St Thomas the Martyr's Church, Oxford
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St Thomas the Martyr's Church, Oxford |
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The south wall of the church | |
Dedication | Thomas Becket |
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Denomination | Church of England |
Tradition | Anglo-catholic |
Administration | |
Diocese | Oxford but under care of Provincial episcopal visitor, the Bishop of Ebbsfleet |
Province | Canterbury |
Clergy | |
Vicar | Richard Martin |
Other |
St Thomas the Martyr's is a Church of England church of the Anglo-Catholic tradition, in Oxford, England, near Oxford railway station in Osney. The church was founded in the 12th century, dedicated to St Thomas Becket. The building still retains some of its original architecture, although substantial expansions and repairs have been made, particularly in the seventeenth century (under the curacy of Robert Burton) and in the nineteenth century.
The church played a significant role in the early stages of the Oxford Movement, being the site of daily services as well as such ritualist practices as altar candles and the wearing of Eucharistic vestments.[1] The leaders of the Oxford Movement preached at the church and the early Tractarians were closely associated with St Thomas's.[2] Although in the Diocese of Oxford, the church is under the care of the Bishop of Ebbsfleet. He is a Provincial episcopal visitor, a bishop who ministers to clergy, laity and parishes like St Thomas' who do not accept the ministry of women priests.
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[edit] History
[edit] To the Restoration
It has traditionally been held in Oseney that the church was founded in the reign of Stephen, but this is unlikely to be true. Thomas Becket was not martyred until some fifteen years after Stephen's death. It is known that in the 1180s, the site was granted to the canons of the nearby Osney Abbey, and a chapel was erected on the site around 1190.[1] From the mid-13th century the Osney area was referred to as the parish of St Thomas', but it remained nominally a chapel of the abbey until the dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII, when it was placed under Christ Church, Oxford. Christ Church treated it as a conventional parish church with a curate, and from the mid-19th century the incumbent was styled a vicar.[1]
After the curacy was placed under the patronage of Christ Church, the incumbents were mostly scholars or members of the college; from 1616 to 1640 the curacy was held by Robert Burton, author of The Anatomy of Melancholy, who enlarged the church. During the Civil War the medieval stained glass in the church was destroyed, partly due to the vandalism of Parliamentary troops captured at Cirencester in 1642 and imprisoned in the church.[3] Following the Restoration, the holders of the curacy changed rapidly, often remaining in the position for only a few years at a time. From at least 1713, a house in High Street was leased by Christ Church to parish trustees and the profits were used for reparing the church. This would continue until 1923, when the house was sold.[1].
[edit] From the birth of the United Kingdom
By the early 19th century the church and its parish were showing signs of neglect. In 1802 only ten communicants are recorded, and in 1814 some 90% of the parish was thought to be non-churchgoing. The church would be reduced further by the creation of the parishes of St Paul's in 1837, St Barnabas' in 1869, and St Frideswide's in 1873.[1]
The curate from 1823 to 1842, one John Jones, brought a significant turnaround in attendance; perhaps the most unusual innovation was a houseboat – the "Boatman's Floating Chapel" – acquired in 1839, for use as a chapel serving the families working on the river and the canals.[3] This boat was St Thomas' first chapel of ease; it was donated by H. Ward, a local coal merchant, and used until it sank in 1868. It was replaced by a chapel dedicated to St Nicholas, which remained in use until 1892. A second chapel was constructed in 1860, dedicated to St Frideswide, later replaced by the new parish church of St Frideswide's, which took on the parish of New Osney in 1873.[3] Major repairs were carried out beginning in 1825. The floor-level was raised above flood-level, a full three feet. The roof was rebuilt, the south wall was reconstructed using the original materials, and the main features of the 12th-century chancel arch were discarded.[1]
The vicar from 1842 to 1892 was Thomas Chamberlain (later founder of St Edward's School), a firm believer in the Tractarian movement, who introduced daily services as well as such ritualist practices as altar candles and the wearing of Eucharistic vestments – the latter causing him to be rebuked by Bishop Wilberforce in 1855.[1] Many of the leaders of the Oxford Movement, including Edward Bouverie Pusey, Henry Parry Liddon, John Mason Neale, Charles Fuge Lowder and Edward King preached at the church. In the early days of the movement, Anglo-Catholicism was closely associated with St Thomas'.[2] In 1847, Chamberlain founded the Community of St Thomas Martyr, which was devoted to the assistance of the poor of the parish, by now heavily slumland; this sisterhood would remain active until 1958. The convent buildings constructed for it were built in 1886, but have since been demolished.[3] In 1846, the north aisle and vestry were knocked down and a new aisle of five bays with a vestry at its west end was constructed in its place. The blocked tower arch and two blocked windows in the chancel were opened, and a new chancel arch was constructed.
The vicar from 1896 to 1908 was T. H. Birley, later Bishop of Zanzibar.[3] In 1897, the building was again reroofed and a vestry built against the north wall of the tower. St Thomas' was declared an ancient parish in 1948. In 1994, the Church of England saw the introduction of women priests. Like several other parishes, the people of the parish of St Thomas' decided they could not accept the ministry of these women. So under the terms of the resolutions passed by General Synod, the Archbishop of Canterbury placed the church under the care of the Bishop of Ebbsfleet. He is a Provincial episcopal visitor who oversees the parish even though it is in the Diocese of Oxford. At present, the liturgy is based around the Book of Common Prayer, the English Missal, and Common Worship. Musical settings are traditional.[4]
[edit] Architecture
The church has a nave with a north aisle and vestry, a west tower, a chancel and a south porch. The nave was rebuilt in the late 15th or early 16th century to meet a tower of approximately the same age; it is often dated to 1521, but appears to be built on older foundations. The north aisle was originally built in the 13th century, and the vestry in the 17th they were demolished and rebuilt in 1846 by Chamberlain, through the generosity of the curate, Alexander Penrose Forbes. The church has been reroofed at least twice, in 1825 and 1897.[1]
The chancel contains three late 12th-century windows, and a priest's door built into the south side circa 1250. A southern porch was built in 1621 by Dr. Robert Burton, whose arms are carved in the gable above the date.[2] A candelabrum given by Ann Kendall in 1705 hangs in the chancel. The chancel ceiling was decorated with a pattern of gold stars on a blue background in 1914. Two years later, an altar was erected at the east end of the north aisle, and an aumbry placed in the north wall of the chancel. The royal arms of William IV are on display in the tower.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Churches, A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 4: The City of Oxford. British History Online. British History Online (1979). Retrieved on 2007-08-25.
- ^ a b c About the Church. Diocese of Oxford. Retrieved on 2007-08-24.
- ^ a b c d e Hibbert, Christopher & Edward (1988). The Encyclopaedia of Oxford. Macmillan. ISBN 033339917X.
- ^ St Thomas the Martyr, Oxford. A Church Near You. Retrieved on 2007-10-07.
[edit] Further reading
- Whitehead, John, The Church of St Thomas the Martyr, Oxford: A Short History and Guide (Privately Printed, 2003). Available in various Oxford Libraries and from the Church itself.