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St Laurence's Church, Ludlow

52°22′6″N 2°43′7″W / 52.36833°N 2.71861°W / 52.36833; -2.71861

St Laurence's Church, Ludlow
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipLiberal Catholic
Websitestlaurences.org.uk
History
DedicationSt. Laurence
Specifications
Tower height157 feet (48 m)
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseHereford
ArchdeaconryLudlow
DeaneryLudlow
ParishLudlow St Laurence
Clergy
Priest in chargeRev'd Kelvin Price (Rector)
Curate(s)Rev'd Lawrence Gittins
Asst Curate(s)Rev'd Wayne Davies
Laity
Organist/Director of musicMichael Oakley
Organist(s)Roger Judd

St Laurence's Church, Ludlow, is a Church of England parish church in Ludlow, Shropshire, England. It is a grade I listed building.[1]

The church is a member of the Greater Churches Group and is the largest parish church in Shropshire. It was one of only 18 churches given a five-star rating in England's Thousand Greatest Churches by Simon Jenkins (1999) and is described as the "cathedral of the Marches".[2][3] It is the 13th most popular free visitor attraction in the West Midlands, with 70,000 visitors per year.[4]

Background Edit

The parish church was established as a place of worship in association with the founding of Ludlow by the Normans in the late 11th century. It is situated atop the hill around which the medieval town developed. The church was rebuilt in the year 1199 and has had several later additions and modifications. The tower is 157 feet (48 metres) high to the top of the pinnacles,[5] and commands expansive views of the town and surrounding countryside. Notable features include an extensive set of misericords in the choir stalls as well as fine stained glass windows.

History Edit

 
The interior looking east towards the chancel

Original Norman traces were found beneath the south porch, indicating some extant foundations exist from the 11th century AD.[6] After its initial construction the church was expanded and rebuilt in 1199 to accommodate a growing town population. In the late Middle Ages considerable wealth accrued to the town based upon the wool trade. Correspondingly the church underwent several further additions in that era. The major works occurred between 1433 and 1471 with a virtual re-building of the nave, tower and chancel elements.[7] The tower took on a Perpendicular style which was the preferred style of the late 15th century in England. The Saint John's Chapel on the north side was the chapel of the Palmers' Guild, which thrived in the Late Middle Ages. The Palmers' Window within St John's Chapel illustrates the legend of King Edward the Confessor and St John the Evangelist by eight panels and was inspired by the Ludlow Palmers’ 13th century pilgrimage to the Holy Land.

In 1540, John Leland called the church very Fayre and large and richly adorned and taken for the Fayrest in all these parts.[6]

The large east window of the chancel underwent restoration in the year 1832; this window depicts the martyrdom of St Laurence. The most extensive repairs and re-ordering occurred in the period 1859 to 1861, which included new roofs, masonry glazing repairs as well as renewing all floors and seating. Further major restorations took place on the tower in 1889–91, and to the roof in 1953–59.[6]

In 2008, a Vision for St Laurence's was launched to address much needed repairs and improve community use of the building. Approximately £850,000 of repairs and other work have been completed including urgent conservation, high level masonry, roofs, as well as new heating and lighting. Target 3, the re-ordering of the nave, will be tackled in two phases beginning in 2016. The nave will be reorganised with moveable seating and will be made available for wider community use. Phase 2 will include a new nave floor, kitchen, toilets, shop and other facilities as well as conservation to historic stained glass and timber.[8]

Architecture Edit

 
St Laurence's Church: one of the large stained glass windows

The dominant exterior feature is the square bell tower, which houses the historic and famed bells of the church. The chancel contains the medieval choir stalls adorned with numerous misericords. Many of these fine wood carvings are of heraldry and others are genre scenes of common life. Typical sizes of the misericords and upper bench carvings are 25 centimetres wide by 12 centimetres high; the carvings have very deep relief (up to two centimetres). Some of the elements of the carving are repeated on roof adornments.[9]

The chancel has a number of monuments, most of which contain the remains of people involved with Ludlow Castle’s Council of the Marches. Other than the large east window, there are other notable windows within the chancel; the most remarkable one depicts the Ten Commandments, the six remaining panels demonstrate commandments being broken.

The hexagonal south porch derives from the 14th century and serves as the main entrance to the church; this porch is one of only three of such a six-sided design in all of England. The other interior chapels are St Catherine’s Chapel and the Lady Chapel, the latter of which has a large filled-in door that was once used for the Ludlow fire engine at an earlier era. Exterior features include a stone memorial tablet to the poet A. E. Housman (set in the north church wall near the West Door) and the Samuel Burgess Memorial Garden. Above the interior stone lantern there is a splendid vault.

Notable burials Edit

Following his death at Ludlow Castle in April of 1502, the bowels (called euphemistically "the heart") of Arthur, Prince of Wales, son of Henry VII and older brother of Henry VIII, were buried in a lead box in the choir but were noted in 1723 to have been taken up not long since.[6] His body was buried at Worcester Cathedral.

Ambrosia Sidney, (1565–1574), sister of Sir Philip Sidney and Mary Sidney who died at Ludlow Castle, aged nine, is buried near the altar under an impressive memorial bearing the arms of Sir Henry Sidney, (1530–1586), president of the Council of Wales and the Marches. His heart was brought from Worcester where he died and buried in a small leaden urn in an oratory near his daughter's tomb. The rest of his remains were buried with his wife Mary Dudley at Penhurst, Kent.

Sir John Bridgeman (1568/69 – 1638), a Chief Justice of The Marches in the 17th century is buried in St Laurence's church, within a tomb monument attributed to Francesco Fanelli.

Admiral James Vashon is also buried at St Laurence's.

The ashes of poet A. E. Housman, whose poem "The Recruit" repeatedly mentions the church tower, are buried in the church grounds. The stump of a cherry tree (planted in memory) marks their location; a replacement cherry tree was planted nearby in 2003. The ashes of sculptor Adrian Jones are also buried in the church grounds, his memorial tablet is on the outside north wall near to that of Housman.[10]

Contents Edit

Chancel stalls and misericords Edit

St Laurence's Church has twenty eight misericords in the chancel which are of a quality usually associated with great cathedrals such as Worcester or Gloucester. Carved on the underside of the hinged seats each misericord is fashioned from a piece of timber some 26 inches (660 millimetres) long, 12 inches (300 millimetres) deep and 6 inches (150 millimetres) thick. Sixteen of the misericords are older than the rest dating from around 1425. Eight have an unusual carvers mark in the form of an uprooted plant and a distinctive profile to the moulding running round the edge of the corbel. The remainder were carved in matching style around 1447 which was when the Palmers Guild bought one hundred planks of oak from Bristol to construct the stalls.[11]

The misericords have a wide variety of themes. One shows a Green Man, another a mermaid. Many show scenes of town life including a wrestling match where two pairs of wrestlers are stripped to the waist while a horse is tied up on one side and a wool sack and a purse hang on the other. One shows a figure drawing ale from a cask and another shows a dishonest ale-wife being carried off to hell by demons, one of whom plays bagpipes. One complex carving shows a prosperous householder with tools of various trades in the centre while a seated woman holds a child on the left and a grave and burial implements are on the right. This has been interpreted as the Palmers Guild caring for spiritual needs from cradle to grave.

Ludlow then being a royal stronghold there is a royal influence shown in a number of misericords. An antelope, gorged and chained, was the badge of Henry VI in whose reign the misericords were carved. A Hart at Rest was the badge of Richard II and three ostrich feathers were then recognised as the badge of Richard's father the Black Prince. A swan represents the Bohun family and through Mary de Bohun's marriage to Henry IV passed to Henry V and Henry VI.[12]

 
18th century tomb inside the church.
 
The organ.

The choir stalls were originally constructed at a number of dates in the 15th century. In 1447, after the chancel had been lengthened, the stalls were doubled in number to thirty two. The stalls were restored in the 19th century under the direction of George Gilbert Scott when canopies removed during the reformation were replaced. The poppyheads are finely carved with four being from 1447. Carved figures include a Pieta, one of only two known in Shropshire, and various saints. One group possibly represents a Boy Bishop and Lord of Misrule involved in new year celebrations.[12]

Porch Edit

Above the porch on the first floor is the Parvis room, which houses a small history museum pertinent to the church. The porch itself contains the parish war memorial, consisting of six bronze plaques listing townsmen who died serving in World War I, with deaths from World War II and the Korean War added later in turn, and three wooden 'battlefield crosses' that temporarily marked graves of two soldiers killed in World War I and a sailor who died in 1921.[13]

Nave and aisles Edit

At St. Catherine's Chapel (the south transept) some floor-stones in the area honour recent congregation members. In the Lady Chapel is a board giving the Ten Commandments, dating from the time of Elizabeth I during the English Reformation.

In the nave and aisle area, there are several noteworthy contents, including:

Organ Edit

In the north transept is the John Snetzler organ. Through the generosity of Henry Arthur Herbert, 1st Earl of Powis, this organ was installed in 1764 at a cost of £1,000. Originally it was located in a gallery beneath the tower and had three manuals with 19 stops.

In the 19th century, Gray and Davison restored the organ and enlarged it, at the same time moving it to its present position in the north transept. By this time, a fourth manual had been added.

The organ was restored in the 1980s by Nicholson & Co (Worcester) Ltd.

In 2006, thanks largely to a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, further work was carried out to clean the instrument, improve the console, and to add a new mounted cornet. More recent work has included new keyboards and toe sweep, as well as overhauling the blowing plant and gilding the facade pipes.

List of organists Edit

  • Edmund White c. 1473[14]
  • Thomas Sherman 1492–1508
  • John Perche c. 1493
  • Maurice Phillips c. 1551
  • John Broke c. 1549 – 1559
  • Thomas Tanner c. 1566
  • Thomas Cope 1568–1579
  • John Cooke 1578–1583
  • John Harrison 1584–1597
  • George Pingle 1597–1604
  • Richard Crumpe 1605–1620
  • Benjamin Cosyn 1621–1622
  • Mr. Perkings 1623
  • Marmaduke Pardoe 1623–1626[15]
  • Walter Gibbs 1626–1628
  • Edward Smith 1627–1630
  • Edward Standley 1630–1634
  • John Maylard 1634–1635
  • Berkeley Wrench 1636–1637 (then organist of Gloucester Cathedral before reappointment in 1642).
  • John ap Evan 1638
  • Thomas Heardson 1637–1642
  • Berkeley Wrench 1642–1645
  • interregnum 1645–1672
  • Benjamin Moone 1672–1704
  • Henry Hall 1704–1707
  • William Hine 1707
  • Josias Preist 1708–1711
  • John Childe 1711–1712
  • John Salter 1712–1713
  • Benjamin Sharrett 1713–1716
  • David Langton 1716–1730
  • David Valentine 1730[16]–1764
  • Joseph Harris 1764–1771 (then organist of St Martin in the Bull Ring, Birmingham)
  • Miles Coyle 1771–1789 (then organist of Hereford Cathedral)
  • John Clarke Whitfield 1789–1794 (later organist of St Patrick's Cathedral, Armagh (Church of Ireland))
  • Charles Evans 1794[17]–1823
  • Adam Ree 1823–1841[18] – 1851[19]–1856
  • Miss Francis Ree 1856–1858
  • William Walter Ridley 1858
  • Robert Bartholomew 1858–1891[20]
  • Joseph Humphrey Anger 1892–1893 (then Instructor of Harmony and Theory at the Royal Conservatory of Music, Toronto)
  • Ivor Atkins 1893–1897 (then organist of Worcester Cathedral)
  • Clement Charlton Palmer 1897–1908 (then organist of Canterbury Cathedral)
  • Norman Charles Woods 1908–1911 (then organist of St. Michael's College, Tenbury)
  • Harold Carpenter Lumb Stocks 1911 [21]–1917 (then organist of St Asaph Cathedral)
  • Frank Edgar Bastick 1917 – c. 1921 [22] – 1948
  • Edgar Sydney Landen 1948[23]–1951
  • Gilbert W. Whitehouse 1951–1970
  • Richard J. E. Francis 1971–1974
  • George Baker 1974–1976
  • Keith Anthony Morgan 1976–1978
  • Morwen Byram-Wigfield 1978–1980
  • Richard J. E. Francis 1980–2007
  • Shaun Ward 2007–2019
  • Michael Oakley 2019–present

List of rectors Edit

The senior priest and incumbent of the parish is titled the Rector.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Historic England. "Church of St Laurence and attached railings (1202794)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  2. ^ St Laurence's 2014-07-14 at the Wayback Machine History and tour
  3. ^ Shropshire Star St Laurence's Church in Ludlow - the Cathedral of the Marches
  4. ^ Shropshire Star Ludlow church looks to future after £500,000 repairs (1 July 2014)
  5. ^ Flannery, Julian (2016). Fifty English Steeples: The Finest Medieval Parish Church Towers and Spires in England. New York City, New York, United States: Thames and Hudson. pp. 330–337. ISBN 978-0500343142
  6. ^ a b c d Lloyd, David Historic Ludlow: the Parish Church of Saint Laurence, a History and a Guide, Birmingham, England: SP Print, 1980
  7. ^ The Parish Church of St Laurence, Ludlow, published by the Parish Church of St Laurence, 2 College Street, Ludlow, England, 2004
  8. ^ "St Laurence's church in Ludlow scales back redevelopment". BBC News. 3 February 2013. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  9. ^ Architecture of St Laurence Church, Ludlow, England, Lumina Technologies, Aberdeen, Scotland, July, 2006
  10. ^ Shropshire War Memorials, Sites of Remembrance. p. 61.
  11. ^ Lloyd, David Historic Ludlow: the Parish Church of Saint Laurence, a History and a Guide, Birmingham, England: SP Print, 1980 p. 42
  12. ^ a b Klein, Peter (1986). The Misericords & Choir Stalls of Ludlow Parish Church. Birmingham: Ludlow Parochial Church Council.
  13. ^ Francis, Peter (2013). Shropshire War Memorials, Sites of Remembrance. YouCaxton Publications. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-909644-11-3.
  14. ^ List drawn from Francis, Richard; Klein, Peter (2007). The Organs and Organists of Ludlow Parish Church (second ed.). St Laurence's Parish Church.
  15. ^ Harper, Sally Music in Welsh Culture Before 1650. Aldershot: Ashgate ISBN 978-0-7546-5263-2; p. 358
  16. ^ Temperley, Nicholas The Music of the English Parish Church. 2 vols. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press ISBN 0-521-22045-9; vol. 1, p. 349
  17. ^ Brown, James D. & Stratton, Stephen S. (1897) British Musical Biography. Birmingham: Stratton; p. 140
  18. ^ Cherubini, Luigi; Hamilton, James Alexander, trans. (1837) A Course of Counterpoint and Fugue. 2 vols. London: R. Cocks; page xx
  19. ^ Bagshaw, Samuel (1851) History, Gazetteer & Directory of Shropshire. Sheffield: S. Bagshaw; p. 606
  20. ^ Kelly's Directory of Shropshire, 1891, p. 348
  21. ^ Bird, Enid The Organists and Organs of the Welsh Cathedrals in the 20th Century. Wakefield: Enid Bird ISBN 0-9516550-1-9
  22. ^ Thornsby, Frederick W., ed. (1921) Dictionary of Organs and Organists; 2nd ed. London: G. A. Mate
  23. ^ Who's Who in Music; First Post-war Edition: 1949/50. London: Shaw Publishing Co. Ltd. London
  24. ^ "Appointments: Church appointments". The Independent. 24 June 1994. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  25. ^ a b "New rector appointed to St Laurence's Church in Ludlow". Ludlow and Tenbury Wells Advertiser. 10 May 2010. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  26. ^ "Sermon preached by Bishop Richard at the licensing of the Revd Kelvin Price" (pdf). St Lawrence Church, Ludlow. 15 May 2017. Retrieved 7 June 2017.

External links Edit

  • Official website

laurence, church, ludlow, 36833, 71861, 36833, 71861, countryenglanddenominationchurch, englandchurchmanshipliberal, catholicwebsitestlaurences, ukhistorydedicationst, laurencespecificationstower, height157, feet, administrationprovincecanterburydioceseherefor. 52 22 6 N 2 43 7 W 52 36833 N 2 71861 W 52 36833 2 71861 St Laurence s Church LudlowCountryEnglandDenominationChurch of EnglandChurchmanshipLiberal CatholicWebsitestlaurences org ukHistoryDedicationSt LaurenceSpecificationsTower height157 feet 48 m AdministrationProvinceCanterburyDioceseHerefordArchdeaconryLudlowDeaneryLudlowParishLudlow St LaurenceClergyPriest in chargeRev d Kelvin Price Rector Curate s Rev d Lawrence GittinsAsst Curate s Rev d Wayne DaviesLaityOrganist Director of musicMichael OakleyOrganist s Roger JuddSt Laurence s Church Ludlow is a Church of England parish church in Ludlow Shropshire England It is a grade I listed building 1 The church is a member of the Greater Churches Group and is the largest parish church in Shropshire It was one of only 18 churches given a five star rating in England s Thousand Greatest Churches by Simon Jenkins 1999 and is described as the cathedral of the Marches 2 3 It is the 13th most popular free visitor attraction in the West Midlands with 70 000 visitors per year 4 Contents 1 Background 2 History 3 Architecture 4 Notable burials 5 Contents 5 1 Chancel stalls and misericords 5 2 Porch 5 3 Nave and aisles 6 Organ 6 1 List of organists 7 List of rectors 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksBackground EditThe parish church was established as a place of worship in association with the founding of Ludlow by the Normans in the late 11th century It is situated atop the hill around which the medieval town developed The church was rebuilt in the year 1199 and has had several later additions and modifications The tower is 157 feet 48 metres high to the top of the pinnacles 5 and commands expansive views of the town and surrounding countryside Notable features include an extensive set of misericords in the choir stalls as well as fine stained glass windows History Edit nbsp The interior looking east towards the chancelOriginal Norman traces were found beneath the south porch indicating some extant foundations exist from the 11th century AD 6 After its initial construction the church was expanded and rebuilt in 1199 to accommodate a growing town population In the late Middle Ages considerable wealth accrued to the town based upon the wool trade Correspondingly the church underwent several further additions in that era The major works occurred between 1433 and 1471 with a virtual re building of the nave tower and chancel elements 7 The tower took on a Perpendicular style which was the preferred style of the late 15th century in England The Saint John s Chapel on the north side was the chapel of the Palmers Guild which thrived in the Late Middle Ages The Palmers Window within St John s Chapel illustrates the legend of King Edward the Confessor and St John the Evangelist by eight panels and was inspired by the Ludlow Palmers 13th century pilgrimage to the Holy Land In 1540 John Leland called the church very Fayre and large and richly adorned and taken for the Fayrest in all these parts 6 The large east window of the chancel underwent restoration in the year 1832 this window depicts the martyrdom of St Laurence The most extensive repairs and re ordering occurred in the period 1859 to 1861 which included new roofs masonry glazing repairs as well as renewing all floors and seating Further major restorations took place on the tower in 1889 91 and to the roof in 1953 59 6 In 2008 a Vision for St Laurence s was launched to address much needed repairs and improve community use of the building Approximately 850 000 of repairs and other work have been completed including urgent conservation high level masonry roofs as well as new heating and lighting Target 3 the re ordering of the nave will be tackled in two phases beginning in 2016 The nave will be reorganised with moveable seating and will be made available for wider community use Phase 2 will include a new nave floor kitchen toilets shop and other facilities as well as conservation to historic stained glass and timber 8 Architecture Edit nbsp St Laurence s Church one of the large stained glass windowsThe dominant exterior feature is the square bell tower which houses the historic and famed bells of the church The chancel contains the medieval choir stalls adorned with numerous misericords Many of these fine wood carvings are of heraldry and others are genre scenes of common life Typical sizes of the misericords and upper bench carvings are 25 centimetres wide by 12 centimetres high the carvings have very deep relief up to two centimetres Some of the elements of the carving are repeated on roof adornments 9 The chancel has a number of monuments most of which contain the remains of people involved with Ludlow Castle s Council of the Marches Other than the large east window there are other notable windows within the chancel the most remarkable one depicts the Ten Commandments the six remaining panels demonstrate commandments being broken The hexagonal south porch derives from the 14th century and serves as the main entrance to the church this porch is one of only three of such a six sided design in all of England The other interior chapels are St Catherine s Chapel and the Lady Chapel the latter of which has a large filled in door that was once used for the Ludlow fire engine at an earlier era Exterior features include a stone memorial tablet to the poet A E Housman set in the north church wall near the West Door and the Samuel Burgess Memorial Garden Above the interior stone lantern there is a splendid vault Notable burials EditFollowing his death at Ludlow Castle in April of 1502 the bowels called euphemistically the heart of Arthur Prince of Wales son of Henry VII and older brother of Henry VIII were buried in a lead box in the choir but were noted in 1723 to have been taken up not long since 6 His body was buried at Worcester Cathedral Ambrosia Sidney 1565 1574 sister of Sir Philip Sidney and Mary Sidney who died at Ludlow Castle aged nine is buried near the altar under an impressive memorial bearing the arms of Sir Henry Sidney 1530 1586 president of the Council of Wales and the Marches His heart was brought from Worcester where he died and buried in a small leaden urn in an oratory near his daughter s tomb The rest of his remains were buried with his wife Mary Dudley at Penhurst Kent Sir John Bridgeman 1568 69 1638 a Chief Justice of The Marches in the 17th century is buried in St Laurence s church within a tomb monument attributed to Francesco Fanelli Admiral James Vashon is also buried at St Laurence s The ashes of poet A E Housman whose poem The Recruit repeatedly mentions the church tower are buried in the church grounds The stump of a cherry tree planted in memory marks their location a replacement cherry tree was planted nearby in 2003 The ashes of sculptor Adrian Jones are also buried in the church grounds his memorial tablet is on the outside north wall near to that of Housman 10 Contents EditChancel stalls and misericords Edit St Laurence s Church has twenty eight misericords in the chancel which are of a quality usually associated with great cathedrals such as Worcester or Gloucester Carved on the underside of the hinged seats each misericord is fashioned from a piece of timber some 26 inches 660 millimetres long 12 inches 300 millimetres deep and 6 inches 150 millimetres thick Sixteen of the misericords are older than the rest dating from around 1425 Eight have an unusual carvers mark in the form of an uprooted plant and a distinctive profile to the moulding running round the edge of the corbel The remainder were carved in matching style around 1447 which was when the Palmers Guild bought one hundred planks of oak from Bristol to construct the stalls 11 nbsp A drawer of ale nbsp Wrestlers nbsp Detail of a Green Man nbsp A mermaid nbsp The misericords have a wide variety of themes One shows a Green Man another a mermaid Many show scenes of town life including a wrestling match where two pairs of wrestlers are stripped to the waist while a horse is tied up on one side and a wool sack and a purse hang on the other One shows a figure drawing ale from a cask and another shows a dishonest ale wife being carried off to hell by demons one of whom plays bagpipes One complex carving shows a prosperous householder with tools of various trades in the centre while a seated woman holds a child on the left and a grave and burial implements are on the right This has been interpreted as the Palmers Guild caring for spiritual needs from cradle to grave Ludlow then being a royal stronghold there is a royal influence shown in a number of misericords An antelope gorged and chained was the badge of Henry VI in whose reign the misericords were carved A Hart at Rest was the badge of Richard II and three ostrich feathers were then recognised as the badge of Richard s father the Black Prince A swan represents the Bohun family and through Mary de Bohun s marriage to Henry IV passed to Henry V and Henry VI 12 nbsp 18th century tomb inside the church nbsp The organ The choir stalls were originally constructed at a number of dates in the 15th century In 1447 after the chancel had been lengthened the stalls were doubled in number to thirty two The stalls were restored in the 19th century under the direction of George Gilbert Scott when canopies removed during the reformation were replaced The poppyheads are finely carved with four being from 1447 Carved figures include a Pieta one of only two known in Shropshire and various saints One group possibly represents a Boy Bishop and Lord of Misrule involved in new year celebrations 12 Porch Edit Above the porch on the first floor is the Parvis room which houses a small history museum pertinent to the church The porch itself contains the parish war memorial consisting of six bronze plaques listing townsmen who died serving in World War I with deaths from World War II and the Korean War added later in turn and three wooden battlefield crosses that temporarily marked graves of two soldiers killed in World War I and a sailor who died in 1921 13 Nave and aisles Edit At St Catherine s Chapel the south transept some floor stones in the area honour recent congregation members In the Lady Chapel is a board giving the Ten Commandments dating from the time of Elizabeth I during the English Reformation In the nave and aisle area there are several noteworthy contents including The royal English coat of arms from the year 1628 Wall hanging A Shropshire Lad located near the south door The west window illustrating some of the historical figures involved with Ludlow Castle The white ensign from HMS Ludlow Organ EditIn the north transept is the John Snetzler organ Through the generosity of Henry Arthur Herbert 1st Earl of Powis this organ was installed in 1764 at a cost of 1 000 Originally it was located in a gallery beneath the tower and had three manuals with 19 stops In the 19th century Gray and Davison restored the organ and enlarged it at the same time moving it to its present position in the north transept By this time a fourth manual had been added The organ was restored in the 1980s by Nicholson amp Co Worcester Ltd In 2006 thanks largely to a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund further work was carried out to clean the instrument improve the console and to add a new mounted cornet More recent work has included new keyboards and toe sweep as well as overhauling the blowing plant and gilding the facade pipes List of organists Edit Edmund White c 1473 14 Thomas Sherman 1492 1508 John Perche c 1493 Maurice Phillips c 1551 John Broke c 1549 1559 Thomas Tanner c 1566 Thomas Cope 1568 1579 John Cooke 1578 1583 John Harrison 1584 1597 George Pingle 1597 1604 Richard Crumpe 1605 1620 Benjamin Cosyn 1621 1622 Mr Perkings 1623 Marmaduke Pardoe 1623 1626 15 Walter Gibbs 1626 1628 Edward Smith 1627 1630 Edward Standley 1630 1634 John Maylard 1634 1635 Berkeley Wrench 1636 1637 then organist of Gloucester Cathedral before reappointment in 1642 John ap Evan 1638 Thomas Heardson 1637 1642 Berkeley Wrench 1642 1645 interregnum 1645 1672 Benjamin Moone 1672 1704 Henry Hall 1704 1707 William Hine 1707 Josias Preist 1708 1711 John Childe 1711 1712 John Salter 1712 1713 Benjamin Sharrett 1713 1716 David Langton 1716 1730 David Valentine 1730 16 1764 Joseph Harris 1764 1771 then organist of St Martin in the Bull Ring Birmingham Miles Coyle 1771 1789 then organist of Hereford Cathedral John Clarke Whitfield 1789 1794 later organist of St Patrick s Cathedral Armagh Church of Ireland Charles Evans 1794 17 1823 Adam Ree 1823 1841 18 1851 19 1856 Miss Francis Ree 1856 1858 William Walter Ridley 1858 Robert Bartholomew 1858 1891 20 Joseph Humphrey Anger 1892 1893 then Instructor of Harmony and Theory at the Royal Conservatory of Music Toronto Ivor Atkins 1893 1897 then organist of Worcester Cathedral Clement Charlton Palmer 1897 1908 then organist of Canterbury Cathedral Norman Charles Woods 1908 1911 then organist of St Michael s College Tenbury Harold Carpenter Lumb Stocks 1911 21 1917 then organist of St Asaph Cathedral Frank Edgar Bastick 1917 c 1921 22 1948 Edgar Sydney Landen 1948 23 1951 Gilbert W Whitehouse 1951 1970 Richard J E Francis 1971 1974 George Baker 1974 1976 Keith Anthony Morgan 1976 1978 Morwen Byram Wigfield 1978 1980 Richard J E Francis 1980 2007 Shaun Ward 2007 2019 Michael Oakley 2019 presentList of rectors EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items March 2016 The senior priest and incumbent of the parish is titled the Rector The Reverend Prebendary Brian Curnew 1994 to 2009 24 25 The Venerable Colin Williams 2010 to 2015 25 The Reverend Kelvin Price May 2017 to present Priest in Charge and Rector 26 See also EditGrade I listed churches in Shropshire Listed buildings in Ludlow northern area Bishop of Ludlow Archdeacon of Ludlow Wool church Fulk FitzWarinReferences Edit Historic England Church of St Laurence and attached railings 1202794 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 16 October 2021 St Laurence s Archived 2014 07 14 at the Wayback Machine History and tour Shropshire Star St Laurence s Church in Ludlow the Cathedral of the Marches Shropshire Star Ludlow church looks to future after 500 000 repairs 1 July 2014 Flannery Julian 2016 Fifty English Steeples The Finest Medieval Parish Church Towers and Spires in England New York City New York United States Thames and Hudson pp 330 337 ISBN 978 0500343142 a b c d Lloyd David Historic Ludlow the Parish Church of Saint Laurence a History and a Guide Birmingham England SP Print 1980 The Parish Church of St Laurence Ludlow published by the Parish Church of St Laurence 2 College Street Ludlow England 2004 St Laurence s church in Ludlow scales back redevelopment BBC News 3 February 2013 Retrieved 3 February 2013 Architecture of St Laurence Church Ludlow England Lumina Technologies Aberdeen Scotland July 2006 Shropshire War Memorials Sites of Remembrance p 61 Lloyd David Historic Ludlow the Parish Church of Saint Laurence a History and a Guide Birmingham England SP Print 1980 p 42 a b Klein Peter 1986 The Misericords amp Choir Stalls of Ludlow Parish Church Birmingham Ludlow Parochial Church Council Francis Peter 2013 Shropshire War Memorials Sites of Remembrance YouCaxton Publications p 96 ISBN 978 1 909644 11 3 List drawn from Francis Richard Klein Peter 2007 The Organs and Organists of Ludlow Parish Church second ed St Laurence s Parish Church Harper Sally Music in Welsh Culture Before 1650 Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 5263 2 p 358 Temperley Nicholas The Music of the English Parish Church 2 vols Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 22045 9 vol 1 p 349 Brown James D amp Stratton Stephen S 1897 British Musical Biography Birmingham Stratton p 140 Cherubini Luigi Hamilton James Alexander trans 1837 A Course of Counterpoint and Fugue 2 vols London R Cocks page xx Bagshaw Samuel 1851 History Gazetteer amp Directory of Shropshire Sheffield S Bagshaw p 606 Kelly s Directory of Shropshire 1891 p 348 Bird Enid The Organists and Organs of the Welsh Cathedrals in the 20th Century Wakefield Enid Bird ISBN 0 9516550 1 9 Thornsby Frederick W ed 1921 Dictionary of Organs and Organists 2nd ed London G A Mate Who s Who in Music First Post war Edition 1949 50 London Shaw Publishing Co Ltd London Appointments Church appointments The Independent 24 June 1994 Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 Retrieved 14 March 2016 a b New rector appointed to St Laurence s Church in Ludlow Ludlow and Tenbury Wells Advertiser 10 May 2010 Retrieved 14 March 2016 Sermon preached by Bishop Richard at the licensing of the Revd Kelvin Price pdf St Lawrence Church Ludlow 15 May 2017 Retrieved 7 June 2017 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Laurence Ludlow Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Laurence 27s Church Ludlow amp oldid 1163264806, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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