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The first mention of Christianity in Woking appears in a letter from Pope Constantine in 710. The monks of Medehamstead (Peterborough) had a small daughter house in Wocchingas (Woking). In 777 control was given to the the monks of the monastery church of St. Peter. The site of the monastery is probably where St. Peter’s Old Woking now stands and the original Saxon church is presumed to have been destroyed at the time of the sacking of Chertsey Abbey by the Danes in 871.
When Edward the Confessor succeeded to the throne in 1042, he placed his Norman chaplain, Osbern(later Bishop of Exeter) in charge of St Peter’s. By then the Church had already been rebuilt in the Norman Style, the existing West Door dates from this time.
In the reign of Richard I a small band canons built Newark Priory and around 1259 Woking Church was served by a vicar paid by Newark Priory. These monks owned the tithes of Woking and Horsell and appointed Woking vicars from 1291 until the dissolution of the monasteries in 1571.

Newark Priory
Woking Palace built on a site just to the east of St Peter’s was chosen by Henry VIII as his summer residence. During the latter part of his reign Henry appropriated the goods from many of the monasteries and Newark Priory was no exception. The reformation gathered pace under Edward VI and St Peter’s was plundered.
During the reign of Elizabeth I Catholics in England suffered persecution. The ex Archbishop of York was forced to live under surveillance at his house in Chobham, a few miles northwest of Woking. A number of Catholics in the area paid fines for recusancy (refusing to attend the Protestant church). By 1676, records reveal 130 “Papists” in Surrey, less than 1% of the population.
After emancipation in 1791 some Catholic missions were established, further encouraged by an influx of refugees from France after the revolution. However by 1851 only 1.4% of church attendances were Catholic.
The new town of Woking was established on land surrounding Woking junction after the construction of the railway line to Southampton and Portsmouth. The original village of Woking is now named Old Woking. Catholic residents of the new town travelled to Send or to St. Edward’s Sutton Green to celebrate Mass.
In the late 1800’s the Revd W.D. Allanson established a permanent mission in Woking. In 1899 he built an iron church in Percy street.

St Dunstan’s Church, Percy Street
In 1923 Fr. Plummer took over the parish from Fr. John Peall and set about building a new church in the fifteenth century English gothic style.

St Dunstan’s, White Rose Lane
On 26 April 1925 Bishop Brown of Pella laid the foundation stone. Eight months later on 8 December (Feast of the Immaculate Conception), Mass was said in the new St Dunstan’s church. Fr. Plummer chose St Dunstan to be the patron of the new church since he had also been patron of the church in Percy Street.
Father Plummer
Fr Plummer died in 1954 and was buried in the grounds of the church he had established. On 13th July 2006, as part of the redevelopment of parish facilities, Bishop Kieran re-interred Fr Plummer’s remains in the cemetery adjacent to St Edward the Confessor church at Sutton Place.
