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St. Mary's Church, Hadlow

St Mary's Church is the parish church in Hadlow, Kent, United Kingdom. The church is a Grade II* listed building.

St Mary's, Hadlow
St Mary's, Hadlow
St Mary's, Hadlow
St Mary's, Hadlow
51°13′24″N 0°20′22″E / 51.22333°N 0.33944°E / 51.22333; 0.33944
OS grid referenceTQ 6343 4971
LocationHadlow, Kent
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipLiberal Catholic
Websitewww.stmaryshadlow.org.uk
History
StatusChurch
Founded975
DedicationSt Mary
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Heritage designationGrade II* listed
Designated20 October 1954
Architectural typeChurch
StyleEarly English
Decorated
Specifications
Number of spires1
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseRochester
ArchdeaconryTonbridge
DeaneryPaddock Wood
ParishHadlow
Clergy
Vicar(s)The Revd Paul White SMMS LLM MA[1]
Laity
Churchwarden(s)Michael Payne, John Speed[1]
Parish administratorJanice Massy[1]

History edit

The first record of a church in Hadlow was in 975.[2] This church would probably have been a wooden building. In 1018, the early church was replaced by a building of stone. In the 12th century, the church was rebuilt and extended by Richard de Clare, then lord of the Manor of Hadlow. De Clare granted the church to the Knights Hospitallers in 1166. The Knights Hospitallers later had a preceptory at nearby West Peckham, which was their local administrative base. From the Norman Conquest until the 18th century, Hadlow did not have a resident Lord of the Manor, being held under Tonbridge Castle.[3] It is thought that the tower was raised and the spire added in the 15th century.[4] Little money was spent on the maintenance of the church, although some 15th- and 16th-century bequests are recorded. Thomas Walter, Yeoman bequeathed 20s in 1448 "To make a window on the north side of the church by the altar of Our Lady". John Tatlyngbery bequeathed 10 marks "For repair of the great door of the church". In 1456, Richard Bealde bequeathed 13s 4d "For repair of the tower of Hadlow church".[5] In 1461, Dionysia Ippenbury left 3d for masses to be said each year for 12 years.[6] In 1465, William Palle, yeoman left a cow to the church. It was to be sold and "the profits therefrom to be devoted to the maintenance of a lamp in the chancel."[5] In 1509, Thomas Fisher, yeoman bequeathed £20 "for making a new rood loft". The rood screen may not have been in existence long, although it was mentioned in bequests dated 1510 and 1513.[7] The church remained under the ownership of the Knights Hospitallers until 1540, when the order was dissolved by Henry VIII.[3] In 1533, Henry Fane left two chalices valued at £4.[6]

The west door is inscribed "WB 1637 ES". The tower and steeple were repaired in that year. The churchwardens were Walter Barton and Essau Simmons.[7] In 1791, the clock was installed in the tower. It was made by John Thwaites of Clerkenwell.[8] At the beginning of the 19th century, the church was in disrepair. In 1847, the chancel was rebuilt and the vestry added. In 1853, the south porch was blocked up. The north aisle was added in this year at a cost of £470, which was raised by public subscription. A private gallery was erected by Walter Barton May, owner of Hadlow Castle. This had its own private access and was located at the west end of the nave. In 1885, an altar reredos was erected to the memory of Sir William Yardley and his wife Amelia. Yardley was a former judge in the High Court of Bombay, India. In 1936, the gallery was removed.[5] Work on the doorway at the west of the church in 1936 exposed some small crosses carved in the stonework. These are attributed to Nicholas de Hadloe and his son, who lived at Hadlow Place. They were carved to commemorate their safe return from the Third Crusade in 1189.[4] St Mary's was listed on 20 October 1954. It is currently Grade II* listed.[9]

Construction edit

St Mary's is mostly constructed from ragstone, with some ashlar detail and quoins of Tunbridge Wells sandstone. The church is built in the Early English and Decorated style. The chancel roof is of slate, while the nave and aisle roofs are tiled. The spire is covered in shingles. The stained glass windows date from the 19th and 20th centuries,[9] the most recent of which is "The Visitation" created by Francis Skeat in 1956.[10]

The Coverdale Chair edit

In 1919, the Coverdale Chair was presented to St Mary's by T E Foster MacGeagh of Hadlow Castle. The chair is so-named because it was owned by Miles Coverdale, Bishop of Exeter, who made the first translation of the Bible into English. In 1954, the chair was transferred to Rochester Cathedral, but it was returned to St Mary's in 1967.[11]

Bells edit

St Mary's has a ring of eight bells, hung for change ringing. The treble and 2nd were inscribed "Pack & Chapman of London Fecit 1775".[7] They were recast in 1994 by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry, London. At this time, the third was welded and the frame renewed.[12] The third is inscribed "Iames Bartlett Me Fecit 1696".[7] The fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh are inscribed "Iames Bartlett Me Fecit 1695",[12] and the tenor is inscribed "Henry Barton Edmond Norman Ch Wardens Andrew Reany Vicar 1695 Iames Bartlett Me Fecit".[7]

Organ edit

The organ at the church was presented as a gift by Ernest Hargreaves (who married the then vicar's daughter) and was built by Alfred Monk of Camden in 1880. It has a brass plate that includes a quotation from verse 6 of Psalm 150:[13]

Presented to St Mary's Church, Hadlow
THROUGH
THE REVD PHILLIP HOWARD MONEYPENNY,
Vicar of the Parish,
BY
ERNEST HARGREAVES ESQR
August 1880.
Let everything that has breath praise the Lord.[14]

It has 35 speaking stops on three manuals and pedal including principal stops, reed stops, flute stops, string stops and a 32 ft contrabass stop.

The organ underwent major restoration in 1975 that was carried out by Hill, Norman and Beard. Prior to the restoration, it was suggested that the instrument should be replaced by an electric or electronic organ; this advice was not followed.

The Victorian background of the organ is clearly displayed by the (later added) chamber surrounding it. The instrument is one of the largest village church organs in the south-east.

Organ specification edit

Great Swell Choir Pedal
Clarion 4 Vox humana 8 Clarionet 8 Violoncello 8
Cornopean 8 Clarion 4 Piccolo 2 Quint 10⅔
Sesquialtra (17.19.22) Oboe 8 Wald flute 4 Bourdon 16
Fifteenth 2 Trombone 8 Gemshorn 4 Open diapason 16
Twelfth 3 Mixture (15.19.22) Viol d'amour 8 Contra bass 32
Principal 4 Fifteenth 2 Lieblich gedact 8
Harmonic flute 4 Principal 4 Keraulophon 8
Gamba 8 Voix celeste 8
Clarabella 8 Dulciana 8
Open diapason 8 Gedact 8
Double open diapason 16 Open diapason 8
Bourdon 16
Tremulant
Swell to Great Choir to Great
Choir to Pedals Great to Pedals Swell to Pedals

3 composition pedals each to Great and Swell; balanced swell pedal.[14][13]

Memorials edit

 
Interior, c. 1920

Many memorials in St Mary's were destroyed in the rebuilding of the church between 1847 and 1853. A brass commemorating John Stoke, vicar (d. 1370) was in existence in 1900, but has since disappeared. Other memorials were to Sir Ralph Colcoff, vicar (d. 1514) and Dame Elizabeth Gossand, wife of Henry Fane.[15]

Surviving memorials are to Thomas Barton of Goldhill (d. 1662) and Thomas May (d. 1714), both ancestors of the builders of Hadlow Castle. Several tablets in St Mary's are to various members of the Moneypenny family. Four generations of this family served as vicars between 1797 and 1952. There is a memorial to Sir John Rivers, former Lord Mayor and Sheriff of London, who was a lay rector at St Mary's,[15] and his wife Joan. Rivers died in 1584, his wife in 1618.[16]

In the churchyard, there is a memorial in the shape of an oast house to 30 hop-pickers who were killed in the Hartlake disaster, an accident that occurred while a wagon, taking around 40 hop-pickers and their families back to their camp site, was crossing the flood-swollen River Medway at the poorly maintained Hartlake Bridge on 20 October 1853.[17] The monument is a Grade II listed building.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Who's who". St Mary's Church. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  2. ^ Dumbreck 1968, p. 1.
  3. ^ a b Dumbreck 1968, p. 2.
  4. ^ a b Thirsk 2007, p. 67.
  5. ^ a b c Dumbreck 1968, p. 3.
  6. ^ a b Thirsk 2007, p. 68.
  7. ^ a b c d e Dumbreck 1968, p. 4.
  8. ^ "The Church". Hadlow Parish Council. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  9. ^ a b "CHURCH OF ST MARY, CHURCH STREET, HADLOW, TONBRIDGE AND MALLING, KENT". English Heritage. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  10. ^ Eberhard, Robert (October 2009). "Stained Glass Windows at St Mary, Hadlow". Church Stained Glass Windows. Retrieved 28 December 2010.
  11. ^ Dumbreck 1968, p. 6.
  12. ^ a b "HADLOW, St Mary". Love's Guide. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  13. ^ a b "The National Pipe Organ Register - NPOR". www.npor.org.uk.
  14. ^ a b "The Alfred Monk Organ at St Mary's, Hadlow - booklet, October 2015" (PDF).
  15. ^ a b Dumbreck 1968, p. 5.
  16. ^ Thirsk 2007, p. 51.
  17. ^ "Hop Pickers Memorial". St Mary's, Hadlow. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  18. ^ "HOPPERS MEMORIAL APPROXIMATELY 20 METRES EAST SOUTH EAST OF THE CHANCEL OF CHURCH OF ST MARY, CHURCH STREET, HADLOW, TONBRIDGE AND MALLING, KENT". English Heritage. Retrieved 14 October 2010.

Sources edit

  • Dumbreck, William Vincent (1968). A short history of St Mary's, Hadlow. Hadlow: St Mary's Church.
  • Thirsk, Joan (2007). Hadlow, Life, Land & People in a Wealden Parish. Canterbury: Kent Archaeological Society. ISBN 978-0-906746-70-7.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Stained Glass Windows at St Mary, Hadlow

mary, church, hadlow, mary, church, parish, church, hadlow, kent, united, kingdom, church, grade, listed, building, mary, hadlowst, mary, hadlowst, mary, hadlowst, mary, hadlow51, 22333, 33944, 22333, 33944os, grid, referencetq, 6343, 4971locationhadlow, kentc. St Mary s Church is the parish church in Hadlow Kent United Kingdom The church is a Grade II listed building St Mary s HadlowSt Mary s HadlowSt Mary s HadlowSt Mary s Hadlow51 13 24 N 0 20 22 E 51 22333 N 0 33944 E 51 22333 0 33944OS grid referenceTQ 6343 4971LocationHadlow KentCountryEnglandDenominationChurch of EnglandChurchmanshipLiberal CatholicWebsitewww stmaryshadlow org ukHistoryStatusChurchFounded975DedicationSt MaryArchitectureFunctional statusActiveHeritage designationGrade II listedDesignated20 October 1954Architectural typeChurchStyleEarly EnglishDecoratedSpecificationsNumber of spires1AdministrationProvinceCanterburyDioceseRochesterArchdeaconryTonbridgeDeaneryPaddock WoodParishHadlowClergyVicar s The Revd Paul White SMMS LLM MA 1 LaityChurchwarden s Michael Payne John Speed 1 Parish administratorJanice Massy 1 Contents 1 History 2 Construction 3 The Coverdale Chair 4 Bells 5 Organ 5 1 Organ specification 6 Memorials 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksHistory editThe first record of a church in Hadlow was in 975 2 This church would probably have been a wooden building In 1018 the early church was replaced by a building of stone In the 12th century the church was rebuilt and extended by Richard de Clare then lord of the Manor of Hadlow De Clare granted the church to the Knights Hospitallers in 1166 The Knights Hospitallers later had a preceptory at nearby West Peckham which was their local administrative base From the Norman Conquest until the 18th century Hadlow did not have a resident Lord of the Manor being held under Tonbridge Castle 3 It is thought that the tower was raised and the spire added in the 15th century 4 Little money was spent on the maintenance of the church although some 15th and 16th century bequests are recorded Thomas Walter Yeoman bequeathed 20s in 1448 To make a window on the north side of the church by the altar of Our Lady John Tatlyngbery bequeathed 10 marks For repair of the great door of the church In 1456 Richard Bealde bequeathed 13s 4d For repair of the tower of Hadlow church 5 In 1461 Dionysia Ippenbury left 3d for masses to be said each year for 12 years 6 In 1465 William Palle yeoman left a cow to the church It was to be sold and the profits therefrom to be devoted to the maintenance of a lamp in the chancel 5 In 1509 Thomas Fisher yeoman bequeathed 20 for making a new rood loft The rood screen may not have been in existence long although it was mentioned in bequests dated 1510 and 1513 7 The church remained under the ownership of the Knights Hospitallers until 1540 when the order was dissolved by Henry VIII 3 In 1533 Henry Fane left two chalices valued at 4 6 The west door is inscribed WB 1637 ES The tower and steeple were repaired in that year The churchwardens were Walter Barton and Essau Simmons 7 In 1791 the clock was installed in the tower It was made by John Thwaites of Clerkenwell 8 At the beginning of the 19th century the church was in disrepair In 1847 the chancel was rebuilt and the vestry added In 1853 the south porch was blocked up The north aisle was added in this year at a cost of 470 which was raised by public subscription A private gallery was erected by Walter Barton May owner of Hadlow Castle This had its own private access and was located at the west end of the nave In 1885 an altar reredos was erected to the memory of Sir William Yardley and his wife Amelia Yardley was a former judge in the High Court of Bombay India In 1936 the gallery was removed 5 Work on the doorway at the west of the church in 1936 exposed some small crosses carved in the stonework These are attributed to Nicholas de Hadloe and his son who lived at Hadlow Place They were carved to commemorate their safe return from the Third Crusade in 1189 4 St Mary s was listed on 20 October 1954 It is currently Grade II listed 9 Construction editSt Mary s is mostly constructed from ragstone with some ashlar detail and quoins of Tunbridge Wells sandstone The church is built in the Early English and Decorated style The chancel roof is of slate while the nave and aisle roofs are tiled The spire is covered in shingles The stained glass windows date from the 19th and 20th centuries 9 the most recent of which is The Visitation created by Francis Skeat in 1956 10 The Coverdale Chair editIn 1919 the Coverdale Chair was presented to St Mary s by T E Foster MacGeagh of Hadlow Castle The chair is so named because it was owned by Miles Coverdale Bishop of Exeter who made the first translation of the Bible into English In 1954 the chair was transferred to Rochester Cathedral but it was returned to St Mary s in 1967 11 Bells editSt Mary s has a ring of eight bells hung for change ringing The treble and 2nd were inscribed Pack amp Chapman of London Fecit 1775 7 They were recast in 1994 by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry London At this time the third was welded and the frame renewed 12 The third is inscribed Iames Bartlett Me Fecit 1696 7 The fourth fifth sixth and seventh are inscribed Iames Bartlett Me Fecit 1695 12 and the tenor is inscribed Henry Barton Edmond Norman Ch Wardens Andrew Reany Vicar 1695 Iames Bartlett Me Fecit 7 Organ editThe organ at the church was presented as a gift by Ernest Hargreaves who married the then vicar s daughter and was built by Alfred Monk of Camden in 1880 It has a brass plate that includes a quotation from verse 6 of Psalm 150 13 Presented to St Mary s Church Hadlow THROUGH THE REVD PHILLIP HOWARD MONEYPENNY Vicar of the Parish BY ERNEST HARGREAVES ESQR August 1880 Let everything that has breath praise the Lord 14 It has 35 speaking stops on three manuals and pedal including principal stops reed stops flute stops string stops and a 32 ft contrabass stop The organ underwent major restoration in 1975 that was carried out by Hill Norman and Beard Prior to the restoration it was suggested that the instrument should be replaced by an electric or electronic organ this advice was not followed The Victorian background of the organ is clearly displayed by the later added chamber surrounding it The instrument is one of the largest village church organs in the south east Organ specification edit Great Swell Choir PedalClarion 4 Vox humana 8 Clarionet 8 Violoncello 8Cornopean 8 Clarion 4 Piccolo 2 Quint 10 Sesquialtra 17 19 22 Oboe 8 Wald flute 4 Bourdon 16Fifteenth 2 Trombone 8 Gemshorn 4 Open diapason 16Twelfth 3 Mixture 15 19 22 Viol d amour 8 Contra bass 32Principal 4 Fifteenth 2 Lieblich gedact 8Harmonic flute 4 Principal 4 Keraulophon 8Gamba 8 Voix celeste 8Clarabella 8 Dulciana 8Open diapason 8 Gedact 8Double open diapason 16 Open diapason 8Bourdon 16TremulantSwell to Great Choir to GreatChoir to Pedals Great to Pedals Swell to Pedals3 composition pedals each to Great and Swell balanced swell pedal 14 13 Memorials edit nbsp Interior c 1920Many memorials in St Mary s were destroyed in the rebuilding of the church between 1847 and 1853 A brass commemorating John Stoke vicar d 1370 was in existence in 1900 but has since disappeared Other memorials were to Sir Ralph Colcoff vicar d 1514 and Dame Elizabeth Gossand wife of Henry Fane 15 Surviving memorials are to Thomas Barton of Goldhill d 1662 and Thomas May d 1714 both ancestors of the builders of Hadlow Castle Several tablets in St Mary s are to various members of the Moneypenny family Four generations of this family served as vicars between 1797 and 1952 There is a memorial to Sir John Rivers former Lord Mayor and Sheriff of London who was a lay rector at St Mary s 15 and his wife Joan Rivers died in 1584 his wife in 1618 16 In the churchyard there is a memorial in the shape of an oast house to 30 hop pickers who were killed in the Hartlake disaster an accident that occurred while a wagon taking around 40 hop pickers and their families back to their camp site was crossing the flood swollen River Medway at the poorly maintained Hartlake Bridge on 20 October 1853 17 The monument is a Grade II listed building 18 See also editList of places of worship in Tonbridge and MallingReferences edit a b c Who s who St Mary s Church Retrieved 6 March 2018 Dumbreck 1968 p 1 a b Dumbreck 1968 p 2 a b Thirsk 2007 p 67 a b c Dumbreck 1968 p 3 a b Thirsk 2007 p 68 a b c d e Dumbreck 1968 p 4 The Church Hadlow Parish Council Retrieved 14 October 2010 a b CHURCH OF ST MARY CHURCH STREET HADLOW TONBRIDGE AND MALLING KENT English Heritage Retrieved 14 October 2010 Eberhard Robert October 2009 Stained Glass Windows at St Mary Hadlow Church Stained Glass Windows Retrieved 28 December 2010 Dumbreck 1968 p 6 a b HADLOW St Mary Love s Guide Retrieved 14 October 2010 a b The National Pipe Organ Register NPOR www npor org uk a b The Alfred Monk Organ at St Mary s Hadlow booklet October 2015 PDF a b Dumbreck 1968 p 5 Thirsk 2007 p 51 Hop Pickers Memorial St Mary s Hadlow Retrieved 14 October 2010 HOPPERS MEMORIAL APPROXIMATELY 20 METRES EAST SOUTH EAST OF THE CHANCEL OF CHURCH OF ST MARY CHURCH STREET HADLOW TONBRIDGE AND MALLING KENT English Heritage Retrieved 14 October 2010 Sources editDumbreck William Vincent 1968 A short history of St Mary s Hadlow Hadlow St Mary s Church Thirsk Joan 2007 Hadlow Life Land amp People in a Wealden Parish Canterbury Kent Archaeological Society ISBN 978 0 906746 70 7 External links editOfficial website Stained Glass Windows at St Mary Hadlow Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Mary 27s Church Hadlow amp oldid 1160454329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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