Professor Ports study of the early nineteenth-century Church Building
Commission and its churches first appeared in 1961 and has long been
difficult to obtain. He has now thoroughly revised it, adding much new
material and a wealth of illustrations, many of which have never been
published before. The book tells of the setting up of the Commission to
build churches in the godless new towns, its trials and tribulations as
it went about its work, the buildings it erected, and the architects who
designed them. Historic and modern photographs, plans and drawings all
reveal a huge diversity of architecture, much of it of the highest
quality. It is now clear that, far from being a modest prelude to the
full-blown Gothic Revival, the Commissioners churches were an essential
factor in making the great Victorian explosion of church-building
possible.