St Lawrence, Isle of Wight
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St Lawrence is a village on the south side of the Isle of Wight, in southern England. It is located to the west of Ventnor and many consider it a part of that town. St Lawrence is situated on the Undercliff, and is subject to regular landslips.
Contents |
[edit] Features
St. Lawrence is much older than Ventnor. One of its churches dates from the 13th century. Before the addition of a chancel in 1830, this church was 25 feet long and 11 feet wide, and considered the smallest church in England. Although there are undoubtedly smaller chapels including the tiny church at Les Vauxbelets on Guernsey, this arguably remains the smallest to be built as a parish church — although this role has long since been supplanted by a larger church in the village. It also has a 15th century baptismal font, a stoup that is about 500 years old, and a series of 18th century hat pegs. The piscina niche is almost the same age as the church.
St. Lawrence also has a 19th century church which has a 17th century altar and a chest that dates from 1612.
There is a Glassworks by the Old Park Hotel in St. Lawrence.
[edit] William Spindler
St Lawrence was in the nineteenth century the subject of an ambitious plan by a German developer, named William Spindler, who had made his fortune as a chemist in Berlin, (and is buried in Whitwell) to develop St Lawrence as a resort to rival Ventnor. He lived on the Isle of Wight from 1881 to his death in 1889, during which time he had an enormous influence on St Lawrence and surrounding areas. He possibly alienated local opinion with a series of "improving pamphlets" criticising local perceived laziness. His legacy has been a number of grand Victorian houses, often semi-derelict and half hidden by woodland. Perhaps his most noticeable memorials are several huge pieces of masonry in Binnel Bay, which once formed a harbour which is all but inaccessible from the land. These have fallen into titanic ruins and are known locally as "Spindler's Follies".[1]
[edit] Transport
It is linked to other parts of the Island by Wightbus bus route 16, serving Ventnor and Shanklin including intermediate villages.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.lakehousedesign.co.uk/spindler.html Lake House Design: William Spindler
- ^ Traveline - Wightbus route 16. www.traveline.org.uk (2008). Retrieved on 2008-05-04.
[edit] External links