to enable every person in the Church to have a better view of the altar. Parts of the altar rails were skillfully reconstructed into two lecterns, one on each side of the altar.
In 2002 the Church was completely renovated, modernised and redecorated, the entrance to the Church was improved to allow easier access for disabled people and a loop system to help people with hearing aids, was installed. The heating system in the Church was completely replaced and a new meeting room was constructed. The effects of the beautiful redecoration which has taken place in the Church can be seen in the Picture gallery.
Because of the growing numbers of Catholics in Hyde, it became a matter of urgency that an alternative chapel to the ones in Dukinfield and Stalybridge, should be provided, and in June 1848, a Mass Centre was established in Hyde by Father John Quealy, in a room above Solomon Wagstaffe’s Ironworks in Hamnett St. (Fr Quealy was the assistant priest to Fr George Fisher of St Mary’s Dukinfield); and he concelebrated the first Mass in Hyde with Father Prendergast, the curate of St Peter’s in Stalybridge, before 200 people. The first full-time Parish Priest] appointed to the new St Paul’s parish was Father John Reah from Mulberry St; Manchester, and because there was no living accommodation for him at the Mission in Hamnett St, Hyde, he lived at Furnace St, Dukinfield. This was convenient, for he also had some partial responsibilities at the church in Dukinfield where, as St Mary’s records show, he officiated for a time at baptisms and funerals. In 1852, Mr Ashton, owner of the Newton Banks Print Works and other industrial operations, gave him a plot of land off Newton St in Newton Moor, to build a Catholic church, which was a testament to Father Reah’s hard work and dedication. The problem then, of course, was how was he to raise the necessary funds for the erection of a church from his mpoverished flock?. Without knowing the answer, he nevertheless trusted that the money would somehow be found, and went ahead, commissioning as architects, Weightman, Hadfield & Goldie, of Sheffield, to produce a suitable design. It is possible that he had been advised that a diocesan benefactor, Michael Hamnett, who, together with his brother John, owned a broker’s business in Fenwick St, Liverpool as well as a private residence in Heswall, Gt. Neston, might help in the same way as he had already done in other parishes. Disappointingly for Father Reah, in February 1853, he was replaced at St Paul’s by Father John Hill, an Irishman from Drogheda with an outgoing personality and outstanding amateur artistic and musical talents, who, being admired by many non-Catholics, did much during his ministry to mitigate the prejudice and hostility in the town towards Catholics. On Friday, 20th May 1853, the foundation stone of the hurch was laid, and it opened for worship on 21st June 1854.
The above is a short extract from "The History of the Parish of St Paul's Catholic Church Hyde" by B. Marshall MA: BA (theol);MIEE. The full account can be found here http://www.marshallfamily.net/fam/dadsbook.pdf
St Paul's Catholic Church, St. Paul's Street, Hyde, SK14 2JU
St Mary's Catholic Church, Zetland Street, Dukinfield, SK16 4EJ
St Mary's Presbytery, 29 Zetland Street, Dukinfield, SK16 4EJ Tel: 0161 330 2424 email: stmaryandstpaulRC@gmail.com
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