St Chad's, Burton upon Trent

Coordinates: 52°49′03″N 01°38′10″W / 52.81750°N 1.63611°W / 52.81750; -1.63611

St Chad's Church, Burton upon Trent

St Chad's Church
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Anglo Catholic, Liberal Evangelical
Website http://www.stchadsburton.org.uk/
Administration
Diocese Diocese of Lichfield
Province Province of Canterbury
Clergy
Vicar(s) The Revd Dr George Crossley
Laity
Organist(s) Steven Blakemore

St Chad's Church is an Anglican church on Hunter Street in Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire England. It is in the diocese of Lichfield and the advowson is vested in the bishop. In 1979 the church was registered as a Grade I listed building.[1]

History

It was a gift to the town by Michael Bass, 1st Baron Burton at a cost of £38,000. The architect was George Frederick Bodley but he died before the church was completed and it was finished by his partner Cecil Greenwood Hare. Work started in 1905 and the church dedication to Saint Chad of Mercia took place in 1910.

The building

The church was designed in the Decorated style and built of red Hollington stone. The building includes a polygonal vestry and a detached north-west tower linked to the body of the church by a vaulted passage. There is a fine Bodley reredos in the north chapel.

It has been described by Nikolaus Pevsner as "the finest building by far in Burton-on-Trent" and in the listing text as "one of Bodley's best later works".

Organ

The organ inside the church is a three manual organ built by Peter Conacher and Co of Huddersfield (installed by 1909). The organ has 32 stops and consists of a swell, great, choir and pedal organ. The organ has a stop key system and has pure tin pipes which gives it a sweet sound.

The tower

Tower

The tower was intended to house a peal of eight bells. The frame was installed in circa 1909 along with just one bell. The bell and frame were made by John Taylor & Co of Loughborough, the frame is a two-tier H frame with sub A frames on top. The bell that Taylors cast was the Tenor bell and weighed 21-1-8 Cwt and was tuned to the note of E. In 1999 the church at Newchurch became redundant and the six bells in it were put up for sale, the then vicar Paul Skillings put in a successful bid. The bells went back to Taylors for refurbishment and two new trebles were cast to take the peal up to an eight; one bell was donated by local football club Burton Albion F.C. whose ground is in the parish.

The new eight became a 13cwt ring in the key of G. However, due to this the bell that was already in the tower was incompatible and it was decided to sell the bell. Finally in 2000 the church had a peal of eight bells after ninety years.

Timeline

See also

References

Sources

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