TitlePic

SACRED HEART CATHEDRAL

BENDIGO, VICTORIA       CATHOLIC

PAUL SCOTT

sun       cross

 

 

Plan

PLAN

 

Starting from the bottom right corner, we walk around the Cathedral in an anticlockwise direction. The Cathedral has an unusual design: essentially cruciform in shape, but with four small octagonal chapels around the crossing. A sacristy has also been added at top right, and there are two slender towers at the West end.

Entering the Cathedral, we again complete a circuit, beginnging at the west wall (bottom) and moving in an anticlockwise direction.

 

A brief history of the Cathedral is given below. However, if you want to begin your tour of the Cathedral immediately, tap / click on START . You can also access intermediate points in the tour by a tap / click on the following links:

 

01. START

17. Entry

19. Nave

32. St Joseph Chapel

37. Lady Chapel

43. Blessed Sacrament Chapel

45. St Francis Chapel

52. St Patrick Chapel

58. Historic Photographs

 

NOTE ON MAGNIFYING IMAGES

With this website format the images are large enough for most purposes. If there is a need for greater magnification of an image, go to the identical photo on

https://www.flickr.com/photos/paulscottinfo/albums

and use Command - + (Mac) or Windows - + (Windows).

 

 

HISTORY

[Wikipedia]

 

Sacred Heart Cathedral, Bendigo is the cathedral church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sandhurst and seat of the Bishop of Sandhurst. The cathedral is located in the provincial city of Bendigo, Victoria, Australia. It was designed in the Gothic style in 1895 by an architect of the firm Reed, Barnes and Tappin.


Sacred Heart Cathedral is one of Australia’s largest churches and the third tallest after St Patrick’s Cathedral and St Paul’s Cathedral in Melbourne. It is exceptionally large for a provincial city cathedral in Australia and its construction was made possible chiefly through the estate of Henry Backhaus (1811-1882), a German from Paderborn and the first Catholic priest on the Bendigo goldfields. Backhaus was very skilled in financial matters and accumulated considerable property – not least through encouraging his gold-mining parishioners to contribute some of their funds to the work of the church. Backhaus left his wealth for the benefit of the church and enabled the cathedral, among other things, to be built.

In 1895, Martin Crane, an Augustinian and the first bishop of the diocese, called for competitive designs for a cathedral from several architects. The winning architect was William Tappin of the firm Reed, Barnes and Tappin, a firm established by Joseph Reed, one of Melbourne’s most significant architects. It was built in the Gothic Revival style, from sandstone quarried from the Geelong area.

The large pipe organ, built by Bishop & Son of London, was installed late in 1905.

After a long interval, work recommenced on the cathedral in 1954 and was completed in 1977. The later works were designed by Bates, Smart and McCutcheon, the successor of Reed, Barnes and Tappin. The spire was of lighter construction than that originally designed, being steel framed and clad with a masonry veneer.

Sacred Heart Cathedral is 75 metres long and has a ceiling height of 24 metres. The main spire is 87 metres high.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Heart_Cathedral,_Bendigo

 

WhiteTriangleRight