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St Peter's Church, Henfield

St Peter's Church is a Church of England parish church in the large village of Henfield, West Sussex. Placed on the site of an 8th-century Saxon church also dedicated to St Peter, it was built in the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries, but was heavily restored and partially rebuilt in the 19th century. English Heritage has listed it at Grade II* for its architectural and historical importance. Services for the parish continue and also cover the parishes of St Giles', Shermanbury and St. Peter's, Woodmancote, which form its united benefice.

St Peter's Church
The church from the south
50°55′56″N 0°16′35″W / 50.9323°N 0.2764°W / 50.9323; -0.2764
LocationChurch Lane, Henfield, West Sussex, BN5 9NY
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationChurch of England
Websitehenfield.org
History
StatusParish church
Founded770
DedicationSaint Peter
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Heritage designationGrade II*
Designated15 March 1955
Years builtEarly 13th century
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseChichester
ArchdeaconryHorsham
DeaneryRural Deanery of Hurst
ParishHenfield
Clergy
Vicar(s)Paul Doick
Assistant priest(s)Christina Bennett
Asst Curate(s)Harriet Neale-Stevens

History edit

The ground of the parish of Henfield is mostly composed of Weald clay, but towards the centre of the parish are low ridges of plateau gravel lying on Lower Greensand. On one of these, near the old road that ran from Eatons, near Ashurst, to Hurstpierpoint, stands the church of St Peter, rather to the north-west of most of the village's older buildings. The first St. Peter's Church, probably built on the same spot, was founded by thegn Waerbald and his wife Tidburg, to whom Osmund, king of Sussex, granted 15 hides of land for that purpose in the year 770.[1][2] It has been suggested that this church was a minster, i.e. that it held a community of clergymen, but this remains a disputed point.[3]

The 15 hides granted by Osmund can presumably be identified with the lands which appear after the Conquest as Stretham (or Henfield) manor, Oreham manor, Henfield park, and the rectory estate. The early history of Stretham manor, consisting of the church itself and most of the southern and central parts of Henfield parish along with outlying parts in neighbouring parishes, shows the close connection between St Peter's, Henfield and its bishops. By 1066 Stretham manor was the property of the bishopric of Selsey, and in 1086 Domesday Book records it as belonging to the bishopric of Chichester (to which the see had been moved in 1075).[4][5] The bishops of Chichester kept a house on this estate which in the later Middle Ages served as Henfield's main courthouse. A farmhouse comprising one wing of the original house still survives under the name Stretham Manor.[4][6][7] A vicarage was ordained in 1219, by which date the rectory had become a prebend of Chichester Cathedral, further strengthening the links between St Peter's and its see.[3]

The Saxon church survived at least as late as Domesday Book, but nothing now remains of it.[8] Perhaps around 1200–1220, and certainly no later than 1250, it had been replaced by a simple nave and chancel built of Caen stone, a kind of Middle Jurassic limestone quarried in Normandy.[9][10][11][12] The chancel arch from this building can still be seen, as can two lancet windows in what is now the vestry.[13] Two aisles to north and south were built later in the 13th century, and in the 14th century the porch and the arches separating the nave from the aisles were added. There was much further building in the 15th century: the tower, a westward extension of the nave, and north of the chancel a new chapel, known as the Parham chapel.[14] This last may have been the work of Thomas Beckington, Prebendary of Henfield from 1438 to 1443.[15] In 1530 the dedication of the church, which is usually given as being to St Peter, was recorded as being to Sts Peter and Paul. In 1627 two dormer windows were added to the north aisle; those in the south aisle are of uncertain date but may be from the same period. A gallery on the south side of the church is recorded as being in place in 1718.[14]

St Peter's and one of its churchwardens featured in a court case in 1607 involving the theft of a bell from St Leonard's Church, Aldrington, a parish church a few miles away.[16][17] Aldrington parish was then depopulated and the church was ruinous, and arrangements were made to sell its bell. Although this arrived at St Peter's, "it did not travel to Henfield with the consent of the Aldrington parishioners": the churchwarden admitted helping to steal it, and "the authorities at Henfield Church admitted that they had received 650 pounds (290 kg) of bell material" which was used to cast a new bell for the tower. They agreed to pay compensation of £16.5s. to Aldrington parish.[16][17]

The 19th century saw extensive rebuilding of the fabric of the church. First of all the south aisle, which had been said to be badly out of repair as early as 1637, was replaced before 1833 at the expense of the notable botanist William Borrer, a local resident, and a gallery was included for the use of schoolchildren. In 1855 the tower was restored by an unknown architect.[14][8] In 1870 and 1871 a large-scale restoration was undertaken to the designs of the architects William Slater and Richard Carpenter. Most of the walls were refaced with flint, the chancel was lengthened eastward and raised in height, a new south chancel chapel was built, both aisles were entirely rebuilt, the roof of the nave was opened up and new clerestory lancet windows installed.[8][14][18]

St Peter's Church was designated a Grade II* listed building on 15 March 1955.[19] Such buildings are defined as being "particularly important ... [and] of more than special interest".[20] In February 2001, it was one of 54 Grade II* listed buildings, and 1,028 listed buildings of all grades, in the district of Mid Sussex.[21] In 2008 a new stone floor was laid, under-floor heating installed, and the 19th-century pews were replaced with chairs.[18][22]

Related buildings edit

 
Seen from the north-east

The prebend is recorded in 1341 as consisting of a house and garden with 60 acres of land. About 1520 it became the property of the diocese, but a few years later in 1533 it was leased for 80 years to Thomas Bishop, lawyer to Bishop Robert Sherburne. From him the lease passed first to his son Sir Thomas Bishop, then to the second Thomas's younger son Henry Bishop, Postmaster General of England, who was temporarily deprived of it during the Commonwealth period.[23] Parsonage House, the successor of the original prebend house, was built in the 16th century or earlier but was refronted in the 18th century; it still stands in Church Street.[24]

A vicarage house appears in documents of 1481, 1529, 1636 and 1724, but the present vicarage was built c. 1806 and enlarged c. 1850.[3]

In 1812 a church school for boys was opened in Henfield. Its successor, St Peter's Church of England Primary School, occupies buildings on the north-west edge of the village which were built in 1957 and extended in 1983.[25]

An iron mission room capable of seating 60 was built on Oreham Common in 1891, but, services there being very badly attended, it was demolished before 1909.[14]

Architecture and fittings edit

 
The church tower and some of the churchyard's 104 clipped yews

The church of St Peter as it stands today consists of a nave with north and south aisles and transepts, a chancel flanked by a chapel to the north and a vestry to the south, a porch and a tower. The nave dates from the 13th century, though whether early or late is disputed. The chancel arch, though 13th century, was rebuilt in the 19th. The aisles and chancel are products of the 1870–1871 restoration.[14][8] The 15th-century Parham chapel is remarkable for its east window, a lovely example of the Gothic style of Henry VI's reign.[26][27] The tower is in a rather austere version of the Perpendicular style, "as grim", Pevsner says, "as it would be in Northumberland".[28]

During the restoration work of 1870–1871 some murals were uncovered, the most interesting of which, found on the church's north wall, was on a heraldic subject. Medieval murals are quite common in Sussex churches, but this one was dated as late as 1694.[29][30] There was also formerly a painting of the Decalogue, Creed and Lord's Prayer with cherubs and angels, dating from 1897, which hung in the Parham chapel until the 1950s.[31]

The church's notable fittings include an octagonal font, dated variously to the early 13th century or to the 15th century, a 14th-century iron-bound chest, and, in the Parham chapel, a reredos carved by Frank Ernest Howard with figures of the patron saints of the four countries of the United Kingdom.[26][8] The chapel screen, in the arch between the Parham chapel and the north aisle, was executed by Frances E. Allen in 1969, but it incorporates 15th-century work. There are eight 18th-century bells, said to give "one of the best rings in the county".[13][14] The plate is of a similar date, consisting of a salver (1704), flagon (1732), chalice (1733), and two patens and an almsdish (1753).[28] The modern kneelers illustrate in tapestry the animal and plant life of Henfield parish in almost 300 different designs.[32]

There are two brasses. One, in the vestry, shows Ann Kenwellmersh (d. 1633) with her hand on the head of her nine-year-old grandson Menelab Rainsford (d. 1627). The other, in the Parham chapel, is of Thomas Bishop (d. 1559), the first of the family to lease the rectory.[8][26] Also in the Parham chapel is a monument to Thomas's grandson Henry Bishop, the Postmaster General. Two memorial tablets inside the church, on the right as you walk through the door from the porch, name the 60 men of the parish who died in the First World War, and the 14 who died in the Second World War.[33][34]

Stained glass edit

 
The Mary Magdalene window

St Peter's Church is notable for the quality of its stained glass,[22] which includes work by some of the best-known designers in late 19th-century and early 20th-century England. In the north aisle the second window, depicting Fortitude and Charity, was produced c. 1907 by the firm of James Powell and Sons, and the first window (St Luke and St Paul) was designed by the Sussex artist Charles Eamer Kempe in 1903.[35] The north transept's north window was made in 1928 by Kempe and Co after Kempe's death; its east window (Madonna and Child, and St Nicholas with children) by Frederick Charles Eden, a Brighton man, in 1935.[35][36] In the Parham chapel, the north window is full of local interest, its five lights depicting Lancelot Andrewes, St Richard of Chichester, St Peter (the dedicatee of the church), St Wilfrid (whom Gibbon called the Apostle of Sussex), and St Augustine of Canterbury. It was produced by Kempe and Co in 1920.[35][37] The chapel's east window, in four lights, is a 1921 work by Geoffrey Fuller Webb.[35] It shows the Captain of the Host of the Lord appearing to Joshua before Jericho (Joshua 5:13–15), and St John the Divine writing about the Holy City.[38]

Between the chapel and the chancel are glass windows engraved with agricultural scenes, which were installed in 1969.[13] The five-light east window of the chancel was designed by Kempe in 1874 or 1875, and shows a Nativity scene, the Crucifixion, and several saints.[35][8] In the vestry, which is kept locked, is a striking, quasi-Art Nouveau depiction of Mary Magdalene over the text "She hath done what she could" (Mark 14:8). It was produced by Lowndes and Drury, to a design attributed by one authority to Mary Lowndes, by another to Isobel Lilian Gloag. According to the art historian Peter Cormack it was designed by Gloag and painted by Lowndes.[22][8][28]

An adjoining office, also locked, has the oldest stained glass in the church, a depiction of Jesus preaching the Sermon on the Mount installed in 1872. Its style suggests it is the work of Clayton and Bell. The three-light south transept window (St Oswald, St George and St Edmund) is by Kempe and Co, 1916. The south aisle's first window by Charles Eamer Kempe, 1898, shows the Annunciation. The second window, designed by Mary Lowndes and produced by James Powell and Sons in 1891, is on the theme "Suffer the little children to come unto me" (Mark 10:14). Finally the west window, which is not accessible to the public, depicts St Michael, St George and St Raphael. It was made in 1896 and is once again the work of Charles Eamer Kempe.[35]

Today edit

Since 1978 St Peter's, Henfield has formed part of the united benefice of Henfield with Shermanbury and Woodmancote, but it remains a distinct parish.[3] The parish is served by a vicar, an assistant priest and an assistant curate. Holy Communion is celebrated on Sunday at 10.00 a.m., sometimes with the Book of Common Prayer liturgy and sometimes with Common Worship, except on the first Sunday of every month when there is a family-friendly service without Communion.[22] There are also sometimes services earlier on Sunday morning, and at 6.30 on Sunday evening. Holy Communion is celebrated on Wednesday at 10.30 a.m. and on Thursday at 7.15 p.m., and services are regularly conducted in two local care homes.[39] The church is open to visitors every day from 8.00 a.m. to 6.00 p.m.[22]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hudson 1987, pp. 133, 135.
  2. ^ Event: Osmund 2 granting land to Wærbald 2 and Tidburg 2 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
  3. ^ a b c d Hudson 1987, p. 155.
  4. ^ a b Hudson 1987, pp. 140–141.
  5. ^ Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I., eds. (1986). Handbook of British Chronology (3rd ed.). London: Offices of the Royal Historical Society. p. 272. ISBN 0861931068. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  6. ^ Historic England. "Stretham Manor, Henfield (1286392)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  7. ^ Nairn & Pevsner 1973, p. 240.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Allen 2017.
  9. ^ Page, William, ed. (1907). The Victoria History of the County of Sussex. Volume 2. London: Constable. p. 372. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  10. ^ Whiteman & Whiteman 1994, p. 82.
  11. ^ Pé 2006, pp. 72, 74.
  12. ^ "Building Stones of London". Discovering Geology. British Geological Survey. 2017. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  13. ^ a b c Pé 2006, p. 74.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Hudson 1987, p. 156.
  15. ^ W. H. G. (1938–39). "Sussex Church Plans XLV. St Peter, Henfield". Sussex Notes and Queries. 7: 86. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  16. ^ a b Middleton 1979, p. 191.
  17. ^ a b Middleton 2003, vol. 12, p.99.
  18. ^ a b Barwick 2017.
  19. ^ Historic England. "The parish church of St Peter, Henfield (1027400)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  20. ^ "Listed buildings". Historic England. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  21. ^ . Images of England. Historic England. 2014. Archived from the original on 6 December 2009. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  22. ^ a b c d e [Anon.] 2017.
  23. ^ Hudson 1987, pp. 140–142.
  24. ^ Historic England. "Parsonage House, Henfield (1027405)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  25. ^ "St Peter's C of E Primary School". St Peter's Church, Henfield, with St Giles', Shermanbury, and St Peter's, Woodmancote. 2017. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  26. ^ a b c Mee 1971, pp. 104–105.
  27. ^ Turner 1871, p. 212.
  28. ^ a b c Nairn & Pevsner 1973, p. 239.
  29. ^ Turner 1871, pp. 212–213.
  30. ^ Vigar, John E. (1986). Exploring Sussex Churches. Gillingham: Meresborough. p. 83. ISBN 0948193093.
  31. ^ Beevers, David; Marks, Richard; Roles, John (1989). Sussex Churches & Chapels. Brighton: The Royal Pavilion, Art Gallery & Museums. p. 92. ISBN 0948723114.
  32. ^ Whiteman & Whiteman 1994, p. 83.
  33. ^ "St Peters Church Tablet WW1". War Memorials Register. Imperial War Museums. 2017. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  34. ^ "St Peters Church Tablet WW2". War Memorials Register. Imperial War Museums. 2017. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  35. ^ a b c d e f [Anon.] n.d.
  36. ^ Allen, John (2017). "Architects & Artists D–E". Sussex Parish Churches. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  37. ^ Gibbon, Edward (1797). History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Volume the Sixth. London: A Strahan, T. Cadell and W. Davies. p. 396. Retrieved 13 August 2017.
  38. ^ Mee 1971, p. 104.
  39. ^ "Benefice of Henfield with Shermanbury and Woodmancote" (PDF). St Peter's Church, Henfield, with St Giles', Shermanbury, and St Peter's, Woodmancote. 2013. Retrieved 11 August 2017.

Works cited edit

  • Allen, John (2017). "Henfield – St Peter". Sussex Parish Churches. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  • [Anon.] (n.d.). "Stained Glass Windows at St Peter, Henfield, Sussex". Church Stained Glass Windows. Retrieved 12 August 2017.
  • [Anon.] (2017). "St Peter's, Henfield". A Church Near You. The Archbishops' Council. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  • Barwick, Alan (2017). "St Peter's Church, Henfield". The Parish Magazine. Henfield Hub. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  • Hudson, T. P., ed. (1987). The Victoria History of the County of Sussex. Volume 6, Part 3: Bramber Rape (North-Eastern Part) Including Crawley New Town. Oxford: Oxford University Press for the Institute of Historical Research. ISBN 0197227686. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  • Mee, Arthur (1971) [1964]. Linnell, C. L. S. (ed.). Sussex. The King's England. London: Hodder and Stoughton. ISBN 0340001054.
  • Middleton, Judy (1979). A History of Hove. Chichester: Phillimore & Co. ISBN 0-85033-325-3.
  • Middleton, Judy (2003). The Encyclopaedia of Hove & Portslade. Brighton: Brighton & Hove Libraries.
  • Nairn, Ian; Pevsner, Nikolaus (1973) [1965]. Sussex. The Buildings of England. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 0140710280.
  • Pé, Diana (2006). Mid Sussex Church Walks. PP (Pé Publishing). ISBN 0954369025.
  • Turner, Edward (1871). "Archaeological Miscellanies". Sussex Archaeological Collections. 23. doi:10.5284/1086634.
  • Whiteman, Ken; Whiteman, Joyce (1994). Ancient Churches of Sussex. Brighton: Roedale. ISBN 0952256002.

External links edit

  •   Media related to St Peter's Church, Henfield at Wikimedia Commons

peter, church, henfield, peter, church, church, england, parish, church, large, village, henfield, west, sussex, placed, site, century, saxon, church, also, dedicated, peter, built, 13th, 14th, 15th, centuries, heavily, restored, partially, rebuilt, 19th, cent. St Peter s Church is a Church of England parish church in the large village of Henfield West Sussex Placed on the site of an 8th century Saxon church also dedicated to St Peter it was built in the 13th 14th and 15th centuries but was heavily restored and partially rebuilt in the 19th century English Heritage has listed it at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance Services for the parish continue and also cover the parishes of St Giles Shermanbury and St Peter s Woodmancote which form its united benefice St Peter s ChurchThe church from the south50 55 56 N 0 16 35 W 50 9323 N 0 2764 W 50 9323 0 2764LocationChurch Lane Henfield West Sussex BN5 9NYCountryUnited KingdomDenominationChurch of EnglandWebsitehenfield wbr orgHistoryStatusParish churchFounded770DedicationSaint PeterArchitectureFunctional statusActiveHeritage designationGrade II Designated15 March 1955Years builtEarly 13th centuryAdministrationProvinceCanterburyDioceseChichesterArchdeaconryHorshamDeaneryRural Deanery of HurstParishHenfieldClergyVicar s Paul DoickAssistant priest s Christina BennettAsst Curate s Harriet Neale Stevens Contents 1 History 2 Related buildings 3 Architecture and fittings 4 Stained glass 5 Today 6 See also 7 References 8 Works cited 9 External linksHistory editThe ground of the parish of Henfield is mostly composed of Weald clay but towards the centre of the parish are low ridges of plateau gravel lying on Lower Greensand On one of these near the old road that ran from Eatons near Ashurst to Hurstpierpoint stands the church of St Peter rather to the north west of most of the village s older buildings The first St Peter s Church probably built on the same spot was founded by thegn Waerbald and his wife Tidburg to whom Osmund king of Sussex granted 15 hides of land for that purpose in the year 770 1 2 It has been suggested that this church was a minster i e that it held a community of clergymen but this remains a disputed point 3 The 15 hides granted by Osmund can presumably be identified with the lands which appear after the Conquest as Stretham or Henfield manor Oreham manor Henfield park and the rectory estate The early history of Stretham manor consisting of the church itself and most of the southern and central parts of Henfield parish along with outlying parts in neighbouring parishes shows the close connection between St Peter s Henfield and its bishops By 1066 Stretham manor was the property of the bishopric of Selsey and in 1086 Domesday Book records it as belonging to the bishopric of Chichester to which the see had been moved in 1075 4 5 The bishops of Chichester kept a house on this estate which in the later Middle Ages served as Henfield s main courthouse A farmhouse comprising one wing of the original house still survives under the name Stretham Manor 4 6 7 A vicarage was ordained in 1219 by which date the rectory had become a prebend of Chichester Cathedral further strengthening the links between St Peter s and its see 3 The Saxon church survived at least as late as Domesday Book but nothing now remains of it 8 Perhaps around 1200 1220 and certainly no later than 1250 it had been replaced by a simple nave and chancel built of Caen stone a kind of Middle Jurassic limestone quarried in Normandy 9 10 11 12 The chancel arch from this building can still be seen as can two lancet windows in what is now the vestry 13 Two aisles to north and south were built later in the 13th century and in the 14th century the porch and the arches separating the nave from the aisles were added There was much further building in the 15th century the tower a westward extension of the nave and north of the chancel a new chapel known as the Parham chapel 14 This last may have been the work of Thomas Beckington Prebendary of Henfield from 1438 to 1443 15 In 1530 the dedication of the church which is usually given as being to St Peter was recorded as being to Sts Peter and Paul In 1627 two dormer windows were added to the north aisle those in the south aisle are of uncertain date but may be from the same period A gallery on the south side of the church is recorded as being in place in 1718 14 St Peter s and one of its churchwardens featured in a court case in 1607 involving the theft of a bell from St Leonard s Church Aldrington a parish church a few miles away 16 17 Aldrington parish was then depopulated and the church was ruinous and arrangements were made to sell its bell Although this arrived at St Peter s it did not travel to Henfield with the consent of the Aldrington parishioners the churchwarden admitted helping to steal it and the authorities at Henfield Church admitted that they had received 650 pounds 290 kg of bell material which was used to cast a new bell for the tower They agreed to pay compensation of 16 5s to Aldrington parish 16 17 The 19th century saw extensive rebuilding of the fabric of the church First of all the south aisle which had been said to be badly out of repair as early as 1637 was replaced before 1833 at the expense of the notable botanist William Borrer a local resident and a gallery was included for the use of schoolchildren In 1855 the tower was restored by an unknown architect 14 8 In 1870 and 1871 a large scale restoration was undertaken to the designs of the architects William Slater and Richard Carpenter Most of the walls were refaced with flint the chancel was lengthened eastward and raised in height a new south chancel chapel was built both aisles were entirely rebuilt the roof of the nave was opened up and new clerestory lancet windows installed 8 14 18 St Peter s Church was designated a Grade II listed building on 15 March 1955 19 Such buildings are defined as being particularly important and of more than special interest 20 In February 2001 it was one of 54 Grade II listed buildings and 1 028 listed buildings of all grades in the district of Mid Sussex 21 In 2008 a new stone floor was laid under floor heating installed and the 19th century pews were replaced with chairs 18 22 Related buildings edit nbsp Seen from the north east The prebend is recorded in 1341 as consisting of a house and garden with 60 acres of land About 1520 it became the property of the diocese but a few years later in 1533 it was leased for 80 years to Thomas Bishop lawyer to Bishop Robert Sherburne From him the lease passed first to his son Sir Thomas Bishop then to the second Thomas s younger son Henry Bishop Postmaster General of England who was temporarily deprived of it during the Commonwealth period 23 Parsonage House the successor of the original prebend house was built in the 16th century or earlier but was refronted in the 18th century it still stands in Church Street 24 A vicarage house appears in documents of 1481 1529 1636 and 1724 but the present vicarage was built c 1806 and enlarged c 1850 3 In 1812 a church school for boys was opened in Henfield Its successor St Peter s Church of England Primary School occupies buildings on the north west edge of the village which were built in 1957 and extended in 1983 25 An iron mission room capable of seating 60 was built on Oreham Common in 1891 but services there being very badly attended it was demolished before 1909 14 Architecture and fittings edit nbsp The church tower and some of the churchyard s 104 clipped yews The church of St Peter as it stands today consists of a nave with north and south aisles and transepts a chancel flanked by a chapel to the north and a vestry to the south a porch and a tower The nave dates from the 13th century though whether early or late is disputed The chancel arch though 13th century was rebuilt in the 19th The aisles and chancel are products of the 1870 1871 restoration 14 8 The 15th century Parham chapel is remarkable for its east window a lovely example of the Gothic style of Henry VI s reign 26 27 The tower is in a rather austere version of the Perpendicular style as grim Pevsner says as it would be in Northumberland 28 During the restoration work of 1870 1871 some murals were uncovered the most interesting of which found on the church s north wall was on a heraldic subject Medieval murals are quite common in Sussex churches but this one was dated as late as 1694 29 30 There was also formerly a painting of the Decalogue Creed and Lord s Prayer with cherubs and angels dating from 1897 which hung in the Parham chapel until the 1950s 31 The church s notable fittings include an octagonal font dated variously to the early 13th century or to the 15th century a 14th century iron bound chest and in the Parham chapel a reredos carved by Frank Ernest Howard with figures of the patron saints of the four countries of the United Kingdom 26 8 The chapel screen in the arch between the Parham chapel and the north aisle was executed by Frances E Allen in 1969 but it incorporates 15th century work There are eight 18th century bells said to give one of the best rings in the county 13 14 The plate is of a similar date consisting of a salver 1704 flagon 1732 chalice 1733 and two patens and an almsdish 1753 28 The modern kneelers illustrate in tapestry the animal and plant life of Henfield parish in almost 300 different designs 32 There are two brasses One in the vestry shows Ann Kenwellmersh d 1633 with her hand on the head of her nine year old grandson Menelab Rainsford d 1627 The other in the Parham chapel is of Thomas Bishop d 1559 the first of the family to lease the rectory 8 26 Also in the Parham chapel is a monument to Thomas s grandson Henry Bishop the Postmaster General Two memorial tablets inside the church on the right as you walk through the door from the porch name the 60 men of the parish who died in the First World War and the 14 who died in the Second World War 33 34 Stained glass edit nbsp The Mary Magdalene window St Peter s Church is notable for the quality of its stained glass 22 which includes work by some of the best known designers in late 19th century and early 20th century England In the north aisle the second window depicting Fortitude and Charity was produced c 1907 by the firm of James Powell and Sons and the first window St Luke and St Paul was designed by the Sussex artist Charles Eamer Kempe in 1903 35 The north transept s north window was made in 1928 by Kempe and Co after Kempe s death its east window Madonna and Child and St Nicholas with children by Frederick Charles Eden a Brighton man in 1935 35 36 In the Parham chapel the north window is full of local interest its five lights depicting Lancelot Andrewes St Richard of Chichester St Peter the dedicatee of the church St Wilfrid whom Gibbon called the Apostle of Sussex and St Augustine of Canterbury It was produced by Kempe and Co in 1920 35 37 The chapel s east window in four lights is a 1921 work by Geoffrey Fuller Webb 35 It shows the Captain of the Host of the Lord appearing to Joshua before Jericho Joshua 5 13 15 and St John the Divine writing about the Holy City 38 Between the chapel and the chancel are glass windows engraved with agricultural scenes which were installed in 1969 13 The five light east window of the chancel was designed by Kempe in 1874 or 1875 and shows a Nativity scene the Crucifixion and several saints 35 8 In the vestry which is kept locked is a striking quasi Art Nouveau depiction of Mary Magdalene over the text She hath done what she could Mark 14 8 It was produced by Lowndes and Drury to a design attributed by one authority to Mary Lowndes by another to Isobel Lilian Gloag According to the art historian Peter Cormack it was designed by Gloag and painted by Lowndes 22 8 28 An adjoining office also locked has the oldest stained glass in the church a depiction of Jesus preaching the Sermon on the Mount installed in 1872 Its style suggests it is the work of Clayton and Bell The three light south transept window St Oswald St George and St Edmund is by Kempe and Co 1916 The south aisle s first window by Charles Eamer Kempe 1898 shows the Annunciation The second window designed by Mary Lowndes and produced by James Powell and Sons in 1891 is on the theme Suffer the little children to come unto me Mark 10 14 Finally the west window which is not accessible to the public depicts St Michael St George and St Raphael It was made in 1896 and is once again the work of Charles Eamer Kempe 35 Today editSince 1978 St Peter s Henfield has formed part of the united benefice of Henfield with Shermanbury and Woodmancote but it remains a distinct parish 3 The parish is served by a vicar an assistant priest and an assistant curate Holy Communion is celebrated on Sunday at 10 00 a m sometimes with the Book of Common Prayer liturgy and sometimes with Common Worship except on the first Sunday of every month when there is a family friendly service without Communion 22 There are also sometimes services earlier on Sunday morning and at 6 30 on Sunday evening Holy Communion is celebrated on Wednesday at 10 30 a m and on Thursday at 7 15 p m and services are regularly conducted in two local care homes 39 The church is open to visitors every day from 8 00 a m to 6 00 p m 22 See also editGrade II listed buildings in West Sussex List of places of worship in Horsham DistrictReferences edit Hudson 1987 pp 133 135 Event Osmund 2 granting land to Waerbald 2 and Tidburg 2 at Prosopography of Anglo Saxon England a b c d Hudson 1987 p 155 a b Hudson 1987 pp 140 141 Fryde E B Greenway D E Porter S Roy I eds 1986 Handbook of British Chronology 3rd ed London Offices of the Royal Historical Society p 272 ISBN 0861931068 Retrieved 12 August 2017 Historic England Stretham Manor Henfield 1286392 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 12 August 2017 Nairn amp Pevsner 1973 p 240 a b c d e f g h Allen 2017 Page William ed 1907 The Victoria History of the County of Sussex Volume 2 London Constable p 372 Retrieved 12 August 2017 Whiteman amp Whiteman 1994 p 82 Pe 2006 pp 72 74 Building Stones of London Discovering Geology British Geological Survey 2017 Retrieved 12 August 2017 a b c Pe 2006 p 74 a b c d e f g Hudson 1987 p 156 W H G 1938 39 Sussex Church Plans XLV St Peter Henfield Sussex Notes and Queries 7 86 Retrieved 12 August 2017 a b Middleton 1979 p 191 a b Middleton 2003 vol 12 p 99 a b Barwick 2017 Historic England The parish church of St Peter Henfield 1027400 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 12 August 2017 Listed buildings Historic England Retrieved 13 August 2017 Images of England Statistics by County Images of England Historic England 2014 Archived from the original on 6 December 2009 Retrieved 13 August 2017 a b c d e Anon 2017 Hudson 1987 pp 140 142 Historic England Parsonage House Henfield 1027405 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 12 August 2017 St Peter s C of E Primary School St Peter s Church Henfield with St Giles Shermanbury and St Peter s Woodmancote 2017 Retrieved 13 August 2017 a b c Mee 1971 pp 104 105 Turner 1871 p 212 a b c Nairn amp Pevsner 1973 p 239 Turner 1871 pp 212 213 Vigar John E 1986 Exploring Sussex Churches Gillingham Meresborough p 83 ISBN 0948193093 Beevers David Marks Richard Roles John 1989 Sussex Churches amp Chapels Brighton The Royal Pavilion Art Gallery amp Museums p 92 ISBN 0948723114 Whiteman amp Whiteman 1994 p 83 St Peters Church Tablet WW1 War Memorials Register Imperial War Museums 2017 Retrieved 13 August 2017 St Peters Church Tablet WW2 War Memorials Register Imperial War Museums 2017 Retrieved 13 August 2017 a b c d e f Anon n d Allen John 2017 Architects amp Artists D E Sussex Parish Churches Retrieved 13 August 2017 Gibbon Edward 1797 History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Volume the Sixth London A Strahan T Cadell and W Davies p 396 Retrieved 13 August 2017 Mee 1971 p 104 Benefice of Henfield with Shermanbury and Woodmancote PDF St Peter s Church Henfield with St Giles Shermanbury and St Peter s Woodmancote 2013 Retrieved 11 August 2017 Works cited editAllen John 2017 Henfield St Peter Sussex Parish Churches Retrieved 12 August 2017 Anon n d Stained Glass Windows at St Peter Henfield Sussex Church Stained Glass Windows Retrieved 12 August 2017 Anon 2017 St Peter s Henfield A Church Near You The Archbishops Council Retrieved 11 August 2017 Barwick Alan 2017 St Peter s Church Henfield The Parish Magazine Henfield Hub Retrieved 11 August 2017 Hudson T P ed 1987 The Victoria History of the County of Sussex Volume 6 Part 3 Bramber Rape North Eastern Part Including Crawley New Town Oxford Oxford University Press for the Institute of Historical Research ISBN 0197227686 Retrieved 11 August 2017 Mee Arthur 1971 1964 Linnell C L S ed Sussex The King s England London Hodder and Stoughton ISBN 0340001054 Middleton Judy 1979 A History of Hove Chichester Phillimore amp Co ISBN 0 85033 325 3 Middleton Judy 2003 The Encyclopaedia of Hove amp Portslade Brighton Brighton amp Hove Libraries Nairn Ian Pevsner Nikolaus 1973 1965 Sussex The Buildings of England Harmondsworth Penguin ISBN 0140710280 Pe Diana 2006 Mid Sussex Church Walks PP Pe Publishing ISBN 0954369025 Turner Edward 1871 Archaeological Miscellanies Sussex Archaeological Collections 23 doi 10 5284 1086634 Whiteman Ken Whiteman Joyce 1994 Ancient Churches of Sussex Brighton Roedale ISBN 0952256002 External links edit nbsp Media related to St Peter s Church Henfield at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Peter 27s Church Henfield amp oldid 1082085055, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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