St Mark's Church, Huddersfield

Church of St Mark, Old Leeds Road
Former Church of St Mark, Old Leeds Road, Huddersfield
St Mark's, before 1907
Church of St Mark, Old Leeds Road
53°38′58″N 1°46′35″W / 53.64944°N 1.77639°W / 53.64944; -1.77639
OS grid referenceSE148170
LocationHuddersfield, West Yorkshire
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipCentral
History
Statusformer church
Founded15 May 1886
DedicationMark the Evangelist
Dedicated27 September 1887
Consecrated27 September 1887
Architecture
Functional statusDefunct
Heritage designationUnlisted
Architect(s)William Swinden Barber
Architectural typeMission church
StyleGothic Revival architecture
Specifications
Bells1
Administration
ParishFormerly St Mark's, Huddersfield

The former St Mark's Church, Old Leeds Road, Huddersfield, was an Anglican parish church in West Yorkshire, England. It was previously known as St Mark's, Leeds Road, before the road name was changed. ("Leeds Road" differentiates this building from St. Mark the Evangelist, Longwood, Huddersfield.) This building was designed in 1886 by William Swinden Barber when the parish of St Peter's was split and a new building was required to accommodate a growing congregation. It was opened in 1887. Among the vicars posted in this benefice were the very popular Canon Percy Holbrook, the notoriously unfortunate Reverend Jonas Pilling who was involved in a standoff with his congregation for many years, the sociable Reverend Robert Alfred Humble who died in mysterious circumstances, and the eloquent preacher Reverend Joseph Miller, who had previously been a Congregational minister. The building was sold by the Church of England in 2001, and it has been converted into a block of offices.