St. Mary's Church, Handsworth

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St.Mary's Church, Handsworth, Birmingham
St.Mary's Church, Handsworth, Birmingham

St. Mary's Church, Handsworth, also known as Handsworth Old Church, is an Anglican church in Handsworth, Birmingham, England (not to be confused with St. Mary's Church in Handsworth, South Yorkshire). Its ten-acre (4 hectare) grounds are contiguous with Handsworth Park and it is just off the Birmingham Outer Circle and south of a cutting carrying the busy railway between Birmingham and Walsall. It is noteworthy as the resting place of famous progenitors of the industrial age, and has been described as "the cathedral of the Industrial Revolution".

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[edit] History

Despite the strong Industrial Revolution profile, St. Mary's parish register deposited at Birmingham Central Library commences in 1558, and the first stone church building was erected on the site around 1160. It was a small and austere Norman structure, occupying about half of the present south aisle. The church's few surviving Norman features can be seen at the lower stages of the sandstone tower at the original church's east end.

14thC corbel inside St.Mary's
14thC corbel inside St.Mary's

In its long history, St. Mary's has undergone successive and opinionated reconstruction, especially in 1820 and 1870. As a Staffordshire country church placed at the convergence of several cross country tracks, St. Mary's became a significant part of the largest industrial city in Britain.

1904 OS map of St.Mary's
1904 OS map of St.Mary's

In his 1851 History, Gazetteer and Directory of Staffordshire, William White records: "Handsworth Church, St Mary, is picturesquely situated on the Walsall road, about two miles NNW of Birmingham. It is an ancient structure, partly rebuilt and enlarged in 1820, and has a tower with six bells, which like the other remaining parts of the ancient fabric, is in the decorated style of the time of Edward III. In the chancel are two recumbent effigies of members of the Wyrley family, and an ancient piscena. On the south side, a neat groined chapel has been raised over the vault of the late celebrated engineer, James Watt, Esq, of whom there is in the chapel a beautiful white marble statue, by Chantrey. Among the numerous mural monuments in the church is one in memory of the late Matthew Boulton, Esq, of Soho. The rectory is in the patronage of the Rev John Peel, DD, and the Rev George William Murray, MA, is the incumbent."

Spring in the Churchyard
Spring in the Churchyard

Handsworth parish was transferred from Staffordshire to Warwickshire in 1911. The rectory to which White refers was demolished in the 1890s to make way for the large pond of Handsworth Park and at the start of the 21st century it is more accurate to describe St. Mary's as situated on Hamstead Road in the Victorian suburb of Handsworth, in the Birmingham electoral ward of Lozells and East Handsworth.

[edit] Plans to end the neglect of the Churchyard

In 2006, and indeed for over 25 years, St.Mary's churchyard has bordered on utter dereliction. It is a closed graveyard, with the apparently empty spaces to the south of the graveyard harbouring the final resting place of numerous paupers whose names are written on the Church Register but whose remains were interred without coffins or visible memorials, beyond the unevenness of the overgrown ground above them. The condition of the churchyard - as a place that feels unsafe to some, whose memorials have become inaccessible to many, their inscriptions overgrown with ivy, headstones broken, unstable or unreachable through the surrounding undergrowth - is recognised as a reproach to all who know the place. Even so, to those who enter the lime avenues long being kept clear of encroaching undergrowth, this wilderness contains mystery and beauty as well as melancholy. It is intended that planned improvements in the accessibility and appearance of the graveyard will be ones that restore it to respect in Handsworth, without lessening its serenity or its qualities as a haven for wild life next to Handsworth Park. It is intended it should become a safer place, a more attractive place and a place of education for visitors of all ages. To this end there has been a marked increase in voluntary work in the graveyard while local community leaders have voted neighbourhood renewal funds that they hope will be matched by other regional agencies to implement a plan drawn up by the city council's Landscape Practice Group end years of neglect and bring about a rejuvenation similar to the great improvements they have funded in the neighbouring park between 2000-2006.

St.Mary's present incumbent is the Rev. Brian A. Hall who, among his many roles in the local community, became, in March 2006, the chairman of a new group called "The Friends of St.Mary's Churchyard" (Handsworth Rectory, 288 Hamstead Road, Birmingham B20 2RB, UK) which aims among more detailed goals 'to be a focus for future hopes for the integrity of St Mary’s Churchyard as a special place' - special not only for the respect accorded to the dead which ought to apply to all graveyards, but because of the association of this church and its grounds with the founding fathers of the industrial age, and more recently with such local celebrities as William McGregor Director of Aston Villa F.C. who organised the founding meeting of the Football League on 22 March 1888. Also in the churchyard are the ashes of the Romany King Esau Smith and his wife Queen Henty, buried with him on 11 Jan 1907 some 6 years after her husband's death and two years before their community was evicted from Black Patch Park in Smethwick.

James Watt
James Watt
William Murdoch
William Murdoch
Matthew Boulton
Matthew Boulton

[edit] Boulton, Watt & Murdoch memorials

James Watt lived in Handsworth and is chiefly remembered as the inventor of the separate condenser, the greatest single improvement ever made to the steam engine. In 1774 Matthew Boulton applied his engineering talent to realising Watt's idea. It was to follow that Boulton and Watt became one of the most famous partnerships in industrial history. William Murdoch, another engineer, perfected gas lighting and gave the world the high-pressure steam engine, and became a partner of Boulton and Watt.

All three are remembered by monuments in the core of the church. On the north wall of the sanctuary is a marble bust of Matthew Boulton, set in a circular opening above two putti, one holding an engraving of the Soho Manufactory. On the wall opposite, below a pointed arch, is a stone bust of William Murdoch, spelled with a 'ck' - different from his own spelling. James Watt was buried in the grounds of St. Mary's, but expansion of the church placed his tomb inside the church. To the south of the sanctuary, in an austere and serene space built especially for it - The James Watt Memorial Chapel - is a marble statue of Watt by Francis Legatt Chantrey, who regarded his statue of Watt as his favourite.

[edit] Genealogical records

Churchyard looking North West October 2004
Churchyard looking North West October 2004

Under the aegis of the Birmingham & Midland Society for Genealogy & Heraldry (BMSGH)[1], who sought it from the Handsworth Historical Society and the congregation of the church, a working group of the Handsworth Historical Society, chaired by Roy Lancelott, worked between March 1980 and March 1984 to create a record of every monument in St. Mary's churchyard. This record comprises 6 volumes, in bound A4, with yellow covers, numbered from I to VI, titled 'Monumental Inscriptions, St Mary’s Church Handsworth Birmingham'. Photocopies of this record, which contains sketches of various headstones and detailed maps showing their position in the graveyard, have been deposited with the BMSGH Library (Fiche number 11054), Margaret Street, Birmingham, The Society of Genealogists, London, The Local Studies Department of the Birmingham City Council Reference Library [2], and Stafford County Record Office [3]. Brian Hall observes this wonderful piece of research has "brought to light once again the fascinating social history of this side of the emerging City of Birmingham during the Victorian and Edwardian period."

Limes in the Churchyard
Limes in the Churchyard

Nowadays less than a handful of monuments are visited by relatives of those interred, and three simple headstones tended annually by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, but visitors from the British Isles and overseas can stroll through aisles of lime trees, enjoy discovering the graveyard's rare black poplars [4], and, if willing to clamber through a profuse undergrowth of brambles, Japanese knotweed, fallen branches and leaning gravestones, seek out memorials to inventors, manufacturers, scientists and other notables. The most illustrious - Matthew Boulton, James Watt, William Murdoch - are within the church.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • Go to reference 1054 at [5] and under 'BIRMINGHAM Monumental Inscription's (fiche) and Photographs of Churches' are details of 'St.Mary's, Handsworth' held by Birmingham & Midland Society for Genealogy & Heraldry
  • Allen E Everitt, Handsworth Church and its Surroundings, Birmingham:E.C.Osborne 1876
  • Francesca Greenoak, God's Acre: The flowers and animals of the Parish Churchyard, WI Books 1985
  • The Reverend J.C.H.Tompkins, M.A., The Parish Church of St.Mary, Handsworth: A Brief History and Guide, (26 page booklet published by and available from the Parish)(date?)
  • Ken Worpole, The Cemetery in the City, Comedia 1997