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Work is due to begin on the roof of All Saints, an unused city-centre church in Bristol believed to be the burial place of 17th‑century slave trader Edward Colston.
The Diocese of Bristol says the legally required repair — likely to cost about £500,000 and take roughly six months — will protect public safety and enable a second phase of consultation about the building’s future.
The first phase engaged African‑Caribbean heritage communities and other stakeholders through interviews, focus groups and surveys.
Options under consideration include deconsecration, conversion to a community resource or museum, and possible exhumation and removal of Colston’s remains and related artefacts.
Demolition was deemed impractical because the church shares walls with neighbouring properties and a previous sale attempt failed.
The move follows citywide debates since Colston’s statue was toppled into Bristol harbour in 2020; the statue was relocated to a museum in 2024.
Some local clergy have criticised spending on the closed church while active congregations, including St Agnes in St Paul’s, say they lack funds for urgent repairs.
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The Guardian | World newsBristol church repair opens door to Edward Colston exhumation





















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