Oban - Cathedral Church of St John the Divine
Our story in Oban begins with the Victorians, though the Episcopal Church has a long and momentous history in the West Highlands, tracing its history back through the Jacobite times, in which the Episcopal Church took a prominent part and for which it suffered severely, back to the days before the disestablishment, when the Church of Scotland was itself Episcopalian and before that back to the foundation of the Diocese of Argyll, about 1200, and the Diocese of the Isles, pre-1189, for which dioceses St John's in 1920 became the Cathedral; back to the Celtic Church, whose principal saints are commemorated in the names of the Cathedral Choir Stalls.
St John's congregation was first gathered in 1846, when Oban was only a
village and the present site was open fields.
The original architect, Charles Wilson, died before the plans were
finalised, and his partner David Thomson picked up the commission and
designed what is now the middle zone of the Cathedral, completed in 1864.
Some of the congregation were Anglicans from England and Ireland,
but many were local Episcopalians from Appin, Ballachulish, and Glencoe,
where the Episcopal Church has existed in continuity from the times before
the Disestablishment. Two local lairds, MacDougall of Dunollie and
Campbell of Dunstaffnage, were crucial to the project of starting a
building, and both the families are still connected with the congregation.
In 1882 a south aisle (which is now the Narthex) was added. Bishop
Chinnery-Haldane had plans underway for a new church building in Oban, and
on his premature death in 1906 the congregation was encouraged to build a
new Church as his memorial. Plans were drawn up by James Chalmers
of Glasgow for a large church, of Cathedral proportions, to be built on
the existing site. Much of the funding derived from the Bishop's
own family, including the cost of the magnificent reredos behind the High
Altar.
Work finished when funds were exhausted in August 1910, and by then only the Sanctuary, Chancel, one Transept and one bay of the Nave were completed. This was knitted in to the existing building, albeit that the latter was twelve foot lower than the Sanctuary, and oriented at right angles to the new structure, which had to be supported by remarkable steel buttresses.
And so in general terms the building has remained ever since, despite
two major campaigns to rebuild or complete it.
One,
the famous Oban Cathedral Fund Appeal run from Staten Island, New York,
and spearheaded by the redoubtable Mary Alice Cisco, foundered in the
Crash on Wall Street. The other, led by two Highland Chiefs from the
Diocese, Maclean of Duart and Cameron of Lochiel, only raised funds
sufficient for Ian G Lindsay in 1968 to improve the existing structure,
the improvements including the creation of the Narthex from the 1882 south
aisle. In 1988 the high structure was stabilised after 80 years of
settlement and pressures, not the least being the noise of Concorde's
trial flights, which were in part monitored by movement to the Cathedral
structure, which lay below the flight path. These last works were
financed largely by the residuary bequest of a couple who came on their
honeymoon to Oban in 1910 and had at that time thought it a shame that the
builders had had to call a halt for lack of funds.
Page updated 16 May 2003