Stained glass c1885 by the studio of Mayer of Munich in the south aisle at St Marie's, Rugby. St Marie's is the mother church of Catholics in Rugby, and the result of gradual growth from the original 1840s building by A.W.N.Pugin with a saddlebacked tower, which later became the south aisle when a new nave and apse were built by Edward Pugin in 1864. Finally a new tower and spire (one of the tallest in the Midlands) were added by Bernard Whelan, completing the building we see today in 1872. The interior is richly adorned and underwent a thorough restoration and redecoration in the 1990s. This is a church I've known since childhood, a major landmark on the Rugby skyline, and shares the same oddity as Rugby's Anglican parish church in having two mismatched towers as a result of enlargements (and not a little inter-denominational rivalry!)