Trinity Church Adelaide
Holy Trinity Church, originally Trinity Church, is an Anglican church located at 87 North Terrace, in the city of Adelaide, South Australia. Trinity has four services at the North Terrace location each Sunday, nine Sunday services in six church plants and various other meetings throughout the week.[1]
History
Trinity is historically significant in that it contains elements of the earliest surviving Anglican church building in South Australia. Of special note is the William IV window that was brought to Adelaide in 1836.
The land on which the church stands was donated by Pascoe St Leger Grenfell along with 40 acres of country land for a cemetery and 'glebe' lands. Pascoe St Leger Grenfell, the holder of a preliminary land order, Raikes Currie and Reverend Sir Henry Robert Dukinfield of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (SPG) who held the collective funds, and thirdly, the men to whom they were transferring their powers, namely James Hurtle Fisher, Osmond Gilles and Charles Mann (advocate-general). Fisher was to be Resident Commissioner in South Australia of the Colonisation Commission, having responsibility independent of the governor for the administration of land in the new colony; Gilles was to be the Treasurer and Mann the Advocate General or principal legal officer of the colony. Grenfell transferred control over order no. 171 for a town acre and over forty acres of country land to be selected in conjunction with the town acre, later known as Trinity Gardens. The conveyance did not have to specify that Currie and Dukinfield hand over money and the portable church, but it may be presumed they did so — alternatively they may have entrusted these resources to John Morphett, appointed as the SPG’s attorney in the colony. The objects of the trust were to use the town acre as a site for ‘the erection of a church where Divine Service could be celebrated according to the rites and ceremonies of the Church of England’. That same acre was also to provide space for a schoolroom and a parsonage and garden for the minister of the church. The country land was to provide six to eight acres for a cemetery and the remainder to be ‘glebe land’, in the familiar phrase of the Church of England, to provide income for the support of the minister. [2]
The church was built in three main stages. It was originally planned that the church would be a prefabricated building imported from England;[2] however, when the prefabricated building arrived from England badly damaged, it was decided instead to build a stone church. Governor Hindmarsh laid the foundation stone on 28 January 1838 and the church opened in about August that year, within two years of the settlement of Adelaide (see History of Adelaide). The building quickly became a landmark with its "peaked cap" top tower and the Vulliamy clock. (Benjamin Lewis Vulliamy 1780–1854, was the clockmaker to King William IV and Queen Adelaide.[3])
In 1844 the church was closed for repairs[3] and the clock was removed for safekeeping. The body of the church was rebuilt and re-roofed and the tower lost its peaked cap. It reopened in August 1845. When Bishop Short arrived in 1847, Holy Trinity assumed many of the functions of a cathedral and was - until other congregations (especially Christ Church, North Adelaide) were established — the place of worship for the governors, many of the colony’s prominent families and the military.[2]
In 1878, there was a proposal to rebuild when some money was subscribed, but this did not take place until the congregation decided in the mid-1880s to completely rebuild the church to a design by the prominent architect Edward John Woods, using the mellow sandstone which eventually weathered to match the original limestone. It was around this time that the present name of "Holy Trinity" became current.
The hall and the rectory are also significant features in the precinct.[2] The hall was built in 1887 using a donation from a parishioner. The original rectory was a prefabricated "Manning" building which arrived in better condition than the church. It was replaced by the present building in 1851 and was the home of seven successive incumbents. It is now used as offices.
The Rev. Lance Shilton, later Dean of Sydney, was Rector of Holy Trinity from 1957 to 1973.
Ministry
Trinity is a large evangelical and conservative Anglican church. Its main campus is adjacent to the University of South Australia (Uni SA), City West campus. Through its involvement with the Australian Fellowship of Evangelical Students on tertiary campuses it also has links to the Evangelical Students [4] at Adelaide University and the Uni SA City campuses. Members of Trinity City Church are also involved in the Church Missionary Society (CMS) and Scripture Union. Trinity has Sunday school for children in primary school, a youth group for high school students, a young adults group, a weekday women's meeting group, a large number of small Bible study groups and various other groups.
Trinity is part of the Adelaide diocese and has an increasing number of locally trained staff, particularly trainees through the Ministry Training Strategy and students of the Bible College of South Australia. In 2007 Trinity was involved in initiating "Equip", a training program for Evangelical Anglican churches in South Australia.[citation needed]
Holy Trinity has planted seven daughter churches:[citation needed]
- Trinity Hills, in the Adelaide Hills
- Trinity Bay, in the Adelaide sea-side suburb of Hove, South Australia
- Trinity North East, in a suburb of Tea Tree Gully Council, Modbury, South Australia. Trinity North East serves the northern suburbs of Adelaide
- Trinity Inner South, Colonel Light Gardens, South Australia
- Trinity Mount Barker, in the outer regional centre of Mount Barker, South Australia
- Trinity South Coast, in Victor Harbor
- Trinity Grove, in Golden Grove
References
- ^ Holy Trinity Adelaide - Home
- ^ a b c d Dickey, B: Holy Trinity Adelaide 1836-1988: the history of a city church, Trinity Church Trust Inc., 1988
- ^ a b "Adelaide". Travel. The Age. 8 February 2004. Retrieved 5 January 2007.
- ^ Evangelical Students, University of Adelaide