Our Parish

The Holy Family Parish of Maidenhead and Twyford was created on 8th June 2025 on the feast of Pentecost.  Maidenhead, Henley, Twyford and Wargrave and the surrounds of our parish are home to many sites of significant historical interest reaching back over a thousand years.

Catholicism has had its own fascinating and varied history in the country at large as well as specifically within this region and parish. Several experienced and qualified historians have at different times made extensive studies of the churches, iconography and unique parish histories found here.

Learn more about St Joseph’s Church

When formal Roman Catholic worship returned to Maidenhead in 1867, William Wilberforce (eldest son of the Abolitionist William Wilberforce) let his study to be used for the celebration of Mass. Later in the year, Wilberforce converted the Old Bull Inn into a Chapel and Priest’s House. The inn was part of his estate and stood on the High Street, where St Ives Road is now.

In 1879 Canon John Scannell acquired a ‘finely situate’ acre of land as the site for a Parish Church and set about raising funds to erect a building to accommodate the town’s growing Catholic population. The eminent architect Leonard Stokes was appointed and the builders were Messrs Silver and Sons and Filewood. The opening ceremony and dedication of the church to St Joseph was performed by the Bishop of Portsmouth, the Right Rev Dr Virtue, on 18th December 1884.

For a more detailed history follow this link:

Learn more about St Elizabeth’s Church, Cookham

St. Elizabeths was founded in 1964.

Prior to 1964 Catholics attended mass at the Cookham Social Club which is close to Cookham railway station.

CAFOD originated in our St. Elizabeths church in Cookham in 1960, when funds from the Family Fast Day were used to support a project in Dominica. This then extended into Maidenhead and through our global church network, is now one of the largest in the world,

 

Learn more about St. Edmund Campion Church

St. Edmund Campion church was opened by Bishop Anthony Emery, on 16 September 1982. Please watch this slideshow to find out more.  

Learn more about St. Thomas More Church

Intertwined with Our Lady of Peace church in Wargrave and St. Johns Convent in Kiln Green.

PRISONERS of war attending mass in a convent sitting room and masses held in a pub are all part of the fascinating history behind churches in Twyford and Wargrave.

St Thomas More Roman Catholic Church at Twyford was dedicated and consecrated by the Bishop of Portsmouth in 1983.

In the early 1940s Catholics, including United States soldiers based locally, met for mass at Woodclyffe Hall, Wargrave.

In 1945, the sisters arrived at St John’s Convent in Kiln Green, which was originally the home residence of the USA Ambassador to the UK – and celebrated mass in their sitting room. This was at 3pm to suit the timetable of the prisoners of war from the camp in Tag Lane, Hare Hatch.

Having mass so late was a challenge when the then rule of fasting meant no eating that day before mass. The sisters’ chapel was built in the early 1950s.

In November 1958, mass started to be held in a Twyford pub. The idea was piloted by retired headteacher Mrs Fitzpatrick, Wokingham parish priest Fr Wallace and Stan Ross of the Royal Station Hotel who offered the use of his club room.

The parish was officially formed in 1967 with Fr Louis Catteral the first priest.

Worshippers moved to the old Polehampton School canteen in 1968.

Later, they shared St James Church of England Church in Ruscombe, with the Anglican service at 9am and the Catholic Mass at 10.15am.

There was a huge fundraising effort to build a Catholic church in Twyford, with a 100 club, known as the Football Club, run by Agnes Whiting at sixpence a week, jumble sales, fetes and barbecues which attracted more than 1,000 people. Parishioners were asked to buy a brick for £5. The building cost was approx..£72,000.

The church was built in time for midnight mass in 1977, and officially opened a month later. It was dedicated and consecrated in June 1983.

Earlier, in Wargrave, a mass centre started in Mr and Mrs Bellord’s home, later moving to Dr and Mrs Black’s boathouse. Villagers worked to have their church, Our Lady of Peace, built and then opened in 1963.

Wargrave church is currently closed for repairs.

Our Churches

St Marks Catholic Church Windsor Ascot

ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC CHURCH

36 Cookham Road

Maidenhead

Berkshire

SL6 7EG

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St Marks Catholic Church Windsor Ascot

ST. ELIZABETH'S CATHOLIC CHURCH

Lower Road

Cookham

Maidenhead

SL6 9EJ

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St Marks Catholic Church Windsor Ascot

ST. EDMUND CAMPION CATHOLIC CHURCH

40a Altwood Road

Maidenhead

Berkshire

SL6 4PY

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St Marks Catholic Church Windsor Ascot

ST. THOMAS MORE CATHOLIC CHURCH

105 London Road

Twyford

Berkshire

RG10 9EL

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Isaiah 61:11

“For as the earth brings forth its bud, and as a garden plants its seeds, so the Lord God shall cause righteousness and praise to spring forth before all nations.”