I decided to have a scoot into Herefordshire yesterday. Only very rarely do I go to an auction these days. I have knocked the little Monday one on the head as just nothing in it of interest - pretty dire tbh. Plus it doesn't start until 3 p.m. and I don't enjoy driving home in the dark once the evenings have properly drawn in. Yesterday's auction was house clearance, not an exciting one, but I thought I would check it out to see if it was a good outlet for anything I needed to pass on in the future. They do get good house clearance stuff too, and had their star sales on a wall in the hall as you go in. One was clearly a "sleeper" until it was picked up on line. A carved bust of a woman, beautifully executed, sold for . . . wait for it . . . £52,000! Gosh, I bet the vendor was delighted! It was good to see what things were making - though the Arts & Crafts carved stand I loved sold very strongly, for several hundred. The two Art Deco vases with Swallows on looked good on line, but in the flesh the decoration was chalky and had rubbed off in places. There was a spinning wheel but that too, failed in the flesh as it was poorly made.
I arrived far too early, and after sitting for half an hour, decided to go and bother Orcop Church, which Keith and I had once checked out when house hunting in the area. Driving along, I passed the sign for Kilpeck (fabulous church, which I've written about before), and Garway Hill - Garway has a Knight's Templar church which Keith and I visited when we got here.
St John the Baptist, Orcop
Next door is a lovely house, with a quiet outlook . . .
Keith and I had been interested by the preaching cross, which has a stoop built in for the Priest to use.
I believe this is the church of St John the Baptist, although Pevsner calls it St Mary's . . .
The church has 12th C roots, but - like SO many - had reached such a stage of disrepair by Victorian times, that it had a makeover. The 16th C bell tower (a ring of 5 bells) has a truncated pyramid roof, and internally, very big scissor braces which I noted but failed to photograph . . .
The font would appear to have been replaced in the Victorian upgrade. I thought the discarded basket on the top gave it a homely feel. I had a lovely chat with Margaret, the Church warden, who said that the congregation was down to just a few - elderly - parishioners now, although the funeral of a local estate agent recently had 400 mourners, so that must have had them packed inside the church and out and hanging from the rafters!
A parishioner had gone to the trouble of sewing a nice patchwork altar front. The stained glass window at the top was made to celebrate the Millennium, on the theme of Light.
T Nicholson was responsible for the 1860 revamp, and this pulpit would date from that time.
As would the King and Queen terminal carvings.
Pierced heart on the vaulted roof .
The bell tower, internally.
This is known as the Poet's Church, as poet Francis Horovitz is buried here. I looked for his gravestone at the back of the church, but couldn't find an obvious candidate, though I did note a strange stone with a metal cross stuck in the side of it. Apparently that was it.
Then it was back to the auction for a bit.
Due to your great interest in churches and church history I wondered if you would like to google Father John Hawes who was born in England but came to Western Australia and ended up designing and building many churches and other church building including Geraldton Cathedral.
ReplyDeleteIf you scroll down you will find pictures of his work. Hope you find this interesting.
As you know I love patchwork and quilting and several years ago our parish priest asked me to make lecturn fronts and matching alter fronts in the four church season colours, green, red, purple and white with gold. The green set were up this morning. It gave me a great deal of pleasure to be asked and to make them. From Shirley Perth W.A.
I've just checked him out Shirley. Gosh, he led an interesting life and changed a couple of life's horses along the way too - from Solicitor to Architect and CoE priest to Catholic Monsignor and finally a hermit. Sounds like his wanderings in Canada and America prepared him for the latter. Clearly he had things to work out in his mind as he clearly wasn't happy with the person he had been at the start. His architectural style is unusual - the church at Gunnerton has two small lancet windows behind the Altar instead of a big stained glass "backdrop". The other churches on his Wikipedia page seem to have a nod to Catholicism too.
ReplyDeleteHow lovely to be asked to make the altar and lecturn fronts for your church.
P.S. The cathedral interior has more than a passing look of the huge church at Grosmont which I visited next . . . though not the colourway!
Lovely to read about this ancient sacred place. I also enjoyed reading Shirley's comment about the altar fronts she made - how lovely.
ReplyDeleteAlison in Devon x
Yes, you don't get more connected to a church than making something so special. Kneelers are one thing - an altar front quite another.
DeleteWhat a beautiful church and sad that so few use it now. The skew-whiff benches made me laugh, I could imagine small children having a lovely time sliding down them. Plum and chilli chutney made, found a few jars in my neighbour's recycling and asked if I could have them, changed to the winter duvet and as it was sunny, the summer one is washed and on the line. Have a good week. Xx
ReplyDeleteEach church I visit has something special which makes it individual - these pews hit the mark! Well done with the chutney - something I've not dared make for years because it affects my asthma so. Someone suggested using distilled vinegar as less fumes, so may try that. Have lots of apples and some gifted courgettes to use up.
DeleteSome nice churches in Hereford, I have passed a few I would not mind visiting. I’m like you and dislike what the Victorians did to churches and I wonder what happened to the old font from that church. This week I published Whitney in Wye after St Harmon last week
ReplyDeleteSome of them are so special Billy. Worth looking up a few along your route to Wales and seeing which are worth stopping off at. Kilpeck, St. Margaret's, Bacton, Shobdon, and St Issui's amongst the mix. (St Issui's at Partrishow is over the Welsh border . . .) I imagine the old font here ended up chucked - hopefully not broken up as rubble . . .
DeleteI love reading about the churches you visit, and studying the pictures. I found it quite moving to touch those stone walls and imagine the centuries of hands that had touched them before me. Shirley's comment was special too.
ReplyDeleteThis one had little of the original fabric of the 12th C church still in place. Those dratted Victorians always got a bit carried away but that said, some of the churches were barely standing by the time they got to them.
DeleteI'm getting the impression that the restoration of these ancient churches didn't follow an idea of returning to the authentic era--more about 'updating' through the years as failing bits were 'repaired?'
ReplyDeleteSee my comment to Debby. Some churches were in such a bad way they almost started again with them, and not all architects were sympathetic to the Medieval elements. Rood screens and painted walls went with the Restoration.
DeleteA very nice church, you always find the most interesting places to visit.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
I have such a long list of ones to visit, so will plod on through the winter to give me something to look forward to.
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