St Laurence's Church, Frodsham
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St Laurence's Church, Frodsham | |
St Laurence's Church, Frodsham |
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Basic information | |
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Location | Frodsham, Cheshire, England |
Geographic coordinates | Coordinates: |
Religious affiliation | Anglican |
District | Diocese of Chester |
Ecclesiastical status | Parish church |
Leadership | Revd. Michael Mills, vicar |
Website | St Laurence's Church, Frodsham |
Architectural description | |
Architect(s) | Bodley and Garner |
Architectural type | Church |
Architectural style | Norman, Gothic |
Year completed | 1883 |
Specifications | |
Materials | Red sandstone |
St Laurence's Church, Frodsham is in Church Road, Frodsham, Cheshire, England (grid reference SJ520773). The church stands, not in the centre of the town, but in the elevated area of Overton overlooking the town. It is a Grade I listed building.[1] It continues to be active as a parish church.[2]
Contents |
[edit] History
The Domesday Book records the presence of a church with a priest in this position.[3] In 1093 the tithes were given by Hugh Lupus to the abbot of St Werburgh's, Chester. In the 1270s they passed to the monastery of Vale Royal when it was founded by Edward I. Following the dissolution of the monasteries the tithes and advowson passed to the dean and chapter of Christ Church, Oxford.[4] Frodsham is one of the ancient parishes of Cheshire and included the villages of Kingsley, Norley, Manley, Alvanley and Helsby. In the 19th century some of these villages formed separate parishes, Norley in 1836, Kingsley in 1851, Alvanley in 1861 and Helsby in 1875.[5]
The structure of the present church dates from around 1180.[6] It is built from local red sandstone. In the 14th century the chancel was lengthened and the tower was built. In the following century the chancel was further lengthened and increased in height. In the 16th century the north chapel, and probably the south chapel, were added.[3] Considerable rebuilding of the church was carried out by Bodley and Garner between 1880 and 1883.[7] This included removing the galleries and plaster ceilings which had been inserted around 1740.[5]
[edit] Structure
The church is built of red sandstone.[1] It has a symmetrical plan with a tower at the west end, a nave of 3½ bays, north and south aisles, north and south two-bay chapels, and a three-bay chancel with sanctuary. The north porch is dated 1715 and a south porch 1724.[7] The tower in three stages has diagonal west and square east buttresses, a three-light west window, a clock on the north and south faces, two-light belfry windows and a crenellated parapet. The aisles and chancels are also crenellated.[1] In the south wall of the tower have been re-set some Saxon and Norman carved stones.[4][6] The north chapel is known as the Blessed Sacrament Chapel (it was formerly the Helsby Chapel) and the south chapel is known as the Lady Chapel (formerly the Kingsley Chapel). The nave is considered to be one of the finest examples of Norman architecture in Cheshire.[3]
[edit] Fittings and furniture
In the sanctuary is a piscina adapted from a 14th century corbel and a sedilia. In the chancel are monuments, mainly to members of the Ashley family who lived in Park Place.[5] The altar rails with twisted balusters date from the 17th century. The three-tier brass candelabra was made in Birmingham in 1805. The pulpit is Victorian and replaces an earlier three-decker pulpit.[3] Hanging on the north wall of the nave is the sounding board from the old pulpit. Beside the pulpit is a memorial to Rev. William Charles Cotton, vicar of Frodsham from 1857 to 1879.[5] The font dated 1880 is by Bodley and Garner. The organ dates from 1883 and was restored in 1922.[3] The organ case is by John Oldrid Scott. The reredos in the north chapel dates from around 1700.[8] An altar table dated 1678 and the parish chest of 1679 were both made by Robert Harper. Most of the church plate was donated around 1760 by the vicar at that time, Rev. Francis Gastrell.[5] The ring consists of eight bells, six dating from 1734 and the other two from 1911.[3] The parish registers begin in 1558, with a break between 1642 and 1661, and the churchwardens' accounts date from 1609.[4]
[edit] External features
In the churchyard is a sundial dated 1790. It consists of a copper dial and gnomon on a sandstone stem standing on a base of three round steps. It is listed Grade II.[9] Also listed Grade II is a tomb to the memory of the Wright family dated around 1806. It consists of a truncated obelisk on a panelled square plinth in grey stone.[10]
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b c Images of Britain: Church of St Lawrence, Frodsham. English Heritage. Retrieved on 2007-07-17.
- ^ St Laurence. St. Laurence parish church in Frodsham. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ a b c d e f Latham, Frank A. (ed.) (1987). Frodsham: The History of a Cheshire Town. Local Historians, 65–67. ISBN 0901993069.
- ^ a b c Richards, Raymond (1947). Old Cheshire Churches. London: B. T Batsford, 157–160.
- ^ a b c d e Frodsham Local History Group (1986). Short Guide to the Parish Church of S. Laurence Frodsham. Widnes: MailBook.
- ^ a b St Lawrence, Frodsham, Cheshire. The Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture. Retrieved on 2007-07-14.
- ^ a b Salter, Mark (1995). The Old Parish Churches of Cheshire. Malvern: Folly Publications, 37. ISBN 1871731232.
- ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus; Edward Hubbard [1971] (2003). The Buildings of England: Cheshire. New Haven: Yale University Press, 220–221. ISBN 0 300 09588 0.
- ^ Images of Britain: Sundial. English Heritage. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
- ^ Images of Britain: Wright tomb. English Heritage. Retrieved on 2007-11-03.
[edit] External links
- Thornber, Craig (2001 & 2004). A Scrapbook of Cheshire Antiquities: Frodsham, Stoak and Thornton le Moors.