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St Peter's Collegiate Church

St Peter's Collegiate Church is located in central Wolverhampton, England. For many centuries it was a chapel royal and from 1480 a royal peculiar, independent of the Diocese of Lichfield and even the Province of Canterbury. The collegiate church was central to the development of the town of Wolverhampton, much of which belonged to its dean. Until the 18th century, it was the only church in Wolverhampton and the control of the college extended far into the surrounding area, with dependent chapels in several towns and villages of southern Staffordshire.

St Peter's Collegiate Church, Wolverhampton
St Peter's Collegiate Church
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipHigh Church
WebsiteSt Peter's Collegiate Church
History
DedicationSaint Peter
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseLichfield
ParishCentral Wolverhampton
Clergy
RectorVacant
Laity
Reader(s)Clare Whitney
Organist/Director of musicCallum Alger
Organist(s)Elli-Mae McGlone (Organ Scholar), Toby Barnard (Assistant Organist), Dr. David Rendell (Organist Emeritus) & Peter Morris (Organist Emeritus)
Churchwarden(s)Deborah Castle

Fully integrated into the diocesan structure since 1848, today St Peter's is part of the Anglican Parish of Central Wolverhampton. The Grade I listed building, much of which is Perpendicular in style, dating from the 15th century, is of significant architectural and historical interest. Although it is not a cathedral, it has a strong choral foundation in keeping with English Cathedral tradition. The Father Willis organ is of particular note: a campaign to raise £300,000 for its restoration was launched in 2008. Restoration began in 2018.[1]

History Edit

 
A Wolverhampton Civic Society blue plaque in the south porch summarises the history of the church.
 
Shaft of Anglo-Saxon cross, attributed to the 9th century, to the south of the church. Although often said to belong to an early Mercian monastery on the site, there is no evidence of such a building. The cross is as likely to have been a preaching cross from the period before the church existed.
 
Statue of Wulfrun bearing her charter, on the church steps, by Charles Wheeler
 
Tablet commemorating Wulfrun's bequest in the south porch

St Peter's is an Anglo-Saxon foundation. The history of St Peter's was dominated for centuries by its collegiate status, from the 12th century constituted as a dean and prebendaries, and by its royal connections, which were crystallised in the form of the Royal Peculiar in 1480. Although a source of pride and prosperity to both town and church, this institutional framework, hard-won and doggedly defended, made the church subject to the whims of the monarch or governing elite and unresponsive to the needs of its people. Characterised by absenteeism and corruption through most of its history, the college was involved in constant political and legal strife, and it was dissolved and restored a total of three times, before a fourth and final dissolution in 1846-8 cleared the way for St Peter's to become an active urban parish church and the focus of civic pride.

994–1066: Origins and endowments Edit

Wulfrun's charter Edit

There is some doubt about the origins of the College of Wolverhampton. The most important item of evidence is a charter, alleged by an anonymous history of the Diocese of Lichfield to have been discovered around 1560 in ruderibus muri, "in the ruins of a wall."[2] The story of its discovery and its subsequent disappearance has cast doubt on the authenticity of the charter.[3] It is known from a transcription made by William Dugdale in 1640,[4] when the original was in the library at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, and included in his famous survey, Monasticon Anglicanum.[5] Sigeric, Archbishop of Canterbury, confirms Lady Wulfrun's endowment of a Minster at Hampton. The original grant by Wulfrun, partly Latin and partly Old English, is quoted in the charter. A translation begins:

I, Wulfrun, do grant to the proper patron and high-throned King of Kings, and (in honour of) the everlasting Virgin mother of God, Mary, and of all the saints, for the body of my husband, and of my soul, ten hides of land, to that aforesaid monastery of the servants of God there, and in another convenient place another ten hides for the offences of Wulfgeat my kinsman lest he should hear in the judgment to be dreaded from the severe Judge, "Go away from me, I hungered and thirsted," and so on. Because he is blessed who shall eat bread in the kingdom of God. Finally now my sole daughter, Elfthryth, has migrated from the world to the life-giving airs. For the third time I have granted 10 hides to the almighty God, with ineffable charity, more willingly than the others (Which are surrounded by these territories). These are the boundaries of the land that Wulfrun has given to the minster in Hamtun and the names of the towns that this privilegium refers to:
First of Earn-leie and Eswick and Bilsetna-tun and Willan-hale and Wodnesfeld and Peoleshale and Ocgingtun and Hiltun and Hagenthorndun and Kynwaldes-tun (Kinvaston) and another Hiltune and Feotherstun.[6]

The charter then defines the boundaries of the estates given by Wulfrun in considerable detail. Some of the places named are fairly easy to recognise from their modern or medieval forms: Arley, Bilston, Willenhall, Wednesfield, Pelsall, Ogley Hay, Hilton, Hatherton, Kinvaston, Featherstone. Others raise problems. These were discussed in the notes to a collection of Anglo-Saxon charters prepared for publication by C. G. O. Bridgeman in 1916, and his conclusions have been generally accepted. These include the identification of Eswick as Ashwood, Staffordshire, as it was Haswic in the Domesday Book, and of the second Hilton as a village of that name near Ogley and Wall, Staffordshire.[7] The ten hides of land at Wolverhampton were probably those which Wulfrun herself had received from Ethelred II by a charter of 985.[8][9] These were specified as ix uidelicet in loco qui dicitur aet Heantune, et aeque unam manentem in eo loco quae Anglice aet Treselcotum uocitatur ("nine plainly in the place which is called Hampton and equally the remaining one in the place called by the English Trescott"):[10] the latter is a place on the River Smestow to the west of Wolverhampton. The Arley lands probably came from a grant which King Edgar the Peaceful had made to Wulfgeat, a relative of Wulfrun, in 963.[11][12] In 1548, before the alleged discovery of Wulfrun's charter, Edgar himselfwas generally accepted as the founder of the College.[13] Wulfgeat was an important adviser to Ethelred, a king who proverbially, as the Unready or Redeless, did not accept good advice: he fell into disgrace[14] and Wulfrun's grants were partly to make amends for his perceived injustices. When Wulfgeat died in about 1006, he left four oxen to the church at Heantune.[15]

Heantun church Edit

The church was originally dedicated to St Mary and this was still the dedication at the Domesday survey:[16][17] It was switched to St Peter, probably in the mid-12th century: an escheator's inquisition in 1393 recalled that it was still St Mary's when Henry I (1100–35) granted a small estate to set up a chantry for himself and his parents.[18] It seems likely that the College always consisted of secular clergypriests who did not belong to a religious order, rather than monks.[19] A writ attributed to King Edward the Confessor (1042–1066) refers to the College as "my priests at Hampton." Although the document is known to be a forgery, probably dating from a century later, the secular character of the chapter seems to have been accepted unchallenged, despite the implication in the foundation charter that it might be a monastery. All of the Domesday entries relating to the church of Wolverhampton refer to clergy, canons or priests, never monks. There is no evidence that a monastery ever existed at Wolverhampton.

A college was not originally an educational institution but rather a body of people with a shared purpose, in this case a community of priests charged with pastoral care over a wide and wild area. Wulfruna's was far from unique, even in its locality. The collegiate church of St Michael at nearby Penkridge pre-dated Wulfruna's church, probably by about half a century.[20] Frank Stenton pointed out that Old English word mynster was often used as a word for churches served by such communities of priests and does not necessarily indicate that a community was made up of monks, although it is derived from the Latin monasterium.[21] Rather than conventional parishes, substantial areas in Anglo-Saxon England were served by groups of priests who replicated the bishop's cathedral chapter in which they had been trained by working in community. These were generally not monastic houses in the full sense. Ethelred II did decree clerical celibacy for such bodies, in an effort them more monastic in character, but without success.[22] Richard A. Fletcher noted that in this period of renewed Viking activity there were numerous "communities of clergy at which reformers looked askance but which very probably made a significant if unobtrusive contribution to the Christianization of Anglo-Scandinavian England."[23] In some cases, like that of Ripon Cathedral, former monasteries were revived as collegiate churches. At least one, Stow Minster in Lincolnshire, benefited greatly from the generosity of another Mercian noblewoman, Godgifu or Lady Godiva.[24] Wulfrun's foundation belonged firmly in this wave of lay foundations. By Domesday Wolverhampton and Penkridge had been joined by St Mary's Church, Stafford[25] and St Michael's at Tettenhall.[26]

1066–1135: Norman conquest and its consequences Edit

It is not clear when the College began to have a close connection with the Crown, although this was to become a defining characteristic, which shaped much of its history. The forged letter of Edward the Confessor is meant to point to just such a close relationship, but we know it dates from a century later, after the church had Wolverhampton had passed through a series of difficulties which it probably wanted to resolve permanently. Some of these stemmed from the Norman Conquest, which brought considerable disruption to Staffordshire's collegiate churches. Wolverhampton's was given by William the Conqueror to his own personal chaplain, Samson.

The following table summarises information in the Domesday Book relating to locations that were or had been holdings of the canons of Wolverhampton. The information is derived from the relevant facsimile page at Open Domesday[29] and the translation at the University of Hull's Hydra Repository.[30]

Map this section's coordinates in "St Peter's Collegiate Church" using: OpenStreetMap
Lands at Domesday
Phillimore reference no. Location Ploughlands Lord in 1066 Tenant-in-chief 1087 Slaves Villeins Smallholders Free men Approximate geographical reference
STS 7,1 Wolverhampton 3 Canons of Wolverhampton Samson the chaplain 14 6 30 52°35′13″N 2°07′41″W / 52.5869°N 2.1280°W / 52.5869; -2.1280 (Wolverhampton)
STS 7,2 Upper Arley 6 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 2 7 3 3 52°25′16″N 2°20′38″W / 52.42118°N 2.34384°W / 52.42118; -2.34384 (Upper Arley)
STS 7,2 Arley 1 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton but Osbern Fitz Richard had taken it by force 4 52°25′16″N 2°20′38″W / 52.42118°N 2.34384°W / 52.42118; -2.34384 (Arley)
STS 7,3 Bushbury ½ Wulfric William Fitz-Ansculf 1 52°37′12″N 2°06′51″W / 52.6199°N 2.1141°W / 52.6199; -2.1141 (Bushbury)
STS 7,4 Trescott ½ Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 1 52°34′08″N 2°13′21″W / 52.5689°N 2.2225°W / 52.5689; -2.2225 (Trescott)
STS 7,5 Tettenhall Edward the Confessor William the Conqueror, who had given its as a free grant to Tettenhall church 1 3 52°35′55″N 2°09′45″W / 52.5986°N 2.1626°W / 52.5986; -2.1626 (Tettenhall)
STS 7,6 Ashwood, Staffordshire 8, but waste because part of the royal forest Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 52°29′18″N 2°11′46″W / 52.4883°N 2.196°W / 52.4883; -2.196 (Ashwood)
STS 7,7 Wednesfield 3 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 6 6 52°35′59″N 2°05′01″W / 52.5997°N 2.0835°W / 52.5997; -2.0835 (Wednesfield)
STS 7,8 Willenhall 1 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 3 5 52°35′03″N 2°03′00″W / 52.5842°N 2.0500°W / 52.5842; -2.0500 (Willenhall)
STS 7,9 Pelsall 1 but waste Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 52°37′32″N 1°58′16″W / 52.6255°N 1.9711°W / 52.6255; -1.9711 (Pelsall)
STS 7,10 Hilton 1 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 2 4 52°38′54″N 1°52′51″W / 52.6483°N 1.8807°W / 52.6483; -1.8807 (Hilton)
STS 7,11 Ogley Hay Waste Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 52°38′52″N 1°55′30″W / 52.6478°N 1.9250°W / 52.6478; -1.9250 (Ogley Hay)
STS 7,12 Hatherton 2 Canons of Wolverhampton Samson the chaplain, who let the land to the priests Edwin and Alric 1 3 7 Man-at-arms 52°41′24″N 2°03′57″W / 52.6900°N 2.0659°W / 52.6900; -2.0659 (Hatherton)
STS 7,13 Kinvaston 1 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 3 3 52°42′32″N 2°08′10″W / 52.709°N 2.136°W / 52.709; -2.136 (Kinvaston)
STS 7,15 Hilton 2 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 1 1 1 52°38′47″N 2°04′29″W / 52.6465°N 2.0748°W / 52.6465; -2.0748 (Hilton)
STS 7,15 Featherstone Waste Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 52°38′56″N 2°05′57″W / 52.6490°N 2.0992°W / 52.6490; -2.0992 (Featherstone)
STS 12,1 Sedgley Woodland Ælfgar, Earl of Mercia William Fitz-Ansculf 52°32′41″N 2°07′42″W / 52.5447°N 2.1283°W / 52.5447; -2.1283 (Sedgley)
WOR 13,1 Lutley ? Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 2 2 1 52°26′46″N 2°05′18″W / 52.446°N 2.0882°W / 52.446; -2.0882 (Lutley)
STS 1,4 Bilston 4 King Edward King William 8 3 52°34′00″N 2°04′31″W / 52.5666°N 2.0753°W / 52.5666; -2.0753 (Bilston)

Domesday shows a variable situation of retreat and advance for the canons of Wolverhampton. They no longer held Wolverhampton itself as tenants-in-chief but as tenants of Samson.[16] No holdings of the canons are mentioned at Bilston, either before of after the Conquest: the whole of Bilston now belonged to the king himself.[31] Other lands he had let out to other priests: certainly Hatherton,[32] although the Victoria County History includes, while Open Domesday does not, Kinvaston,[33] Hilton[34] and Featherstone.[35] At Arley, some of their land had been seized forcibly by one Osbern Fitz Richard.[36] On the other hand, even before the Conquest, they had acquired an estate at Lutley, Worcestershire, and they claimed woodland at Sedgeley: neither of these was in Wulfrun's grant.

At Wolverhampton, the canons' land was cultivated by 14 slaves, alongside 36 other peasants.[16] The church also had slaves at Upper Arley. The expansion of the royal forests, hunting grounds for the king and his retainers, had hit the region hard and Wolverhampton was almost surrounded, with the Forest of Kinver up to its southern edge, and the Forest of Brewood and Cannock Chase to the north. This took substantial areas out of agricultural production, making them almost valueless to the canons: there were five hides at Ashwood now subsumed into the Forest of Kinver, for example. Despite the direct royal patronage and the close attention of the royal chaplain, the Conquest had brought considerable setbacks for the canons.

 
Seal of Henry I, an important benefactor of St Peter's

Samson was elected Bishop of Worcester on 8 June 1096.[37] He may have been previously in only minor orders, as he had to be ordained a priest the day before his consecration. He became notorious, despite his vow of clerical celibacy, as the father of at least three children, two of whom later became bishops. During the reign of Henry I, he donated the church at Wolverhampton to his cathedral priory at Worcester, although its lands and privileges were protected.[38] Henry I himself made a very substantial grant to Wolverhampton church to establish his chantry there: a house with forty acres of land and rents worth £20 a year.[18]

1135–89: Anarchy and after Edit

 
Tomb in Salisbury Cathedral, thought to be that of Roger of Salisbury

However, The Anarchy, the confused civil strife of King Stephen's reign, brought great challenges. First the church was seized by Roger, Bishop of Salisbury.[39] Roger had risen to be Lord Chancellor and Henry I's chief minister and had vowed to support the succession of the Empress Matilda, Henry I's daughter and chosen heir.[40] He broke his word on Henry's death, citing her marriage to Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, as justification. His support was initially crucial in allowing Stephen to consolidate his rule after his coup d'état of 1135, and he used his influence to extend his property, building a powerful political clique that included his nephews, Nigel, Bishop of Ely and Alexander, Bishop of Lincoln. Stephen felt threatened by his over-mighty Chancellor and moved against him on 24 October 1139. Provoked into a brawl at the king's court at Oxford, Roger and his family were disgraced and dispossessed. He lost the church at Wolverhampton and its lands, along with much else, and died in December. At Oxford, in 1139 or 1140, Stephen granted Wolverhampton church to Roger de Clinton, described as Bishop of Chester and Lichfield Cathedral.[41] He also issued a writ of intendence, calling on all the clergy, laity and tenants to transfer their loyalty to Bishop Roger.[42]

The canons were outraged at this betrayal of trust, which left them at the mercy of a powerful magnate in their own vicinity, and appealed to Pope Eugenius III. It is notable that around this time the dedication was changed to St Peter, which would be a flattering move in negotiations with Rome. Occasionally thereafter it was described as the Church of St Peter and St Paul.[43] Whatever dedication is given, the church's seals generally picture both saints.[44] Despite the briefness of the interlude under Lichfield, the impact of Bishop Roger de Clinton and his chapter of secular clergy at Lichfield may have been considerable. The diocese had three centres: Coventry, Chester and Lichfield. As the other centres were so heavily involved in the military action of Stephen's reign, it seems that Clinton gave renewed emphasis to the religious role of Lichfield, re-establishing it as the headquarters of his see.[45] It seems that he reorganised Lichfield's chapter on a prebendal model in order to counterbalance the monastic chapter at Coventry[46] and using Rouen Cathedral as his model.[47] At some time in the mid-12th century, probably under the control of Lichfield, Wolverhampton was reorganised along similar lines, with a dean and prebendaries.[48] King Stephen restored Wolverhampton church to Worcester priory by 1152, perhaps as early as 1144. In his concession, he described himself as prius inconsulte – previously ill-advised.[49]

 
Effigy of Henry II at Fontevraud Abbey

Stephen was forced to agree that he would be succeeded by Matilda's son, Henry Plantagenet, at that time already Duke of Normandy and Duke of Aquitaine. Even before he succeeded to the throne, Henry issued a charter in which he described the church at Wolverhampton as "my chapel", restored all its privileges from the time of Henry I, and recognised it as free from secular taxation.

As soon as he came to the throne in 1154 as Henry II, he issued another charter recognising the right of the canons to hold a manorial court.[52] Neither of these charters explicitly stated Wolverhampton was not subject to the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Lichfield, but the king had clearly asserted a special relationship with the Crown, recognising the church at Wolverhampton as a royal chapel. It was probably Henry II who appointed Peter of Blois as Dean of Wolverhampton: he is the first dean whose name is known. Peter was a Latin poet, lawyer and a diplomat of considerable experience. He had been tutor to William II of Sicily, one of the most cultivated rulers of his time, and Henry had brought him into his circle of close supporters when he was under extreme pressure because of the murder of Thomas Becket and ruptures in the royal family.[53] It is not clear when Peter was appointed to the position at Wolverhampton, but he outlived his royal patron, entering a period of relative disfavour under Richard I.

1189–1224: Dissolution and restoration Edit

By the time Peter of Blois was appointed, the College was organised as a community of prebendaries, headed by a dean. Peter seems to have taken little interest in his Wolverhampton deanery until after the death of Henry II: he had numerous other benefices and was heavily involved in Archbishop Baldwin's prolonged feud with his own cathedral chapter, spending a year away, arguing Baldwin's case at the Papal Curia in 1187-88.[53]

The earliest extant evidence of any interest Wolverhampton is a letter he wrote to the Chancellor, William Longchamp, to denounce the “tyranny of the Sheriff of Stafford[54] who was, he complained, trampling on the church's ancient privileges and oppressing the townspeople. The letter was well-calculated to win sympathy, as the sheriff was Hugh Nonant, Bishop of Coventry, an enemy of Longchamp because he supported the Prince John, the regent. It must have been written in 1190-1, as Longchamp's ascendancy dates from mid-1190 and he was forced to leave the country in October 1191.[55] Although he championed the church against outsiders, Peter considered the prebendaries corrupt. He wrote a stinging rebuke to Robert of Shrewsbury who held one of the Wolverhampton prebends and sought to retain it after he was elected Bishop of Bangor.[56]

 
King John from a medieval manuscript of Historia Anglorum

Around 1202, Peter resigned his post and put forward a revolutionary plan from outside. In a letter to Pope Innocent III, Peter denounced the college as composed of a clique, so closely and notoriously intermarried that no-one was able to prise them apart. As they were incorrigible, a complete reform was necessary.[57] With the assent of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the king, a Cistercian monastery could be established, as the area abounded in the woods, meadows and waters[58] needed by this ascetic French order dedicated to a radical and literal interpretation of the Benedictine Rule. Peter did persuade Archbishop Hubert Walter and King John of the advantages of his plan and it received royal assent early in 1203. It appears that John had already appointed one Nicholas to the deanery, left vacant by Peter's resignation.[59] This Nicholas appeared as Dean of Wolverhampton when he was taken to court in September 1203 by Elias Fitz Philip in a property case involving an estate at Kinvaston.[60] Shortly afterwards, he appears in court again, shorn of his title, as plain Nicholas de Hamton,[61] and later again under the same designation, when it is specified that the dispute is over one virgate of land.[62] It appears that this marks his loss of the deanery, in line with the king's decision to wind up the college of Wolverhampton..

Early in 1204 John transferred the deanery and prebends to the archbishop in order for him to establish a monastery, which should pray for souls of the king and his ancestors after death, as well as in their lifetimes. He dispensed with Forest law and exactions for these properties.[63] On 28 July 1204 John also granted the manor of Wolverhampton: his charter suggests that there were already Cistercian monks waiting there in readiness.[64] On 31 May 1205 at Portchester John granted the vill of Tettenhall.[65] These were additional to the deanery and prebends and represented a further level of security in possession of the estates: the Pipe rolls show that in 1203/4 Hubert Walter had already drawn an income of 20 shillings per quarter or £4 a year from Tettenhall,[66] while in 1204/5 he received the same from Tettenhall (but in three instalments) and 33 shillings quarterly or £6 12s. for the year from Wolverhampton.[67] On 1 June 1205, still at Portchester, John issued a charter transferring to Archbishop Hubert woodland at Kingsley in Kinver Forest, which was close to Tettenhall, this time specifying that it was for the construction of a Cistercian monastery: once again, it was dispensed from Forest law and customs.[68] John also had a full charter drafted, granting in perpetual alms "the deanery, prebends and whole manor of Wolverhampton, the wood of Kingsley and the vill of Tettenhall and all their parts."[69] The scheme also received the reforming Innocent III's approval, which was still in force when Archbishop Hubert Walter died on 13 July 1205.[70]

Immediately everything was reversed. The draft charter of liberties was marked as cancelled because of archbishop's death.[69] John had changed his mind completely and on 5 August 1205, only three weeks after the archbishop's death, he appointed a replacement dean of Wolverhampton: Henry, the son of his Chief Justiciar, Geoffrey Fitz Peter, 1st Earl of Essex.[71] Abandoning any pretence of reform, the terms of Henry's appointment specified that he was to hold the deanery with its liberties and honours exactly as his predecessors. Well-connected to all the centres of power in the kingdom, he seems to have held the post of dean for nearly two decades. It is often claimed that the new church was begun early in the 13th century,[72] probably during the interregnum, meaning that it would have been constructed largely under Henry. However, the building's Historic England listing now suggests that the earliest part of the present building, the crossing and south transept, date from the late 13th century.[73]

1224–1300: Disputes and prosperity Edit

Giles de Erdington Edit

Giles of Erdington, who became Dean of St Peter's around 1224, was a talented lawyer and was already set on a career that would make him one of Henry III's most eminent judges,[74] a Justice of the Common Bench. He soon seized the opportunity afforded by the appointment of a new and inexperienced bishop, Alexander Stavensby, to make a formal deal with the Diocese of Lichfield. The dean's right to appoint and discipline the prebends was recognised. The bishop was to intervene only in the last resort, if the dean was not carrying out his functions. For his part, the dean recognised the bishop's right to be received with honour at St Peter's and to administer the sacraments there.[75] However the whole issue blew up again in 1260, when Erdington repelled an attempt by Bishop Roger de Meyland to hold a canonical visitation by getting a royal prohibition on 8 November "against any person attempting anything against the privileges of Giles de Erdinton, king's clerk, dean of Wolverhampton, or of the king's chapel of Wolverhampton, or of the canons or servitors there."[76] The prohibition cited a Papal rescript, issued at Lyon in 1245, that guaranteed the independence of royal chapels, which it characterised as ecclesiae Romanae immediate subjecta, directly subordinate to the Roman Church.[77] They were therefore immune even from excommunication and interdict pronounced at a lower level, which disarmed the local bishop in his dealings with them.

Erdington was equally vigorous in promoting the economic interests of the college. Sometimes this meant taking a firm line over local issues: in 1230 he literally raised a stink by taking legal action against a chaplain at Tettenhall over marshland at Codsall that was creating a health hazard.[78] Property agreements were carefully recorded, often by the device of a fine of lands, a conveyance registered by a fictional lawsuit. On 18 November 1236, for example, he was notionally sued for land at Kinvaston by Athelard: the two sides came to an agreement that Athelard's family would rent 1½ virgates from the dean and his successors for ½ mark annually.[79] To make clear the college's territorial sway, he had the boundaries walked ceremonially. In 1248, for example, the king ordered the sheriff to organise a perambulation with twelve knights near Codsall where the College's lands bordered the Oaken estate of Croxden Abbey.[80] Sometimes it was necessary to pursue offenders. In June 1253 the Dean and Chapter prosecute 39 local men who had entered the College's lands as an armed band, destroying fences and crops. None turned up in court and their sureties proved worthless, so the sheriff was ordered to take appropriate action.[81]

Erdington was concerned that the church benefit from the town's booming trade, which was based mainly on wool. In 1258 Erdington secured for the deanery the lucrative right to hold a "weekly market on Wednesaday at Wolverhampton, co. Stafford, and of a yearly fair there on the vigil and Feast of Saints Peter and Paul and the six days following,"[82] both of which took place thereafter at the foot of the church steps. Erdington took care to placate other local magnates who might take offence at the growth of Wolverhampton, foremost among them being Roger de Somery, lord of neighbouring Sedgley. Somery was an ambitious man who wanted to establish himself in a castle at Dudley[83] and had an interest in the town's future. In February 1261 the two sides came to a compromise. Erdington conceded various useful pieces of land, including 20 acres at Wolverhampton and roadside verges on the route through Ettingshall and Sedgley, in return for an annual rent of eight pounds of wax[84] – useful to the church with its constant need for candles. Somery accepted Erdington's market without challenge, on condition his own family, as well as the burgesses and villeins might travel to and from Wolverhampton without tolls.[85] In 1263 Erdington reinforced the position of his own burgesses by granting them the right to succeed to their burgages freely, on the same terms as those of Stafford.[86] He established a chaplain in the church, probably a chantry priest. In 1398 a Chantry of St Mary was mentioned when Thomas of Wrottesley was appointed to it by the king: this may have been Erdington's chantry.[87] Whatever the exemptions granted by earlier kings, it is clear that Wolverhampton and the other royal chapels in Staffordshire were paying secular taxation by this time: Wolverhampton's payment of 53s. 4d. towards the levy of a tenth was acknowledged in April 1268, along with similar sums from the chapels at Tettenhall, Stafford and Penkridge.[88]

Theodosius de Camilla Edit

The next dean was Theodosius de Camilla, an Italian cleric related to the powerful Fieschi family[89] of Genoa, and a cousin of Pope Adrian V.[90] He was appointed on 10 January 1269,[91] following Erdington's death. As early as 1218, It was roundly asserted at Lichfield Assizes that "the Church and Deanery of Wuvlrenehamtum is of the King's gift. Giles de Ardington holds it by gift of the present King."[92] However, in 1252, after Henry de Hastings perished in the Seventh Crusade, it was made clear that he had held the advowson of Wolverhampton deanery. Although the king was keen to assert his right, it seems likely that he was willing to sell or rent it if the need was great enough. However, the appointment of Theodosius was by the king himself. Moreover, the notification made clear that it included collation to the prebends – a potentially lucrative right.

 
Pope Adrian V (Ottobuono de' Fieschi)

Theodosius was just as vigorous as Erdington in defending the college, but his tenure began to demonstrate some of the disadvantages of royal appointment. He was a notorious pluralist and a career diplomat rather than a pastor. In 1274 he came into conflict with Canterbury over the issue and his rectory of Wingham, Kent sequestrated by the Dominican Archbishop Robert Kilwardby[93] until restored to him on the intervention of his cousin, Cardinal Ottobuono de' Fieschi.[90] In 1276 he had even obtained a dispensation from Pope John XXI allowing him to hold both Wingham and Wolverhampton, without need of residence or even ordination,[94] suggesting he was no more than a sub-deacon. The dispensation was conditional on his resigning two other benefices, one in the Diocese of Lincoln, the other York. No mention was ever made in this context of his prebends of Bartonsham in Hereford Cathedral[95] and Yetminster Prima in Salisbury Cathedral[89] His absences from the country on royal or personal business continued throughout his life. In February 1286 Edward I gave him letters to cover a visit to the Papal Curia and he appointed attorneys for his absence.[96] In September 1289, again going overseas, he appointed Andrew of Genoa his attorney for a year.[97] He was sent abroad again by the king in January 1291,[98] and nominated attorneys until Midsummer.[99]

Andrew of Genoa, was the main representative of Theodosius in and around Wolverhampton, his bailiff and proctor as well as his attorney. The deanery lands were exploited with great thoroughness. Around 1274, finding that tenants at Bilbrook had failed to pay their tallage or hand over their best pigs in return for pannage in the woods, the deanery simply seized their cattle on the road[100] and sat out their attempt to gain restitution.[101] In 1292 Andrew appeared in court for Theodosius as his bailiff in a dispute with the Abbot of Croxden over woodland at Oaken.[102] After getting the case postponed with ingenious arguments about the true pronunciation of the name of the place, he resorted to challenging the property boundary and the jury found against him. It seems that he was ruthless in extracting value from the dean's woodland. The exploitation was so intense that Roger Le Strange, the Justice in Eyre took deanery woods back into Cannock Chase for protection: this area was recovered in June 1293.[103] A writ for a full-scale inquisition into infractions of deanery and prebendal rights was issued later that year from Cambridge and it was held in Lichfield, with numerous issues rehearsed, particularly concerning woods and assarts around Hatherton, Wednesfield and Codsall.[104]

At least some of the prebendaries were royal servants with pressing obligations elsewhere, while some travelled widely abroad. Geoffrey of Aspall was keeper of the wardrobe to Queen Eleanor, responsible for her finances.[105] Theodosius collated at least three of his relatives to prebends. Edward de Camilla is known from a case in which Master Andrew was trying to recover £50 arrears for the farm of the deanery and Edward's prebend, which was let to a Wolverhampton entrepreneur:[106] the largely absentee dean and canons did not manage their own estates but lived on advance fees paid by the farmers. Another Theodosius of Camilla, a canon of Wolverhampton, made preparations for a two-year overseas trip in 1298, nominating Andrew as his attorney, three years after Dean Theodosius died.[107] Gregory of Camilla was setting off for Rome in July 1304.[108]

 
Effigy of John Peckham on his tomb in Canterbury Cathedral

Although he was seldom if ever present in Wolverhampton, the church was important enough to Theodosius for him to face down even the Archbishop of Canterbury in its defence. The Second Council of Lyons in 1274 denounced a number of abuses of which the prebendaries were plainly guilty, including non-residence and pluralism. The Franciscan Archbishop John Peckham was determined to bring the royal chapels to book. On 1 April 1280, while staying at Trentham Priory, he wrote a letter to the king, setting out clearly his intention to carry out a metropolitical visitation, against an explicit royal prohibition he had just received, and of backing it with excommunications where necessary.[109]

On 27 July 1280, Peckham appeared at the doors of St Peter's, which were shut against him. He was forced to write to the dean and canons from the church cemetery, noting that "Tedisius of Camilla, who calls himself dean," was apparently overseas.[110] He threatened them all with excommunication and summoned the prebendaries to meet him on 31 July. However, the canons of all the royal chapels in the diocese ignored him and on 11 November the sentences of excommunication were confirmed.[111] On 13 December Peckham appointed Philip of St Austell, a cleric on his own staff, to complete the visitation.[112] In February 1281 he wrote to the king to reiterate and to justify the sentences:[113] apparently he was already feeling the force of royal censure. The pressure on Peckham seems to have been building, as he was compelled to write to the Bishop of Dublin, who was dean of Penkridge, and at least twice more to the king, arguing his case,[114] which rested on his own interpretation of the precedent of Archbishop Boniface. On 23 February he wrote to Jordan, Bishop Meyland's official at Lichfield, warning him that it was a profanation of the sacrament to allow the excommunicated clerics to officiate at Mass.[115] However, only a day later he wrote to the king to inform him that he had postponed the excommunications, excepting those of the clergy at Penkridge, pending the calling of a Parliament.[116] Peckham agreed to allow the issue to be decided by a tribunal specially constituted for the purpose and on 21 May nominated the Dean of Arches as his proctor.[117] An agreement was reached the following month by which Bishop Meyland accepted that six of the chapels, including Wolverhampton, were beyond the reach of any ordinary, on condition that he be honourably received in them, as before.[118]

 
Pope Boniface VIII (Benedetto Caetani)

The archbishop's feud with Theodosius continued, however. He briefed his proctor in Rome for a campaign, stressing the dean's absenteeism and pluralism.[119] In 1282 Camilla was excommunicated and deprived of his Wingham rectory and the church at Tarring.[120] However, events began to move in his direction early in the following year, when Pope Martin IV ordered Peckham to restore the churches. His impunity was largely the result of his powerful contacts, including Benedetto Caetani, the future Pope Boniface VIII: Peckham wrote directly to him in an attempt to improve relations,[121] but without result. Theodosius then began to pursue Peckham and his associates, the incumbents of the disputed churches, through the ecclesiastical courts. After arguments at a tribunal, the sides agreed to arbitration by Bernard, Bishop of Porto, which resulted in a triumph for Theodosius. Peckham and his group were ordered to pay him and his successors a pension of 200 marks in compensation.[122] When he died in 1295, he was still Dean of Wolverhampton, despite all opposition.

Erdington and Theodosius brought St Peter's to its medieval peak of prosperity and influence, although its spiritual standards were already notorious. The economic well-being of the church was greatly improved by their unwillingness to pay tax. Theodosius was deriving 50 marks a year from the deanery by the 1290s,[123] but declared only 20 marks for tax purposes. The total taxable value of the church was reported in the Taxatio Ecclesiastica, compiled 1291-2, as only £54 13s. 4d. This included six prebends, which are named for the first time at this point: Featherstone, Willenhall, Wobaston, Hilton, Monmore, Kinvaston.[124] In addition there was the chantry of St Mary in Hatherton, which was shortly to become a seventh prebend.

1300–1480: Neglect and revival Edit

 
Medieval pulpit, probably mid-15th century, in the nave of the church. It is one of the best preserved of its period, with a full set of stone steps.
 
The intact carved lion on the balustrade of the pulpit

Dilapidation of fabric and alienation of land Edit

Philip of Everdon was appointed dean by Edward I on 15 September 1295.[125] In December 1302 he was warned by the king to revoke the collation of Ottobonus Malespania to a prebend by Papal provision.[126] The following month the king ordered the sheriff to defend the rights of Nicholas de Luvetot, whom Philip had previously collated to the prebend of Kinvaston, against the Italian claimant.[127] The incident seems to have marked a serious breach between king and dean. Further problems were to follow. While the 13th-century deans had been shrewd in business, enriching themselves through improvements to the church estates, their 14th-century successors would have struggled because of the economic crisis of the early 14th century and the ensuing Black Death. However, they frittered away the assets, and in some cases resorted to plain embezzlement. An underlying problem was the enclosure of waste for sale, which alienated it from the church's estates. On 1 May 1311 John of Everdon (1303–23) was licensed to enclose no less than 400 acres at Prestwood and Blakeley, on the edge of Wednesfield and inside Cannock Chase:[128] by 1322 he was selling off this land in fee simple to John Hampton. In 1323, after John's death, Edward II ordered the escheator to sequester lands that he had alienated without licence, "to the prejudice of the king and the peril of disherison of the deanery, whereat the king is much disturbed."[129] An inspeximus of 1376 revealed another of John's land sales in the area, and one dating from the time of Theodosius, but confirms both, "notwithstanding that the said plots were of the foundation of the said church, which is now called the king's free chapel of Wolvernehampton."[130]

Dean Hugh Ellis (1328–39) was suspected of giving away much of the stock of the deanery and left the buildings dilapidated. After his death Edward III ordered a thorough survey and inquiry by a commission of justices in the presence of his new dean, Philip de Weston.[131] A further commission in March 1340 added an investigation of the books, vestments and ornaments,[132] while in the following year the king opined that Ellis had "wasted the goods and possessions of the deanery, whereby the divine worship and works of piety of old established there have been withdrawn."[133] The report revealed great prodigality. A vast quantity of expensive cutlery, silverware, tableware, linen, precious stones, horses, livestock, even a relic of the True Cross, had been dispersed among friends and retainers or stolen from Hugh's custody. His own manse had fallen into serious disrepair, with defects in the walls, kitchen, part of the roof and farm buildings. Three cottages at Wednesfield had fallen into disrepair and been plundered for the materials. Oaks worth £10 had been felled and sold off at Pelsall. A mill and its pool were in disrepair. There were substantial tax arrears. However, the vestments and ornaments were not found defective.[134] Philip de Weston himself seems to have problems with one of his bailiffs, John Buffry, who failed to render account of his work and failed to appear in court at Michaelmas 1356.[135] It transpired that he had defrauded Weston and a chaplain of 55 marks. He was outlawed, surrendered himself and was confined in the Fleet Prison: the king pardoned him the following May.[136] The incompetence and waste seems to have infected many of the royal chapels in the region and in 1368 the king, noting that they were immune from ordinary jurisdiction, set up commissions to carry out visitations of Wolverhampton, St Mary's Church, Bridgnorth, Stafford, Tettenhall and St Mary's Church, Shrewsbury. He alleged alienation, poor estate management, loss of books and vestments, the dissolute lives of the canons, neglect of worship and almsgiving, and misappropriation of funds.[137] The visitation of Wolverhampton was headed by the Abbots of Halesowen and Evesham. In fact, Wolverhampton's deans had remained zealous in maintaining the college's rights and privileges, getting successive kings to confirm its charters,[138] if most of the other accusations were true.

Continued decay and emerging opposition Edit

After the king's visitation, the running of the church was much as before. Dean Richard Postell (1373–94) was careful of the church's liberties: in 1379 he obtained inspeximus and confirmation of letters patent of Edward III, a document that confirmed charters further back, to the time of Edward the Confessor.[139] However, an inquisition of 1393 found that he had dismissed the six priests funded by Henry I's grant to celebrate the liturgy and for 19 years he had diverted the income, amounting to £26 13s. 4d. annually, to his own uses.[18] It seems that he also embezzled money entrusted to him by prominent lay members of the congregation, Roger Leveson, John Salford and John Waterfall.[140] There were complaints and appeals to the king about the judicial functions of his officials,[141] with the cases being referred to the Archdeacon of Coventry for decision,[142][143] presumably because these were matters concerning marriage and family. Near the end of his life his exasperated tenants launched a rent strike.[144]

Lawrence Allerthorpe (1394–1406) continued to neglect the deanery. For his first three years of office he was also dean of St Mary's Stafford.[145] In September 1399 he was made a Baron of the Exchequer by Henry IV, who had seized power that year.[146] In February 1401 Archbishop Thomas Arundel sent delegates to carry out a visitation of St Peter's.[147] Allerthorpe objected but had to back down, probably as Arundel was a key pillar of the new régime. Allerthorpe certainly retained royal favour after the affair and on 31 May 1401 was appointed Lord High Treasurer,[148] a near-impossible job, given the disorder in the country and the low levels of royal receipts, as he made clear to the king later in the year.[149] At Michaelmas 1402 his attorney appeared in court to complain that a group of Wolverhampton people had attacked and torn down the refreshment stalls he maintained in the town,[150] perhaps enraged at a commercial monopoly enforced under spiritual excuses: the culprits did not appear and the case disappears from view. After Allerthorpe's death, rumours reached the king that great damage had been done to the deanery assets: the chancel was in disrepair and the estates and fences neglected. In July 1406 he set up an inquisition on the issue.[151] In 1410, when Dean Thomas Stanley died, a further inquisition into dilapidations was set up, although it was acknowledged that Allerthorpe's executors had made due allowance for repairs, which Stanley had pocketed.[152]

Lay initiatives Edit

Despite this neglect, there were still plenty of pious people prepared to make large donations and bequests to the church. There were two chantry chapels in the collegiate church, both well-endowed. One of these was St Mary's chapel, probably Erdington's. The other dated from 1311, when Henry of Prestwood paid 20s. for a licence to alienate in mortmain a toft or farmhouse, 30 acres of land and rents worth 13s. 4d. so that a chaplain might sing Mass for him daily in St Peter's.[153] To obtain the licence Henry had to attend an inquisition before the king's escheator, who was concerned to ensure that the king and the county suffered no unforeseen losses through the donation. This valued his gift at a total of 23s. 10d. per year.[154] Henry was not of the landowning class but a middling farmer, all of whose lands were held of the dean: after his donation he was left with 3 carucates of land, 30 acres of meadow and 40 acres of pasture at Wednesfield.

Lay donations played a major part in securing priests for the outlying areas of the parish. By establishing chantries, the donors ensured at least one daily act of worship would take place in each chapel. The chaplain at Pelsall was maintained by William la Kue's grant of a house, 60 acres and rents – worth 60s. 6d. per year in total – made two weeks after Henry of Prestwood's grant in 1311, and following an inquisition at Walsall.[155] At Willenhall services were sustained from a gift made by Richard Gervase: a house, 40 acres of land, four of meadow and a half share in a mill, altogether worth 40s. annually.[156] This was to support a chantry with one chaplain to celebrate Mass daily for the souls of Richard, his wife Felicia and all their relatives. After an inquisition in October 1327 at Wolverhampton, the king licensed the chantry on 14 February 1328.[157] Not until 1447 did Bilston acquire a similar chaplain, when Sir Thomas Erdington obtained a licence to found a chantry with one priest in the chapel of St Leonard and to grant land in mortmain to the chaplain up to the value of 40s. a year.[158]

A special lay body, the "wardens of the light", was founded in 1385 to tend a light in honour of St Peter.[159] A remarkable product of this lay piety was St Mary's Hospital — not a centre for medical treatment but an almshouse and chantry, established through the efforts of two wardens of the light: William Waterfall, a generous layman, and Clement Leveson, a chaplain at St Peter's.[160] On 4 August 1392, in return for five marks, they obtained a licence from Richard II to found a hospital for a chaplain and six poor people and to alienate to it in mortmain a messuage and three acres.[161] The following month Waterfall got permission to acquire for the hospital property and rents to the value of £10 per year.[162] Initially the residents were to pray for the founders and Joan Waterfall, William's wife. Further permissions were required from the lord of the manor of Stow Heath and from the dean. Hence, Hugh, Lord Burnell, a powerful marcher lord,[163] and Dean Lawrence Allerthorpe were added to the list of those for whom prayers were offered. The first recorded chaplain was John Pepard,[164] who seems to have given his name to the hospital, Pyper's Chapel. It was situated east of the town, just in the manor of Stowheath, bordering Can Lane to the east:[165] today this area is dominated by Wolverhampton bus station on Pipers Row.

Reversal of fortune Edit

The decline of the church and its estates, which stood in stark contrast to the flourishing of lay piety, was stemmed by two deans, whose work in the town roughly spans the Wars of the Roses and who showed at least a modicum of interest in the church. Dean John Barningham (1437–57), sometimes rendered Berningham, recommenced work on the church building soon after his appointment. On 1 July 1439 a royal commission was issued to John Hampton, Thomas Swynforton, William Leveson, James Leveson, John Mollesley, William Salford and Nicholas Leveson to quarry stone for the rebuilding from prebendal lands and supply it on reasonable terms.[166] It was this that led to the reshaping of the building in substantially its present form. Barningham was firm in ensuring records were available and people held to account. In 1441 he sued Nicholas Leveson to give up a bag of deeds and charters that belonged to the church.[167] Ten years later he sued his former bailiff, William Taillour, to render proper account of his term of office: Taillour did not appear, so the sheriff was ordered to arrest him and bring him to court during the Easter sessions.[168] However, Barningham had much else on his mind, as he was deeply involved in the affairs of the Diocese of York, as a key supporter of Archbishop John Kemp and a member of the chapter of York Minster. This had begun well before his appointment as Dean of Wolverhampton, when he was collated to the prebend of Wetwang in 1426.[169] In 1432 he was made Treasurer,[170] one of the key administrative officers of the cathedral and diocese. In 1435 he became a canon of Beverley Minster and in 1450 provost of its chapter.[171] He held numerous other benefices and became very wealthy. Even while dean of Wolverhampton, he was engaged from 1452 in a fruitless struggle to wrest the deanery of York from its holder.[172] His will of 29 March 1457 made bequests to the town and its people.

Barningham was as generous as he was wealthy, leaving bequests for many parishes and institutions with which he was associated. His generosity to Wolverhampton, however, contrasts with £50 for York Minster:[174] even for this dean, Wolverhampton was at the periphery of his activity.

 
St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle

William Dudley, his successor, managed much of the rebuilding. He was also Dean of Windsor, the first Dean of Wolverhampton to hold both posts.[175] In 1461 he had the important charters confirmed by Edward IV,[176] the first of the new Yorkist dynasty. On 31 July 1476 he became Bishop of Durham[177] and was consequently unable to remain dean. Despite their many diversions, Barningham and Dudley at least gave the town a new church and improved its prestige considerably.

After Dudley moved to Durham, Lionel Woodville, the Queen's brother was dean for a few years, but he resigned when he became Chancellor of the University of Oxford. It must therefore have been immediately after the appointment of a new dean, Richard Beauchamp, already Bishop of Salisbury and Dean of Windsor, that on 21 February 1480 a grant from Edward IV created a permanent union between the deanery of Wolverhampton and that of St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle.[178] This was explicitly made not only to Beauchamp himself but also to succeeding deans of Windsor. Moreover, it confirmed their valuable right to collate to prebends at Wolverhampton – a right they did not have at Windsor.

1480–1603: Royal Peculiar and Reformation Edit

 
The tomb of John and Joyce Leveson in the Lady Chapel, 1575, attributed to Robert Royley of Burton on Trent, the oldest surviving monument in the church. John was a cousin of James Leveson, like him a Merchant of the Staple, and like him had financial interests in the deanery and prebends. This financial entanglement ultimately proved ruinous for the church.

It is from this point that Wolverhampton is generally considered a Royal Peculiar or Peculier, although it had claimed and vindicated its status as a royal chapel, independent of the diocesan authorities, for many centuries already. From 1480, however, it was formally placed on a footing with St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, the monarch's own household chapel. It was never subsumed into Windsor. For about half a century, about half of the prebendaries were also canons of Windsor, but this practice petered out in the 16th century.[179] The link between Wolverhampton and Windsor persisted purely through the dual role of the deans and Wolverhampton kept its own seal–a key indicator of institutional independence.

 
Statue of Vice Admiral Sir Richard Leveson (1570–1605) of Lilleshall. A distinguished seaman who served in the Spanish Armada campaign, and another member of the family who were so closely involved in the history of the church. Originally part of a larger family group in the chancel that was vandalised during the English Civil War, it is now in the Lady Chapel
 
Tomb of Thomas and Katherine Lane of Bentley, c. 1585, attributed to Robert Royley of Burton on Trent, in the north chapel. The Lanes were important landowners in Staffordshire and, although they accepted the Reformation, closely allied with the recusant Giffard family of Chillington Hall

As the deans and most of the canons continued to be absentees, their lands and rights were increasingly farmed out. From 1516, it was James Leveson, one of the immensely rich and powerful Merchants of the Staple who increasingly took over responsibility for exploiting their estates. The rent agreed for the deanery holdings was £38, and Leveson managed to keep it fixed for 25 years, despite steady inflation. He also gradually extended his investments into the prebendary holdings. The Leveson family inherited and extended his interests after he died. (The name Leveson is pronounced /ˈljsən/ LEW-sɜn and is a patronymic from Louis or Lewis)

The Reformation brought dissolution for the second time in the college's history. It was threatened under the first Chantry Act in 1545 but survived because Henry VIII died before it could be implemented. Edward VI's Protestant guardians brought in a second act in 1547. The Dean argued that Wolverhampton should be exempt, as Windsor was specifically excluded from the terms of the act. Nevertheless, the college was dissolved and replaced by a vicar and curates, on £20 a year. This was not a great hardship for the dean and canons, as they continued to receive pensions at the same level as their former income from their benefices. In December 1552 William Franklyn, who remained dean of Windsor, had his and his successors' profits from Wolverhampton guaranteed, although limited to £40 annually.[180] Moreover, the canons had farmed out most of their holdings on perpetual leases, at fixed and very low rents, to the Leveson and Brooke families—allegedly in the hope of recovering them later and protecting the college's investments, but probably to make a quick gain before dissolution. The sale was authorised by the chapter of Windsor, which was not lawful, as the two colleges had separate seals and finances. The prebendal and the deanery estates themselves were confiscated by the Crown, then granted to John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland, then the leading figure in Edward's government, and his wife Jane.[181]

However, Queen Mary's Counter-Reformation soon restored the old regime. As Northumberland was attainted, his property was forfeit, so it was relatively easy to restore the college's property. This was presented by Mary's letters patent of 26 December 1553 as a favour to St George's College, Windsor. She referred to the great love her ancestors had for the chapel and made clear this was a restoration of the grant of Edward IV. Franklyn, the seven prebendaries and the sacristan were all named and reinstated in their posts for life and the structure of the college described in detail.[182] However, Mary's gracious act left the years 1547–53 in legal limbo, with the status of any transactions carried out by the canons during those years uncertain. St Peter's was the only royal peculiar in the region to be restored: all the others proved intractable, as the property had been sold or given to landowners in good standing, many of them pious Catholics. The little hospital of St Mary was not so fortunate. The provision to say prayers for the dead would have guaranteed its dissolution as a chantry and it is never heard of again, apparently absorbed into the Leveson estates.[183]

Despite a decision to follow a broadly Protestant path, Elizabeth did not pursue the matter further, and confirmed the restoration of the college by royal charter in 1564. This meant a restoration of the old abuses. The deans and most of the canons stayed away, failing to attend even the quarterly chapter meetings and paying scant wages to deacons, and in some cases unordained readers, to perform their functions at St Peter's. The running of Wolverhampton's church devolved upon the sacrist, who was paid a separate income, amounting to the reasonable sum of £26 by the mid-17th century, and given a seat on the chapter. It seems that he held the estate allocated to the morrow-mass priest before 1548, which may have been the grant of Henry of Prestwood.[184]

1603–1660: Religious strife and civil war Edit

 
Fine carving on a pillar of the wooden west gallery. The Puritans tended to dislike such ostentatious decoration, although their ire was mainly directed against items that symbolised theological differences between radical Protestants and High Churchmen, like altars. West galleries in many churches were strongholds of popular music making in subsequent centuries.

"That captivated Church" Edit

A Puritan survey, which can be dated fairly confidently to the first three months of 1604, found considerable cause for concern.[185] Seven stipendiaries were doing the work: four of them were on incomes of 10 nobles (£6 6s. 8d.) and three on £6.[186] These compare unfavourably with estimates of the incomes required to sustain celibate medieval priests: Bishop William Lyndwood had thought £6 13s. 4. necessary in the early 15th century,[187] well before the inflation of the Tudor period. Six of the seven prebends were in the hands of Walter Leveson.[186] The parish was said to have a population of 4000, many of them Catholic in sympathy and recusant. In the satellite chapel at Pelsall the curate's stipend was £4. At Bilston and Willenhall the curates had no reserved stipend. Two of the curates, named as Mounsell and Cowper, were said to be "notorious drunkards and dissolute men." No comment was made on the parochial work of the sacristan.

 
Joseph Hall
 
Marco Antonio de Dominis, Archbishop of Spalato, Croatian cleric, theologian and scientist, who left the Roman Catholic Church for a time and was Dean of Windsor and Wolverhampton

The far from Puritan Joseph Hall, later Bishop of Exeter and Bishop of Norwich, took a similarly negative view of St Peter's. Starting his career as a chaplain to Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, he was sent in quest of a prebend by a relative, Samuel Barton (also rendered Burton), Archdeacon of Gloucester, who, "knowing in how good terms I stood at Court, and pitying the miserable condition of his native Church of Wolverhampton, was very desirous to engage me in so difficult and noble a service, as the redemption of that captivated Church."[188] His connections secured him free collation to the prebend of Willenhall, which he seems to have held from 1610.[189] Several of his contemporaries at Wolverhampton were also ambitious, rising clerics, like the consecutive Hatherton prebendaries Godfrey Goodman, a Catholic sympathiser and future bishop, and Cesar Callendrine,[190] a German Calvinist minister who long headed the Dutch Reformed Church in London. Hall found St Peter's under the thumb of Walter Leveson: "the freedom of a goodly Church, consisting of a Dean and eight prebendaries competently endowed, and many thousand souls lamentably swallowed up by wilful recusants, in a pretended fee-farm for ever." Because of this the prebend was worth only 19 nobles or £6 3s. 4d. Using the evidence of forged seals and documents, Hall and other prebendaries became involved in a protracted action against Leveson in the Kings Bench.[191] This was on the brink of complete success, with Dean Marco Antonio de Dominis content, when Leveson died, leaving the situation confused. In 1622 Hall resigned the prebend and the Dean appointed in his place "a worthy preacher, Mr Lee, who should constantly reside there, and painfully instruct that great and long neglected people: which he hath hitherto performed, with great mutual contentment and happy success."

The High Church triumphant Edit

 
Dean Matthew Wren

Lee quickly gained a reputation as a forceful Puritan preacher, so Hall must have been of an eirenic temper to value his work so highly. Lee's preaching seems to have been popular and he met strong opposition from Matthew Wren, a prominent Laudian who was appointed Dean in 1628. The High Church party had come into the ascendancy with the accession of Charles I. Wren particularly objected to the fact that Lee had taken up residence in Wolverhampton and preached regularly.[192] Matthew Wren became Bishop of Hereford in 1634 and was succeeded as dean by his brother, Christopher Wren, the father of the famous architect. Christopher Wren tried unsuccessfully to pursue Hall's work in the courts, petitioning Francis Cottington, 1st Baron Cottington, Master of the Court of Wards and Liveries, that the prebendal lands be restored to the Church when the rent of £38 fell into arrears under Walter Leveson's young son, Thomas.[193] Wren took panic measures to deal with Lee, ignoring the traditional independence of the church to call on Archbishop William Laud to institute a metropolitical visitation. This was conducted by Nathaniel Brent, who toured the Midlands, purging churches where there had been complaints of nonconformity.[194] Lee was suspended but, when Brent acted similarly at Shrewsbury, the congregation of St Julian's church installed Lee as their lector. On 11 October 1635 Wren celebrated with an elaborate ceremony to consecrate a new High Altar in St Peter's. William Prynne, the Presbyterian publicist, gleefully described an item he saw as bizarre and idolatrous.

 
Perhaps the altar that bemused Prynne, it is now in the Lady Chapel.
 
William Prynne, by Wenceslaus Hollar
Maister Edward Latham, one of the Proctors of Leichfeild, & Surrogate of Woluerhampton accompanied with some 20. or 30. Persons, men, weomen and Chorasters, came to the Towne, many of the Inhabitants, but chiefly the Clergie going to meet him. The intent of his & their coming, was to performe the solemnity of Dedicating the Communion Table to be an Altar, and of consecrating certeyne Altar Cloathes (as they said) to the glory of God. The Table was made new for this purpose, being about a yard & an halfe in length, exquisitely wrought and inlaid, a fayre wall of waynscot being at the backe of it, & the rayle before it, was made to open in the middle, & not at one side; the middle, where the Ministers tread, being matted with a very fayre Matt. Vpon the Table was placed a faire Communion Booke, couered with cloth of gold, & bossed with great silver Bosses, together with a faire Cushion of Damaske, with a Carpet of the same; both party coulored of skie coulor & purple, the fringe of the Carpet being blew & white.[195]

The dedication service itself was replete with incense, ritual hand washing and elaborate music, all calculated to offend or puzzle the Puritans.[196]

Over the succeeding years disciplinary action was taken against Puritan laity. In June 1638 William Pinson, a lawyer who had moved to Birmingham after the visitation, was called before the Court of High Commission, along with John Rogers, for his activities in at St Peter's during 1631–36, appearing before Sir John Lambe, Dean of the Arches, and Sir Charles Caesar, the Master of the Faculties. He was accused of maintaining conventicles in his house because he had prayed, recalled sermons and discussed scripture with groups of friends, although he denied the events had any regular or formal character. He was in trouble too because his wife had shown insufficient respect for the churching of women by failing to wear a veil at the service: she had put a table napkin on her head when challenged.[197] Allegedly Pinson had conducted a campaign of vexatious litigation against Hugh Davies, the chaplain involved in the incident. Pinson maintained that "Mr. Davies refused to church her, and so she departed unchurched, to her and his grief." This may have been disingenuous, as the churching of women had provided a focus for Puritans in the West Midlands to confront the High Church establishment for some time.[198]

Pinson got off fairly lightly. He was registered as admonished in January 1640 and final sentencing was twice postponed[199] before his case was simply dropped on 6 November 1640.[200] However, others seem to have suffered prison. A letter from one Tarte, a Puritan who had fled to America, to Edward Latham, the dean's official, condemned him for imprisoning a Puritan activist called William Knight. The letter compared Latham to the notorious Edmund Bonner and threatened him with destruction "as a millstone that is cast into the sea."[201] The letter was filed with the Court of High Commission.

Civil war and Commonwealth Edit

 
The trial of Laud, depicted by Wenceslaus Hollar
 
William Laud, after Anthony van Dyck

This short-lived triumph for the Laudians came at a price for Laud himself. When the Long Parliament assembled in 1640, his arrest was one of its first acts. In 1644, during the English Civil War, he was tried for treason and the events at Wolverhampton formed an important part of the case brought against him. Evidence was given by two Wolverhampton men, Leonard Lee, Richard's brother, and William Pinson. Richard Lee himself was promoted to curate at St Julian's, Shrewsbury, in 1642 on the eve of war,[202] but cannot have stayed long in the town, which quickly fell to the royalists. The Clergy of the Church of England database, if the identification is correct, records his appointment in 1640 as vicar of Melbourne, where the advowson was held by John Coke,[203] and in 1643 as rector of Rugby, where the patron was Humphrey Burnaby.[204] However, Laud himself referred only to Lee's appointment at Shrewsbury during the trial. Prynne mentions that during the trial Lee was residing in Shoreditch, by order of Parliament.[205] Prynne printed a memorandum of March 1634 that he had found among John Lambe's paper. The original, he claimed, was in the handwriting of Laud's secretary, William Dell, and it was addressed to Nathaniel Brent. In this Laud appeared to prejudice the visitation by singling out Richard Lee.

And that you take speciall notice of one Mr Lee, a Prebend there who hath been the Author of much disorder thereabouts, And if you can fasten upon any thing, whereby he may justly be censured, pray see it be done, and home, or bring him to the High Commission Court to answer it there, &c. But HOWEVER let him not obtain any License to Preach any Lecture there, or in another Exempt place hard by at Tetenshall, whither those of Wolverhampton do now run after him, out of their Parish; Note. for the Church hath not much need of such men. If you speak with Mr Latham of Litchfield who is the Surrogate there, he will informe you more fully concerning this Businesse. That he (the said Mr Lee) hath Churched Refractory Women in private &c. That he is averse to all good Orders of the Church. As also that in another place thereabouts they caused a Bell-man in open Market to make Proclamation for a Sermon...[206]

At his trial in July 1644 Laud argued that he ordered proceedings against Lee only "If there were found against him that which might justly be Censured,"[207] a wording that differs significantly from Prynne's version. Laud claimed the responsibility for singling out Lee was not his because "the Dean of Windsor his Ordinary complained unto me, that Mr. Lee's Carriage was so Factious there, that he could contain him in no Order. If he were a Man after this approved at Shrewsbury (as Mr: Walker witnesses) I hope the Proceedings at Wolverhampton did him good." He then resorted to blaming his secretary for the discrepancy between his intention and the wording of the memorandum: "I believe your Lordships would not willingly answer for every Phrase of your Secretaries Letters, which yet you command them to write." Although the trial itself was inconclusive, Laud was later attainted and beheaded.

St. Peter's church itself suffered considerable damage at the hands of Parliamentary soldiers in 1642. Much worse was an attack on the chapter house by royalist soldiers under Colonel Leveson, which resulted in the loss of all its records.[208] Victoria County History attributes the dissolution of the college by Parliament to a law of 1643 that suppressed all deans and chapters and was implemented after the fighting drew to a close. However, Shaw points out this Ordinance for sequestring notorious Delinquents Estates,[209] which did name 14 bishops and refer to deans and prebends, was not a law against Church lands but an expedient for raising funds for the Parliamentary army.[210] Not until October 1644 did Parliament begin to consider how best to turn the resources of the Church toward better support for the parish ministry. This resulted in an act of October 1646[211] to abolish bishops and archbishops and to turn their assets over to trustees,[212] and another ordinance the following month to implement the sale of their lands.[213] This formed the model for legislation to abolish the deans and chapters, which was not introduced until more than a year later. However, its progress was long delayed and only in April 1649 did Parliament pass the Act for abolishing of Deans, Deans and Chapters, Canons, Prebends and other offices and titles of or belonging to any Cathedral or Collegiate Church or Chappel within England and Wales.[214]

 
A weathercock, dated 1646, is perhaps the only item in the church from Richard Lee's incumbency, and an apt symbol of the constantly changing fortunes of the time.

Richard Lee returned to St Peter's as minister in 1646, supported by a grant of £100.[215] VCH says that the post of sacrist was abolished and his £26, together with a further £50, was provided for an assistant minister. However, these figures are derived from a petition of Wolverhampton residents to Oliver Cromwell during the Protectorate, dated 10 May 1654. This attributes the sums to the period immediately after the dissolution of the college,[216] and it is not entirely clear from it when and for how long they held good: the funding had largely dried up by the time of the petition. The windfall for the parish ministry did not come not from the sale of prebendal lands, which was impossible because they were leased to Colonel Thomas Leveson. However, as Leveson was considered a royalist "delinquent," the lands were sequestrated by Parliament and the proceeds earmarked for the support of clergy. The records of the Committee for Compounding with Delinquents, which dealt with the sequestered property of royalists, show how the claims on the sequestered lands built up and the flow of funds reduced. From 1650 the Colonel's wife, Frances Leveson, who claimed to be a Parliamentarian, mounted an increasingly successful campaign for maintenance for herself and her children.[217] Meanwhile, the creditors closed in: local man William Hayes demanding title to Heath Manor and Francis Blount of London in search of £200.[218]

Thomas Leveson himself had fled to Bordeaux, where he lived well at the expense of the eccentric Armand de Bourbon, Prince of Conti, the provincial governor. Although he kept servants and horses, when he died in September 1652, his furniture had to be sold to pay for his funeral. In September 1653 Robert Leveson alleged that his father Thomas, who held the tithes of Upper Penn as well as St Peter's and 13 other churches, had already settled the estates on himself as early as 1640, before the civil war began. The augmentations to the parish clergy were suspended immediately while an enquiry was held. On 17 November, Leveson won his case and the sequestration of the family estates was discharged. The stream of funding was already in decline and now the ministers of those churches which had been receiving augmentations began to complain of serious hardship: Ralph Strettel of Shareshill, entitled to £100 but finding that he was paid only £10 for 1652 and £27 6s. for 1653 to supplement his pittance of 16 nobles;[219] Charles Wynn of Penn, who had only £3 augmentation for the year, worried it might end; Edward Barton of Wednesbury, who had seven children and only ever received 6 months' worth of his £50 augmentation. So at Wolverhampton, Ambrose Sparry and his assistant, Richard Clayton, were among a host of claimants left impoverished by the return of the prebendal lands and other estates to the Levesons. They complained of the magnitude of the task they were expected to perform: "the town so swarms with Papists as to be called little Rome, and there are 20 gentry families of recusants, some of whom were so turbulent last summer that the justices had to call in a troop of horse." All of this was echoed in the petition by their supporters. In May 1654 it transpired that the County Committee had not even been informed of the discharge of Leveson's sequestration, so the meagre augmentations of which the clergy complained were actually overpayments. Fortunately the impoverished ministers were not asked to repay the excess.

1660–1848: Decline and demise of the old order Edit

 
The Church of St John in the Square was originally built as a chapel-of-ease to relieve overcrowding at St Peter's in the 1750s.
 
Bilston revolted against the dean's appointment of clergy in the 1730s and symbolised its independence of spirit by building its own chapel. The present St Leonard's church replaced the 18th-century building in 1826.
 
St George's church was built in a Neo-Classical style, already being superseded by Gothic Revival at the time. It relieved the growing overcrowding in churches but proved a short-lived success, as a church-building boom sponsored by the Evangelicals ringed the town centre with ample new seating. The building, long-derelict, was incorporated into a supermarket in the 1980s.

The Restoration of Charles II automatically brought the restoration of the college at St Peter's, as the legislation abolishing it was regarded as invalid. Everything was restored very quickly. However, the loss of the records at the hands of Leveson, whose family coincidentally had important claims on college property, was a serious problem for the restored institution and its financial position continued to be weak. Cesar Callendrine[220] and Thomas Wren, son of Matthew Wren and prebendary of Willenhall, mounted a legal challenge to Leveson dominance in 1661. It quickly ran into problems and Joseph Hall's gains were lost.[221] Callendrine was dead by the time the case was finally decided in 1667, with the Court of Chancery dismissing their claim and awarding Robert Leveson costs.[222]

Leveson sold his Wolverhampton estates to the Earl of Bradford, his nephew, in 1705 and the college went to court again to recover its alienated lands. This time the case was dismissed immediately. Not until 1811 did the college finally abandon its attempts to recover its property - more than two and a half centuries after its loss. Meanwhile, Samuel de l'Angle, a Huguenot who was prebendary of Kinvaston 1684–93,[189] had initiated a Chancery suit to recover his prebendal lands. After his death the claim was pursued to a successful conclusion by his son and executor.[223] However, all the dependent chapels but Kinvaston were now very poorly funded and unable to attract able or dedicated ministers. They were still expected to contribute to the upkeep of St Peter's and to the expenses of the sacrist, who doggedly defended his income from burials and other rites. They were now starting to chafe at the bit. Bilston revolted against the dean's attempts to impose a curate twice — in 1730 and 1735 — and the congregation elected their own.

The population of Wolverhampton itself and of the towns to the east was growing rapidly as manufacturing took hold. Peniston Booth, a dean who actually spent some of his time at the deanery house in Wolverhampton, was sufficiently in touch with opinion to authorise the building of new chapels of ease at Wednesfield, Willenhall and Bilston. With considerably more persuasion, and after a major public campaign fronted by Lord Grey, he acquiesced in the building of a new chapel of ease in Wolverhampton itself. It was authorised by a private Act of Parliament in 1755, and the fine Neo-Classical St John's Church, Wolverhampton quickly rose on a site enclosed in a square to the south of St Peter's.[224]

The college, with its deanery and prebends, was increasingly proving a straitjacket for the Anglican Church in Wolverhampton. The increasing population was a challenge in itself, but it also brought social misery and discontent as the crowded housing of the Wolverhampton and the Black Country failed to keep up with demand. Increasing religious diversity was another consequence. There had been Protestant Dissenters since the Civil War, but their numbers were greatly increased by the preaching of Methodism: in 1761 John Wesley himself preached at an inn-yard in what he called "this furious town" of Wolverhampton.[225] Catholic recusancy was strong in the surrounding countryside. Despite the Penal laws, in the 1730s the Giffard family of Brewood succeeded in building a Catholic chapel in the guise of a private house, just to the west of St Peter's. As Catholic Emancipation approached, this was rapidly expanded into a functioning Roman Catholic church.[226] Already, distress in Ireland was bringing immigration and a large working class, Irish Catholic community, concentrated to the north of St Peter's in the slums of an area known as "Caribee Island".[227]

In 1811 a special Act was passed to reform St Peter's church itself.[228] The post of sacrist was replaced by that of perpetual curate. Three readerships were abolished and their income signed over to the curate. A fund was established from proceeds of mining on the deanery land to improve the income of the curate. This did not go far enough. The curate was still heavily dependent on fees from the dependent chapels and friction over this continued to sour relations. However, the curates initially performed their duties very much better than earlier sacrists and things were improved further by the building of a new chapel of ease in the town: St George's, another Neo-Classical structure, completed in 1830 to a design by James Morgan.

It was in connection with a possible post at St George's that William Dalton, an Evangelical Anglican clergyman from Ulster first visited Wolverhampton. He returned in 1835, after marrying Sarah Marsh, the widow of a Bilston ironmaster, to take up the living of St Paul's, yet another chapel of ease on the south-western edge of the town. Dalton began a lifelong campaign to build more churches to serve the growing population. Dalton's agitation had a venomously anti-Catholic edge, attacking both Anglo-Catholicism and Roman Catholicism,[229] but his church-building campaign won wide support. It further undermined the relevance of the dean and the Royal Peculiar.[230] St Peter's itself and all the new chapels already operated as parish churches in all but name, but were hampered by lack of funds. The deanery was a sinecure that took £600 a year out of the town - largely the product of coal mining on deanery lands.[231]

 
George Oliver

The radical Whig administration of the 1830s was determined to remedy a wide range of abuses at the local level. The establishment of elected municipal self-government for Wolverhampton and most of England's towns and cities came in 1836. This swept away the last vestiges of ecclesiastical influence in the politics of Wolverhampton and created a much stronger expectation of local accountability. In the same year, the Ecclesiastical Commissioners were established, aimed at rationalising the finances and structures of the Church of England, and charged with recommending further legislation to reform the Church. Henry Lewis Hobart, the Dean of Windsor and Wolverhampton, was generally considered a wealthy nonentity and had failed to win any real support at Court. The sacrist or perpetual curate, was Dr. George Oliver, appointed in 1834, who had a distinguished career in the Diocese of Lincoln before his appointment at Wolverhampton and continued as vicar of Scopwick in Lincolnshire until his death.[232] A freemason who wrote widely on the craft, Oliver was remembered by some as "of a kind and genial disposition, charitable in the highest sense of the word."[233] However, he seems also to have had a talent for controversy. VCH avers that in Wolverhampton he pursued "rather sordid and very public disputes" with other clergy.[234] These involved clashes in the pulpit and the public prints with the clergy of St George's over burial and other fees, with Oliver countering every argument of his opponents with a new pamphlet, invariably headed a Candid Reply. His Masonic career was at times stormy: in 1840 he was suspended from his position as Deputy Grand Master of the Lincolnshire Province over his support for Robert Crucefix, a mason involved in controversy over care for aged and sick masons with Prince Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex, the Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England.[235] As he was also a prolific author on medieval history, particularly important churches, it seems unlikely that Oliver had much time to devote to parochial work at St Peter's.

The old order was suppressed completely under the terms of legislation, variously referred to as the Cathedrals Act 1840 and the Ecclesiastical Commissioners Act 1840, but actually entitled An Act to carry into effect, with certain Modifications, the Fourth Report of the Commissioners of Ecclesiastical Duties and Revenues.[236] Section 21 of the act decreed that the deanery should be suppressed, along with those of Middleham, Heytesbury and Brecon.[237] Section 51 restricted the rights of any appointees to positions within the colleges but allowed the existing deans to continue in office until their deaths.[238] The prebends were left vacant in readiness and, on Hobart's death in 1846, the deanery was wound up. In the same year Lord Lyndhurst, the Lord Chancellor, gave Oliver the rectory of South Hyckham, near Lincoln, and he subsequently resigned his Wolverhampton post,[232] making way for John Dakeyne to be appointed temporary sacrist pending a full reorganisation. Dakeyne had been incumbent of St Benedict's Church, Lincoln and had defended the traditional doctrine of baptism in 1843, in a book dedicated to Lord Lyndhurst.[239] He too was an active Freemason who had spoken in 1844 at a testimonial for Oliver, part of the address being used as a preface to some editions of Oliver's Book of the Lodge.[240]

In 1848, a specific piece of legislation for St Peter's, the Wolverhampton Church Act, abolished the ancient college altogether and transferred all its assets to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. They swiftly oversaw the establishment of a rectory for St Peter's and confirmed Dakeyne as rector. All the dependent chapels were turned into separate parish churches, each with its own vicar. From the available funds, the Commissioners were able to grant the rector a living of £750 a year, and to improve the incomes of all 13 of the other clergy involved, as well as to contribute to building repairs. St Peter's and all the newly established parishes became part of the Diocese of Lichfield, subject to the bishop as Ordinary.

Timeline Edit

This summary is based on a University of Wolverhampton publication,[241] supplemented by the Victoria County History.[242]

  • 994 - Lady Wulfrun gave lands (given to her by King Aethelred II) to the Church of St Mary at Heantune. Wulfrun + heantune = Wolvernehampton - the town is named Wolverhampton. The church is run by a college of canons, who are secular priests.
  • 1066 - The Norman Conquest leads to the church being granted to Samson, a royal chaplain, who alienates its lands and gives it to Worcester cathedral priory.
  • 1135 - The church enters a period of great turbulence in the anarchy of King Stephen's reign, with several changes of control.
  • 1152-54 - The church emerges triumphant, recognised as a royal chapel and independent of Lichfield's diocesan control, constituted as a dean and prebendaries, newly dedicated to St Peter or St Peter and St Paul.
  • 1203-05 - The college is dissolved because of corruption and abortive plans are laid to replace it with a Cistercian monastery. Tower crossing (oldest extant part of the church) constructed. College restored, now recognised as lord of the manor of Wolverhampton.
  • 1258 - Right to hold a weekly Market and an annual Fair on the feast of St Peter and St Paul.
  • 1263 - Autonomy of burgesses recognised.
  • 1280 - Archbishop of Canterbury turned away at the doors of the church. Independence from Canterbury formally recognised.
  • 1350? - Chapel of our Lady and St George is built.
  • 1358 - Edward III orders an inspection because of notorious abuses at the church.
  • 1440 - Nave roof raised to current height.
  • 1450 - Stone pulpit built.
  • 1479 - King Edward IV united the Deaneries of Wolverhampton and Windsor in a single holder, establishing the Royal Peculiar. Deans and prebends are mostly absent and poorly paid curates do most of the work, as before.
  • 1540 - Bells from Much Wenlock Priory installed to replace old bells (in 1729 more bells added to make a total of 10; in 1911 the frame replaced and bells recast).
  • 1547 - The Reformation sweeps away the college and turns it into a parish church.
  • 1550 - The canons alienate much of the college's property to the Leveson family on perpetual leases.
  • 1553 - Queen Mary restores the college.
  • 1560 - The college becomes an Anglican institution, unique in the Church of England.
  • 1635 - Dean Christopher Wren calls in Archbishop Laud to purge Puritans and triumphantly consecrates an altar.
  • 1642-43 - The church is damaged by Parliamentary troops, while Col. Leveson's royalists destroy all the college's records.
  • 1646-60 - Under the Commonwealth, St Peter's is a parish church with Puritan incumbents.
  • 1667 - The restored college loses the first of many actions to recover its property from the Levesons.
  • 1755 - The building of St John's marks the end of St Peter's church's monopoly in the town, although it remains merely a chapel-at-ease for over a century.
  • 1811 - St Peter's church is partially reformed with the appointment of a perpetual curate. The futile legal wrangle with the Levesons is abandoned.
  • 1836 - Wolverhampton gains municipal self-government as a borough.
  • 1840 - The Cathedrals Act declares the deanery and the Royal Peculiar abolished from the death of the current dean.
  • 1846 - Dean Hobart dies and the deanery is suppressed.
  • 1847 - St Peter's Collegiate School established adjacent to the church.
  • 1848 - The college is wound up and St Peter's becomes a parish within the Lichfield Diocese, with its own Rector. The dependent chapels become new parishes, each with a vicar.
  • 1860 - "Father" Henry Willis built a new organ (in 1882 the organ was enlarged; revamped with an electrical blowing installation in 1914; rebuilt in 1970, "restored" in 1983 and rebuilt in 2019)
  • 1865–Present chancel completed in decorated Gothic style
  • 1937 - A civic and public appeal raises £10,000 in a few days for restoration of the tower and other important repairs.
  • 1968 - Sanctuary re-panelled
  • 1978 - Parish of Central Wolverhampton established: St Peter's with All Saints, St Chad and St Mark. Later, the two latter were amalgamated and St John in the Square was added. Team ministry established under leadership of the Rector.

Architecture Edit

St Peter's Church is built of red sandstone on an elevated site in the centre of the City of Wolverhampton. The oldest part of the building above ground is the crossing under the tower, which probably dates from the beginnings of the Abbey in 1200, followed by the Chapel of Our Lady and St George (Lady Chapel). Much of the Church was rebuilt and extended in the fourteenth century, in the Decorated Style. However, the Church was to be substantially altered in the middle of the fifteenth century at the expense of the town's wool merchants, with the addition of a clerestory to the nave, and reduction in height of the north and south aisles. The upper part of the tower was rebuilt around 1475 to a height of 120 feet, and the Chapel of St Catherine and St Nicholas (Memorial Chapel) was completed at the end of the fifteenth century. The chancel was reconstructed in 1682 following considerable damage caused to the original medieval one during the Civil War, and it was again completely rebuilt in 1867 as part of the extensive restoration of the Church under architect Ewan Christian.

Unique features include the carved stone pulpit with a figure of a lion at the foot of the steps to protect the minister delivering the sermon. The font dates from 1480 with several stone carved figures and the west gallery dates from 1610, paid for by the Merchant Taylors' Company for use by the boys of Wolverhampton Grammar School.

Near the south porch is a 14-foot-high stone column, carved in the ninth century with birds, animals and acanthus. It may have been a column pillaged from Roman Viroconium and brought to Heantune, either as part of a preaching cross or memorial. The carvings have deteriorated, but a cast made in 1877 can be seen in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

Bells Edit

The bells of St Peter's are the second oldest complete ring of 12 in the country and third oldest in the world, all twelve cast in 1911 by Gillett & Johnston of Croydon.

Five bells are known to have existed at St Peter's in 1553. In 1698 a new 23 cwt. ring of eight was cast by Abraham Rudhall I. In 1740 Henry Bagley III of Chacombe cast a large ‘funeral’ (or hour) bell of some 35 cwt. In 1827 the eight were augmented to ten by Thomas Mears. The ten ringing bells were rehung by Barwells in 1889 and the seventh was recast in 1895 by Mears & Stainbank after cracking during a peal attempt.

The bells, including the hour bell, were recast and two new trebles added to produce a new ring of twelve by Gillett & Johnston. This was their first complete ring of twelve, to be followed by Coventry in 1927, Croydon in 1936 and Halifax in 1952. They were tuned on the 5 tone Simpson Principle in the key of C sharp major. Gillett also provided a new single-tier steel and iron H-frame with new fittings throughout. The clock chime was connected to the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 8th and the clock generally rearranged. They were rung for the first time as 12 for the coronation of King George V after a silence of three years. The front eight were subsequently rehung in 1977 and the tenor in 1985.

In April 2000 maintenance work was carried out. The 9th, 10th and 11th were rehung on new bearings and the pulley on the 10th was renewed. The 12 ductile-iron clappers were replaced by the original, overhauled wrought-iron clappers and other minor works carried out. All work was carried out by Whitechapel Bell Foundry of London.

The bells are rung twice weekly, on Mondays for practice and for the main Sunday service.[243][244]

Music Edit

 
The organ of St Peter's Collegiate Church, Wolverhampton

The three-manual Father Willis organ, was built in 1860.[245] A campaign to raise almost £300,000 towards its restoration was launched in 2008. The restoration work, designed to return the organ to its former glory after the wear and tear of near-daily use, was completed by Michael Farley Organ Builders in 2019.

On Saturday 25 September 2010 a concert of Elgar's greatest pieces was held at the church which included the very first football chant, He Banged The Leather for Goal, written by Elgar himself,[246] in respect of Wolves star of the time, Billy Malpass. The concert was a joint venture between the church and Wolverhampton Wanderers to raise funds for the organ appeal and to firm the link that Elgar had between respective organisations. Elgar was a Wolves fan and cycled from Malvern (a good 40 miles approx) to watch the Wolves with close friend Dora Penny, daughter of then St Peter's Church Rector Revd Penny. St Peter's director of music Peter Morris said: "We wanted to celebrate the connection between Elgar and the church, so we got in touch with Wolves and it just grew. "We knew about Elgar’s connection with the club because the rector’s daughter Dora Penny used to write about him going to watch them when he came to visit."[247]

There is a strong choral tradition: more than 40 children and young people are involved in the Music at St Peter's, along with Lay Clerks and choral scholars. There are separate boys' and girls' choirs, which sing at a Cathedral during the Summer holidays. The Boys' Choir, Lay Clerks and choral scholars sang at Lincoln Cathedral in 2007, York Minster in 2008, Norwich Cathedral in 2009, Rochester Cathedral in 2010, Ely Cathedral in 2011, Wells Cathedral in 2012, Chichester Cathedral in 2013, Ripon Cathedral in 2014, Durham Cathedral 2015, Edinburgh Cathedral in 2016, Salisbury Cathedral in 2017, Chester Cathedral in 2018 and Durham Cathedral again in 2019. The girls choir, Lay Clerks and choral scholars sang at Chester Cathedral in 2007, Chichester Cathedral in 2008 and 2010, Carlisle Cathedral in 2009, Canterbury Cathedral in 2011, Truro Cathedral in 2012, Salisbury Cathedral in 2013, Exeter Cathedral in 2014, Canterbury Cathedral in 2015, Edinburgh Cathedral in 2016, Canterbury again in 2017, York Minster in 2018 and Winchester Cathedral in 2019. The full choirs sang at Truro Cathedral in 2021 and Wells Cathedral in 2022. Other recent singing has taken place in Gloucester Cathedral, Westminster Abbey, St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, The Royal Albert Hall (at the Proms) and Symphony Hall.

The church has been involved with the Choristers Outreach Programme of the Choir Schools Association and Sing Up which takes choristers into Primary Schools in the city to help the singing programmes in schools.

The Director of Music is Callum Alger. The Assistant Director of Music is Charlie Francis and the Organ Scholar is Elli-Mae McGlone. The assistant organists are Toby Barnard, Dr. David Rendell (Organist Emeritus) & Peter Morris (Organist Emeritus).

List of organists Edit

  • Mr. G. Hay ????- 1836[248] - 1842[249] - ????
  • Thomas S. Hayward ca. 1860[250] - 1870 (afterwards organist of Blackburn Parish Church)
  • Arthur Henry Mann 1870–1871[251]
  • Isaac Roper 1874–1908
  • Frederick Harold Houldershaw 1908–1944
  • Sidney Campbell 1943–1947
  • Charles Leslie Parker Hutchings 1947–1964
  • David Jones 1964–1970
  • Brian Armfield 1971–1979
  • Andrew Newberry 1979–1983
  • Timothy C. Storey 1984–1993
  • Alistair Pow 1994–1998
  • Gary Cole 1998–2001
  • Nicholas P. Johnson 2001–2003
  • Peter Morris 2003–2018
  • Callum Alger (acting) 2018-2019
  • Hamish Dustagheer 2019-2020
  • Callum Alger 2020-
 
St Peter's from the west

Today Edit

Worship is in the Catholic tradition of the Church of England. Vestments, reservation and the sacrament of reconciliation are all part of its tradition with incense used at festival services. Sunday services usually comprise Holy Communion, Choral Eucharist, and Choral Evensong. Choral Evensong is also sung on Wednesdays at 5.15pm.

St. Peter's is open on weekdays and Saturdays, and before and after services on Sundays. There is a shop within the church and a coffee lounge in the nearby St Peter's House.

The church has strong links with St Peter's Collegiate Academy, which, although founded adjacent to the church in 1847, is now located at Compton Park, along with St Edmund's Catholic Academy and the Wolverhampton Wanderers FC training ground.

Lists of Incumbents Edit

Deans of Wolverhampton Edit

Rectors of St Peter's Collegiate Church Edit

After the suppression of the deanery, a new sacrist, John Dakeyne, was appointed in 1847, with a view to making him rector on the winding up of the college. This duly occurred in the following year.

  • John Dakeyne, 1848
  • John Iles, 1860
  • John Jeffcock, 1877
  • Alfred Penny, 1895
  • Joseph Stockley, 1919
  • Robert Hodson, 1929
  • John Brierley, 1935
  • Francis Cocks, 1965
  • John Ginever, 1970
  • John Hall-Matthews, 1990
  • David Frith, 2003
  • David Wright, 2009

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Parish of Central Wolverhampton. 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2008.
  2. ^ Anglia Sacra, p. 445.
  3. ^ "S 1380". The Electronic Sawyer: Online catalogue of Anglo-Saxon charters. King's College, London. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  4. ^ G C Baugh, W L Cowie, J C Dickinson, Duggan A P, A K B Evans, R H Evans, Una C Hannam, P Heath, D A Johnston, Hilda Johnstone, Ann J Kettle, J L Kirby, R Mansfield and A Saltman (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, footnote 1". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ William Dugdale. Monasticon Anglicanum 6, p. 1443. Retrieved 27 April 2016. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help) In this document, probably dated 994, Dugdale gave the date as 996, but this has generally been regarded as incorrect. See Bridgeman, p. 114.
  6. ^ Duignan, p. 9-10.
  7. ^ Bridgeman, p. 112-3.
  8. ^ "S 860". The Electronic Sawyer: Online catalogue of Anglo-Saxon charters. King's College, London. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  9. ^ Bridgeman, p. 103.
  10. ^ Kemble, p. 214.
  11. ^ "S 720". The Electronic Sawyer: Online catalogue of Anglo-Saxon charters. King's College, London. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  12. ^ Translation in Bridgeman, p. 99-100.
  13. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, footnote 1". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  14. ^ Duignan, p. 9, footnote 2.
  15. ^ Bridgeman, p. 119.
  16. ^ a b c Wolverhampton in the Domesday Book
  17. ^ Domesday text, Phillimore reference: STS 7,13
  18. ^ a b c Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous, 1392–1399, p. 20, no. 44.
  19. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 13". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  20. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Penkridge, St Michael, note anchor 2". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  21. ^ Stenton, p. 148-9.
  22. ^ Stenton, p. 660.
  23. ^ Fletcher, p. 394.
  24. ^ Fletcher, p. 395.
  25. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Stafford, St Mary, note anchor 1". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  26. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Tettenhall, St Michael, note anchor 1". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  27. ^ Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum, Volume 1, p. 125, no. XXVI.
  28. ^ Translation based on Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum, Volume 1, p. 57, no. 210.
  29. ^ Staffordshire, Page 4, at Open Domesday
  30. ^ Morris, John; Palmer, J. N. N.; Palmer, Matthew; Slater, George; Caroline, Thorn; Thorn, Frank (2011). "Domesday text translation". Hydra Digital Repository. University of Hull. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
  31. ^ Bilston in the Domesday Book
  32. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 18-19". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  33. ^ Kinvaston in the Domesday Book
  34. ^ Hilton in the Domesday Book
  35. ^ Featherstone in the Domesday Book
  36. ^ St Peter's Collegiate Church in the Domesday Book
  37. ^ Bateson, Mary; Costambeys, Marios. "Samson". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/24600. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  38. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 22". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  39. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 23". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  40. ^ Kemp, B. R. "Salisbury, Roger of". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23956. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  41. ^ Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum, Volume 3, p. 170, no. 452.
  42. ^ Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum, Volume 3, p. 170-1, no. 453.
  43. ^ Collections for History of Staffordshire, 1913, p. 8
  44. ^ See for example, the 13th-century seal reproduced at (PDF). Parish of Central Wolverhampton. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 November 2008. Retrieved 12 October 2008.
  45. ^ Franklin, M. J. "Clinton, Roger of". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/95152. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  46. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "House of secular canons - Lichfield cathedral: To the Reformation, note anchor 37". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  47. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "House of secular canons - Lichfield cathedral: To the Reformation, note anchor 39". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  48. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 23-4". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  49. ^ Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum, Volume 3, p. 359, no. 969.
  50. ^ Delisle and Berger, p. 66.
  51. ^ Regesta Regum Anglo-Normannorum, Volume 3, p. 356, no. 962.
  52. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 30". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  53. ^ a b Southern, R.W. "Peter of Blois". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/22012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  54. ^ Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia, Letter 108, Volume 1, p. 340.
  55. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, footnote 31". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  56. ^ Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia, Letter 97, Volume 2, p. 74.
  57. ^ Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia, Letter 152, Volume 2, p. 87-8.
  58. ^ Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia, Letter 152, Volume 2, p. 89.
  59. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, footnote 37". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  60. ^ Wrottesley (ed.), p. 87.
  61. ^ Wrottesley (ed.), p. 118.
  62. ^ Wrottesley (ed.), p. 126.
  63. ^ Rotuli Chartarum, p. 115.
  64. ^ Rotuli Chartarum, p. 135.
  65. ^ Rotuli Chartarum, p. 152.
  66. ^ Eyton (ed.), p. 119.
  67. ^ Eyton (ed.), p. 125.
  68. ^ Rotuli Chartarum, p. 153.
  69. ^ a b Rotuli Chartarum, p. 154.
  70. ^ Ralph of Coggeshall, p. 160.
  71. ^ Rotuli Chartarum, p. 156.
  72. ^ "St. Peter's Collegiate Church". Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website. Bev Parker. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  73. ^ Historic England (2016). "Church of St Peter (1282467)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  74. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 48". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  75. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 49". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  76. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1258–1266, p. 126.
  77. ^ Annales Monastici, Volume 1, p. 275.
  78. ^ Patent Rolls, 1225–1232, p. 356.
  79. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 4, p. 232-3.
  80. ^ Close Rolls 1247–1251, p. 50.
  81. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 4, p. 124.
  82. ^ Calendar of Charter Rolls, 1257–1300, p. 7.
  83. ^ J.W. Willis-Bund. Parishes: Dudley, note anchor 38. in A History of the County of Worcester, Volume 3.
  84. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 4, pp. 248–9, no. 53.
  85. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 4, p. 250-1, no. 54.
  86. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 57". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  87. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1396–1399, p. 387.
  88. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1266–1272, p. 221.
  89. ^ a b Greenway, Diana J., ed. (1991), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300, vol. 4, pp. 108–109
  90. ^ a b Calendar of Papal Registers, Volume 1, Regesta 37, 4 Kal. July, 1275.
  91. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1266–1272, p. 310.
  92. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 4, p. 69.
  93. ^ Calendar of Papal Registers, Volume 1, Regesta 37, 4 Kal. January 1274.
  94. ^ Calendar of Papal Registers, Volume 1, Regesta 38, Id. November 1276.
  95. ^ Barrow, J. S., ed. (2002), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300, vol. 8, pp. 29–31
  96. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1281–1292, p. 226.
  97. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1281–1292, p. 318.
  98. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1281–1292, p. 410.
  99. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1281–1292, p. 413.
  100. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 6, Part 1, p. 66.
  101. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 6, Part 1, p. 70.
  102. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 6, Part 1, p. 233.
  103. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1292–1301, p. 24.
  104. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1911, p. 228-32.
  105. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1272–1281, p. 469.
  106. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 6, Part 1, p. 181.
  107. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1292–1301, p. 346-7.
  108. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1301–1307, p. 346-7.
  109. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 109-10, translation on p. 392n-392o.
  110. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 130-1.
  111. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 147-50.
  112. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 154-6.
  113. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 178-9, translation on p. 392s.
  114. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 179-83, translation of letters to king on p. 392t-392u.
  115. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 183-4.
  116. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 184-5, translation on p. 392v.
  117. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 196.
  118. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 74". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  119. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 1, p. 384-7.
  120. ^ Calendar of Papal Registers, Volume 1, Regesta 41, 12 Kal. February 1283.
  121. ^ Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham, Volume 2, p. 629-30.
  122. ^ Calendar of Papal Registers, Volume 1, Regesta 43, 14 Kal. September 1286.
  123. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 66". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  124. ^ Benefice of Wolverhampton (Collegiate Church) at Taxatio
  125. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1292–1301, p. 147.
  126. ^ Calendar of Close Rolls 1302–1307, p. 66-7.
  127. ^ Calendar of Close Rolls, 1302–1307, p. 71.
  128. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1307–1313, p. 342.
  129. ^ Calendar of Fine Rolls, 1319–1327, p. 201.
  130. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1374–1377, p. 282.
  131. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1338–1340, p. 482.
  132. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1338–1340, p. 488.
  133. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1340–1343, p. 306.
  134. ^ Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous, Volume 2, p. 434, no 1758.
  135. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 12, p. 143.
  136. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1354–1358, p. 532.
  137. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1367–1370, p. 142.
  138. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 85". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  139. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1377–1381, p. 336.
  140. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 15, p. 82.
  141. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1377–1381, p. 401.
  142. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1381–1385, p. 59.
  143. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1381–1385, p. 91.
  144. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1391–1396, p. 357.
  145. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Stafford, St Mary, footnote 146". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  146. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1399–1401, p. 8.
  147. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 100". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  148. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1399–1401, p. 489.
  149. ^ Jacob, p. 75-6.
  150. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, Volume 15, p. 104-5.
  151. ^ Calendar of Close Rolls, 1405–1409, p. 55.
  152. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1408–1413, p. 223.
  153. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1307–1313, p. 357.
  154. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1911, p. 308-9.
  155. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1911, p. 309-10.
  156. ^ Collections for History of Staffordshire, 1913, p. 8-9.
  157. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1327–1330, p. 231.
  158. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1445–1452, p. 77.
  159. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 98". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  160. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Hospitals: Wolverhampton, St Mary, note anchor 2". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  161. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1391–1396, p. 139.
  162. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1391–1396, p. 176.
  163. ^ Entry for Hugh Burnell at the peerage.com
  164. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). "Hospitals: Wolverhampton, St Mary, note anchor 13". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  165. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). "Hospitals: Wolverhampton, St Mary, footnote 1". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  166. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1445–1452, p. 312.
  167. ^ Collections for History of Staffordshire, Series 2, Volume 3, p. 157.
  168. ^ Collections for History of Staffordshire, Series 2, Volume 3, p. 200.
  169. ^ Jones, B., ed. (1963), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541, vol. 6, pp. 90–91
  170. ^ Jones, B., ed. (1963), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541, vol. 6, pp. 12–15
  171. ^ Testamenta Eboracensia, Volume 2, p. 203, footnote 2.
  172. ^ Jones, B., ed. (1963), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541, vol. 6, pp. 6–9
  173. ^ Testamenta Eboracensia, Volume 2, p. 205.
  174. ^ Testamenta Eboracensia, Volume 2, p. 204.
  175. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 106". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  176. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1461–1467, p. 61.
  177. ^ Jones, B., ed. (1963), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541, vol. 6, pp. 107–109
  178. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1476–1485, p. 175.
  179. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 109". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  180. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1550–1553, p. 401.
  181. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1547–1553, p. 179.
  182. ^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, 1553–1554, p. 230-1
  183. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). "Hospitals: Wolverhampton, St Mary, note anchor 19-21". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  184. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1915, p. 322.
  185. ^ Peel, p. 339.
  186. ^ a b Peel, p. 351.
  187. ^ Bridgett, p. 124.
  188. ^ Hall, p. xxxiv-xxxv.
  189. ^ a b Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1915, p. 331.
  190. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1915, p. 330.
  191. ^ Hall, p. xxxvi-xxxvii.
  192. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 141". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  193. ^ Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles I, 1635–1636, p. 69.
  194. ^ Coulton, p. 88.
  195. ^ Prynne. A Quenche-Coale, p. 196.
  196. ^ Prynne. A Quenche-Coale, p. 197.
  197. ^ Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles I, 1636–1637, p. 382-3.
  198. ^ Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles I, 1640, p. 379.
  199. ^ Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles I, 1640–41, p. 383. and p. 388.
  200. ^ Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles I, 1640–41, p. 392.
  201. ^ Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, of the Reign of Charles I, 1640–41, p. 349.
  202. ^ Coulton, p. 90.
  203. ^ "Lee, Richardus (at Melbourne, Derbyshire) (CCEd Appointment ID 227133)". The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540–1835. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
  204. ^ "Lee, Richardus (at Rugbye, Warwickshire) (CCEd Appointment ID 187708)". The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540–1835. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
  205. ^ Prynne. Canterburies doome, p. 380.
  206. ^ Prynne. Canterburies doome, p. 381.
  207. ^ Laud, p. 371.
  208. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 156". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  209. ^ March 1643: An Ordinance for sequestring notorious Delinquents Estates, in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum.
  210. ^ Shaw, Volume 2, p. 206.
  211. ^ October 1646: An Ordinance for the abolishing of Archbishops and Bishops, in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum.
  212. ^ Shaw, Volume 2, p. 210-13.
  213. ^ November 1646: An Ordinance for explanation and better putting in execution the late Ordinance, Entituled, An Ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, for appointing the sale of Bishops Lands for the use of the Commonwealth, in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum.
  214. ^ April 1649: An Act for abolishing of Deans, etc., in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum.
  215. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 148". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  216. ^ Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, 1655–66, p. 142.
  217. ^ Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding, &c., Volume 4, p. 2483.
  218. ^ Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding, &c., Volume 4, p. 2484.
  219. ^ Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding, &c., Volume 4, p. 2485.
  220. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1915, p. 341, note 42.
  221. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1915, p. 344-5, note 73.
  222. ^ Baugh; et al. (1970). Greenslade, M W; Pugh, R B (eds.). "Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter, note anchor 165". A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3.
  223. ^ Collections for a History of Staffordshire, 1915, p. 343, note 59.
  224. ^ Hickman, Peter. "St. John's in the Square: the New Church". Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website. Bev Parker. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  225. ^ Journal of the Rev. John Wesley, Volume 3, p. 47.
  226. ^ "Giffard House and St.Peter's & St.Paul's Church". Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website. Bev Parker. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  227. ^ Quirke, James. Quirke, Patrick (ed.). "Roman Catholicism in Wolverhampton 1828–1865: The Growth of the Catholic Community in Wolverhampton (part 4)". Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website. Bev Parker. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  228. ^ Act 51 George III cap.182.
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  232. ^ a b Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). "Oliver, George (1782-1867)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 42. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  233. ^ Mackey. Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, Volume 2, p. 529.
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  235. ^ Mackey. Encyclopedia of Freemasonry, Volume 2, p. 528.
  236. ^ Phillimore and Phillimore. p. 172.
  237. ^ Phillimore and Phillimore. p. 174.
  238. ^ Phillimore and Phillimore. p. 183.
  239. ^ Dakeyne. Baptismal Regeneration, dedication page.
  240. ^ Oliver. Book of the Lodge, 1864 edition.
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  245. ^ "ORGAN OF THE MONTH 47: May 2006". Birmingham Organists' Association. May 2006. Retrieved 12 October 2008.
  246. ^ Richard Alleyne (26 September 2010). "Sir Edward Elgar wrote football chant along with his classical music". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  247. ^ "Choirs' songs to honour Wolves legend Malpass".
  248. ^ Staffordshire Advertiser - Saturday 23 April 1836
  249. ^ Hertford Mercury and Reformer - Saturday 22 January 1842
  250. ^ Staffordshire Sentinel and Commercial & General Advertiser - Saturday 28 July 1860
  251. ^ Hubbard, William Lines; Green, Janet M., eds. (1908). Musical Biographies. p. 14. Retrieved 27 April 2016. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)

References Edit

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External links Edit

  • The Parish of Central Wolverhampton
  • St Peter's Wolverhampton Choir
  • St Peter's Guild of Change Ringers
  • Diocesan website
  • Google Virtual Tour of St Peters Church, Wolverhampton
  • Church of England Statistics 2002. 3 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine.

52°35′13″N 2°07′41″W / 52.5869°N 2.1280°W / 52.5869; -2.1280

peter, collegiate, church, confused, with, westminster, abbey, located, central, wolverhampton, england, many, centuries, chapel, royal, from, 1480, royal, peculiar, independent, diocese, lichfield, even, province, canterbury, collegiate, church, central, deve. Not to be confused with Westminster Abbey St Peter s Collegiate Church is located in central Wolverhampton England For many centuries it was a chapel royal and from 1480 a royal peculiar independent of the Diocese of Lichfield and even the Province of Canterbury The collegiate church was central to the development of the town of Wolverhampton much of which belonged to its dean Until the 18th century it was the only church in Wolverhampton and the control of the college extended far into the surrounding area with dependent chapels in several towns and villages of southern Staffordshire St Peter s Collegiate Church WolverhamptonSt Peter s Collegiate ChurchDenominationChurch of EnglandChurchmanshipHigh ChurchWebsiteSt Peter s Collegiate ChurchHistoryDedicationSaint PeterAdministrationProvinceCanterburyDioceseLichfieldParishCentral WolverhamptonClergyRectorVacantLaityReader s Clare WhitneyOrganist Director of musicCallum AlgerOrganist s Elli Mae McGlone Organ Scholar Toby Barnard Assistant Organist Dr David Rendell Organist Emeritus amp Peter Morris Organist Emeritus Churchwarden s Deborah CastleFully integrated into the diocesan structure since 1848 today St Peter s is part of the Anglican Parish of Central Wolverhampton The Grade I listed building much of which is Perpendicular in style dating from the 15th century is of significant architectural and historical interest Although it is not a cathedral it has a strong choral foundation in keeping with English Cathedral tradition The Father Willis organ is of particular note a campaign to raise 300 000 for its restoration was launched in 2008 Restoration began in 2018 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 994 1066 Origins and endowments 1 1 1 Wulfrun s charter 1 1 2 Heantun church 1 2 1066 1135 Norman conquest and its consequences 1 3 1135 89 Anarchy and after 1 4 1189 1224 Dissolution and restoration 1 5 1224 1300 Disputes and prosperity 1 5 1 Giles de Erdington 1 5 2 Theodosius de Camilla 1 6 1300 1480 Neglect and revival 1 6 1 Dilapidation of fabric and alienation of land 1 6 2 Continued decay and emerging opposition 1 6 3 Lay initiatives 1 6 4 Reversal of fortune 1 7 1480 1603 Royal Peculiar and Reformation 1 8 1603 1660 Religious strife and civil war 1 8 1 That captivated Church 1 8 2 The High Church triumphant 1 8 3 Civil war and Commonwealth 1 9 1660 1848 Decline and demise of the old order 1 10 Timeline 2 Architecture 3 Bells 4 Music 4 1 List of organists 5 Today 6 Lists of Incumbents 6 1 Deans of Wolverhampton 6 2 Rectors of St Peter s Collegiate Church 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksHistory Edit nbsp A Wolverhampton Civic Society blue plaque in the south porch summarises the history of the church nbsp Shaft of Anglo Saxon cross attributed to the 9th century to the south of the church Although often said to belong to an early Mercian monastery on the site there is no evidence of such a building The cross is as likely to have been a preaching cross from the period before the church existed nbsp Statue of Wulfrun bearing her charter on the church steps by Charles Wheeler nbsp Tablet commemorating Wulfrun s bequest in the south porchSt Peter s is an Anglo Saxon foundation The history of St Peter s was dominated for centuries by its collegiate status from the 12th century constituted as a dean and prebendaries and by its royal connections which were crystallised in the form of the Royal Peculiar in 1480 Although a source of pride and prosperity to both town and church this institutional framework hard won and doggedly defended made the church subject to the whims of the monarch or governing elite and unresponsive to the needs of its people Characterised by absenteeism and corruption through most of its history the college was involved in constant political and legal strife and it was dissolved and restored a total of three times before a fourth and final dissolution in 1846 8 cleared the way for St Peter s to become an active urban parish church and the focus of civic pride 994 1066 Origins and endowments Edit Wulfrun s charter Edit There is some doubt about the origins of the College of Wolverhampton The most important item of evidence is a charter alleged by an anonymous history of the Diocese of Lichfield to have been discovered around 1560 in ruderibus muri in the ruins of a wall 2 The story of its discovery and its subsequent disappearance has cast doubt on the authenticity of the charter 3 It is known from a transcription made by William Dugdale in 1640 4 when the original was in the library at St George s Chapel Windsor Castle and included in his famous survey Monasticon Anglicanum 5 Sigeric Archbishop of Canterbury confirms Lady Wulfrun s endowment of a Minster at Hampton The original grant by Wulfrun partly Latin and partly Old English is quoted in the charter A translation begins I Wulfrun do grant to the proper patron and high throned King of Kings and in honour of the everlasting Virgin mother of God Mary and of all the saints for the body of my husband and of my soul ten hides of land to that aforesaid monastery of the servants of God there and in another convenient place another ten hides for the offences of Wulfgeat my kinsman lest he should hear in the judgment to be dreaded from the severe Judge Go away from me I hungered and thirsted and so on Because he is blessed who shall eat bread in the kingdom of God Finally now my sole daughter Elfthryth has migrated from the world to the life giving airs For the third time I have granted 10 hides to the almighty God with ineffable charity more willingly than the others Which are surrounded by these territories These are the boundaries of the land that Wulfrun has given to the minster in Hamtun and the names of the towns that this privilegium refers to First of Earn leie and Eswick and Bilsetna tun and Willan hale and Wodnesfeld and Peoleshale and Ocgingtun and Hiltun and Hagenthorndun and Kynwaldes tun Kinvaston and another Hiltune and Feotherstun 6 The charter then defines the boundaries of the estates given by Wulfrun in considerable detail Some of the places named are fairly easy to recognise from their modern or medieval forms Arley Bilston Willenhall Wednesfield Pelsall Ogley Hay Hilton Hatherton Kinvaston Featherstone Others raise problems These were discussed in the notes to a collection of Anglo Saxon charters prepared for publication by C G O Bridgeman in 1916 and his conclusions have been generally accepted These include the identification of Eswick as Ashwood Staffordshire as it was Haswic in the Domesday Book and of the second Hilton as a village of that name near Ogley and Wall Staffordshire 7 The ten hides of land at Wolverhampton were probably those which Wulfrun herself had received from Ethelred II by a charter of 985 8 9 These were specified as ix uidelicet in loco qui dicitur aet Heantune et aeque unam manentem in eo loco quae Anglice aet Treselcotum uocitatur nine plainly in the place which is called Hampton and equally the remaining one in the place called by the English Trescott 10 the latter is a place on the River Smestow to the west of Wolverhampton The Arley lands probably came from a grant which King Edgar the Peaceful had made to Wulfgeat a relative of Wulfrun in 963 11 12 In 1548 before the alleged discovery of Wulfrun s charter Edgar himselfwas generally accepted as the founder of the College 13 Wulfgeat was an important adviser to Ethelred a king who proverbially as the Unready or Redeless did not accept good advice he fell into disgrace 14 and Wulfrun s grants were partly to make amends for his perceived injustices When Wulfgeat died in about 1006 he left four oxen to the church at Heantune 15 Heantun church Edit The church was originally dedicated to St Mary and this was still the dedication at the Domesday survey 16 17 It was switched to St Peter probably in the mid 12th century an escheator s inquisition in 1393 recalled that it was still St Mary s when Henry I 1100 35 granted a small estate to set up a chantry for himself and his parents 18 It seems likely that the College always consisted of secular clergy priests who did not belong to a religious order rather than monks 19 A writ attributed to King Edward the Confessor 1042 1066 refers to the College as my priests at Hampton Although the document is known to be a forgery probably dating from a century later the secular character of the chapter seems to have been accepted unchallenged despite the implication in the foundation charter that it might be a monastery All of the Domesday entries relating to the church of Wolverhampton refer to clergy canons or priests never monks There is no evidence that a monastery ever existed at Wolverhampton A college was not originally an educational institution but rather a body of people with a shared purpose in this case a community of priests charged with pastoral care over a wide and wild area Wulfruna s was far from unique even in its locality The collegiate church of St Michael at nearby Penkridge pre dated Wulfruna s church probably by about half a century 20 Frank Stenton pointed out that Old English word mynster was often used as a word for churches served by such communities of priests and does not necessarily indicate that a community was made up of monks although it is derived from the Latin monasterium 21 Rather than conventional parishes substantial areas in Anglo Saxon England were served by groups of priests who replicated the bishop s cathedral chapter in which they had been trained by working in community These were generally not monastic houses in the full sense Ethelred II did decree clerical celibacy for such bodies in an effort them more monastic in character but without success 22 Richard A Fletcher noted that in this period of renewed Viking activity there were numerous communities of clergy at which reformers looked askance but which very probably made a significant if unobtrusive contribution to the Christianization of Anglo Scandinavian England 23 In some cases like that of Ripon Cathedral former monasteries were revived as collegiate churches At least one Stow Minster in Lincolnshire benefited greatly from the generosity of another Mercian noblewoman Godgifu or Lady Godiva 24 Wulfrun s foundation belonged firmly in this wave of lay foundations By Domesday Wolverhampton and Penkridge had been joined by St Mary s Church Stafford 25 and St Michael s at Tettenhall 26 1066 1135 Norman conquest and its consequences Edit It is not clear when the College began to have a close connection with the Crown although this was to become a defining characteristic which shaped much of its history The forged letter of Edward the Confessor is meant to point to just such a close relationship but we know it dates from a century later after the church had Wolverhampton had passed through a series of difficulties which it probably wanted to resolve permanently Some of these stemmed from the Norman Conquest which brought considerable disruption to Staffordshire s collegiate churches Wolverhampton s was given by William the Conqueror to his own personal chaplain Samson W rex Anglorum L archiepiscopo et G episcopo Constant et P episcopo et R vicecomiti ceterisque suis fidelibus de Estaffordscire salutem Sciatis me dedisse Sampsoni capellano meo ecclesiam Sancte Marie de Wolvrenehamptonia cum terra et omnibus aliis rebus et consuetudinibus sicut melius predicta ecclesia habuit tempore regis Edwardi 27 William I King of the English greets Archbishop L anfranc and G osfrid Bishop of Coutances and P eter Bishop of Lichfield and R obert the sheriff and the other lieges of Staffordshire Know that I the King have given to Samson his chaplain the church of Saint Mary of Wolverhampton with the land and all the things and customs which the aforesaid church had in the time of King Edward 28 The following table summarises information in the Domesday Book relating to locations that were or had been holdings of the canons of Wolverhampton The information is derived from the relevant facsimile page at Open Domesday 29 and the translation at the University of Hull s Hydra Repository 30 Map this section s coordinates in St Peter s Collegiate Church using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Lands at Domesday Phillimore reference no Location Ploughlands Lord in 1066 Tenant in chief 1087 Slaves Villeins Smallholders Free men Approximate geographical referenceSTS 7 1 Wolverhampton 3 Canons of Wolverhampton Samson the chaplain 14 6 30 52 35 13 N 2 07 41 W 52 5869 N 2 1280 W 52 5869 2 1280 Wolverhampton STS 7 2 Upper Arley 6 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 2 7 3 3 52 25 16 N 2 20 38 W 52 42118 N 2 34384 W 52 42118 2 34384 Upper Arley STS 7 2 Arley 1 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton but Osbern Fitz Richard had taken it by force 4 52 25 16 N 2 20 38 W 52 42118 N 2 34384 W 52 42118 2 34384 Arley STS 7 3 Bushbury Wulfric William Fitz Ansculf 1 52 37 12 N 2 06 51 W 52 6199 N 2 1141 W 52 6199 2 1141 Bushbury STS 7 4 Trescott Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 1 52 34 08 N 2 13 21 W 52 5689 N 2 2225 W 52 5689 2 2225 Trescott STS 7 5 Tettenhall 2 Edward the Confessor William the Conqueror who had given its as a free grant to Tettenhall church 1 3 52 35 55 N 2 09 45 W 52 5986 N 2 1626 W 52 5986 2 1626 Tettenhall STS 7 6 Ashwood Staffordshire 8 but waste because part of the royal forest Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 52 29 18 N 2 11 46 W 52 4883 N 2 196 W 52 4883 2 196 Ashwood STS 7 7 Wednesfield 3 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 6 6 52 35 59 N 2 05 01 W 52 5997 N 2 0835 W 52 5997 2 0835 Wednesfield STS 7 8 Willenhall 1 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 3 5 52 35 03 N 2 03 00 W 52 5842 N 2 0500 W 52 5842 2 0500 Willenhall STS 7 9 Pelsall 1 but waste Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 52 37 32 N 1 58 16 W 52 6255 N 1 9711 W 52 6255 1 9711 Pelsall STS 7 10 Hilton 1 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 2 4 52 38 54 N 1 52 51 W 52 6483 N 1 8807 W 52 6483 1 8807 Hilton STS 7 11 Ogley Hay Waste Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 52 38 52 N 1 55 30 W 52 6478 N 1 9250 W 52 6478 1 9250 Ogley Hay STS 7 12 Hatherton 2 Canons of Wolverhampton Samson the chaplain who let the land to the priests Edwin and Alric 1 3 7 Man at arms 52 41 24 N 2 03 57 W 52 6900 N 2 0659 W 52 6900 2 0659 Hatherton STS 7 13 Kinvaston 1 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 3 3 52 42 32 N 2 08 10 W 52 709 N 2 136 W 52 709 2 136 Kinvaston STS 7 15 Hilton 2 Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 1 1 1 52 38 47 N 2 04 29 W 52 6465 N 2 0748 W 52 6465 2 0748 Hilton STS 7 15 Featherstone Waste Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 52 38 56 N 2 05 57 W 52 6490 N 2 0992 W 52 6490 2 0992 Featherstone STS 12 1 Sedgley Woodland AElfgar Earl of Mercia William Fitz Ansculf 52 32 41 N 2 07 42 W 52 5447 N 2 1283 W 52 5447 2 1283 Sedgley WOR 13 1 Lutley Canons of Wolverhampton Canons of Wolverhampton 2 2 1 52 26 46 N 2 05 18 W 52 446 N 2 0882 W 52 446 2 0882 Lutley STS 1 4 Bilston 4 King Edward King William 8 3 52 34 00 N 2 04 31 W 52 5666 N 2 0753 W 52 5666 2 0753 Bilston Domesday shows a variable situation of retreat and advance for the canons of Wolverhampton They no longer held Wolverhampton itself as tenants in chief but as tenants of Samson 16 No holdings of the canons are mentioned at Bilston either before of after the Conquest the whole of Bilston now belonged to the king himself 31 Other lands he had let out to other priests certainly Hatherton 32 although the Victoria County History includes while Open Domesday does not Kinvaston 33 Hilton 34 and Featherstone 35 At Arley some of their land had been seized forcibly by one Osbern Fitz Richard 36 On the other hand even before the Conquest they had acquired an estate at Lutley Worcestershire and they claimed woodland at Sedgeley neither of these was in Wulfrun s grant At Wolverhampton the canons land was cultivated by 14 slaves alongside 36 other peasants 16 The church also had slaves at Upper Arley The expansion of the royal forests hunting grounds for the king and his retainers had hit the region hard and Wolverhampton was almost surrounded with the Forest of Kinver up to its southern edge and the Forest of Brewood and Cannock Chase to the north This took substantial areas out of agricultural production making them almost valueless to the canons there were five hides at Ashwood now subsumed into the Forest of Kinver for example Despite the direct royal patronage and the close attention of the royal chaplain the Conquest had brought considerable setbacks for the canons nbsp Seal of Henry I an important benefactor of St Peter sSamson was elected Bishop of Worcester on 8 June 1096 37 He may have been previously in only minor orders as he had to be ordained a priest the day before his consecration He became notorious despite his vow of clerical celibacy as the father of at least three children two of whom later became bishops During the reign of Henry I he donated the church at Wolverhampton to his cathedral priory at Worcester although its lands and privileges were protected 38 Henry I himself made a very substantial grant to Wolverhampton church to establish his chantry there a house with forty acres of land and rents worth 20 a year 18 1135 89 Anarchy and after Edit nbsp Tomb in Salisbury Cathedral thought to be that of Roger of SalisburyHowever The Anarchy the confused civil strife of King Stephen s reign brought great challenges First the church was seized by Roger Bishop of Salisbury 39 Roger had risen to be Lord Chancellor and Henry I s chief minister and had vowed to support the succession of the Empress Matilda Henry I s daughter and chosen heir 40 He broke his word on Henry s death citing her marriage to Geoffrey Plantagenet Count of Anjou as justification His support was initially crucial in allowing Stephen to consolidate his rule after his coup d etat of 1135 and he used his influence to extend his property building a powerful political clique that included his nephews Nigel Bishop of Ely and Alexander Bishop of Lincoln Stephen felt threatened by his over mighty Chancellor and moved against him on 24 October 1139 Provoked into a brawl at the king s court at Oxford Roger and his family were disgraced and dispossessed He lost the church at Wolverhampton and its lands along with much else and died in December At Oxford in 1139 or 1140 Stephen granted Wolverhampton church to Roger de Clinton described as Bishop of Chester and Lichfield Cathedral 41 He also issued a writ of intendence calling on all the clergy laity and tenants to transfer their loyalty to Bishop Roger 42 The canons were outraged at this betrayal of trust which left them at the mercy of a powerful magnate in their own vicinity and appealed to Pope Eugenius III It is notable that around this time the dedication was changed to St Peter which would be a flattering move in negotiations with Rome Occasionally thereafter it was described as the Church of St Peter and St Paul 43 Whatever dedication is given the church s seals generally picture both saints 44 Despite the briefness of the interlude under Lichfield the impact of Bishop Roger de Clinton and his chapter of secular clergy at Lichfield may have been considerable The diocese had three centres Coventry Chester and Lichfield As the other centres were so heavily involved in the military action of Stephen s reign it seems that Clinton gave renewed emphasis to the religious role of Lichfield re establishing it as the headquarters of his see 45 It seems that he reorganised Lichfield s chapter on a prebendal model in order to counterbalance the monastic chapter at Coventry 46 and using Rouen Cathedral as his model 47 At some time in the mid 12th century probably under the control of Lichfield Wolverhampton was reorganised along similar lines with a dean and prebendaries 48 King Stephen restored Wolverhampton church to Worcester priory by 1152 perhaps as early as 1144 In his concession he described himself as prius inconsulte previously ill advised 49 nbsp Effigy of Henry II at Fontevraud AbbeyStephen was forced to agree that he would be succeeded by Matilda s son Henry Plantagenet at that time already Duke of Normandy and Duke of Aquitaine Even before he succeeded to the throne Henry issued a charter in which he described the church at Wolverhampton as my chapel restored all its privileges from the time of Henry I and recognised it as free from secular taxation H dux Normannorum et Aquitanorum et cornes Andegavorum omnibus archiepiscopis episcopis comitibus baronibus justiciis vicecomitibus et omnibus amicis et fidelibus suis Normannis et Anglis salutem Sciatis me concessisse ecclesie de Wlvronehamptona capelle mee omnem illam libertatem quam habuit in tempore H regis avi mei et omnem illam quietanciam in bosco et plano in pratis et pascuis in aquis et extra in viis et semitis et omnibus locis et canonicis ejusdem ecclesie eandem concedo libertatem et quietanciam Quare mando et firmiter precipio ut eadem ecclesia capella mea libera sit et quieta ab omnibus consuetudinibus et exactionibus cum omnibus pertinentiis suis et canonici omnia sua libere et quiete possideant ne quis eis dampnum vel molestiam vel injuriam aliquam facere presumat Testibus Rogero comite Herefordie Waltero fratre suo constabulario Henrico fratre suo Gervasio Paganell germano Apud Dudeleg 50 51 Henry duke of Normandy and Aquitaine count of Anjou greets all archbishops bishops earls barons justices sheriffs and all his Norman and English friends and lieges Know that I have given to the church at Wolverhampton my chapel all that liberty and immunity it had in the time of King Henry my grandfather in woods and level land in meadows and pastures in waters and outside them on roads and pathways and all places and to the canons of this same church I grant these liberties and immunities By the same token I order and strongly enjoin that this same church my chapel be free of all customs and taxes and all they imply and that all its canons occupy it freely and safely without threat of loss harassment or injury Witnessed by Roger Earl of Hereford Walter his brother the Constable Henry his brother Gevase Pagnell his close friend At Dudley As soon as he came to the throne in 1154 as Henry II he issued another charter recognising the right of the canons to hold a manorial court 52 Neither of these charters explicitly stated Wolverhampton was not subject to the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Lichfield but the king had clearly asserted a special relationship with the Crown recognising the church at Wolverhampton as a royal chapel It was probably Henry II who appointed Peter of Blois as Dean of Wolverhampton he is the first dean whose name is known Peter was a Latin poet lawyer and a diplomat of considerable experience He had been tutor to William II of Sicily one of the most cultivated rulers of his time and Henry had brought him into his circle of close supporters when he was under extreme pressure because of the murder of Thomas Becket and ruptures in the royal family 53 It is not clear when Peter was appointed to the position at Wolverhampton but he outlived his royal patron entering a period of relative disfavour under Richard I 1189 1224 Dissolution and restoration Edit By the time Peter of Blois was appointed the College was organised as a community of prebendaries headed by a dean Peter seems to have taken little interest in his Wolverhampton deanery until after the death of Henry II he had numerous other benefices and was heavily involved in Archbishop Baldwin s prolonged feud with his own cathedral chapter spending a year away arguing Baldwin s case at the Papal Curia in 1187 88 53 The earliest extant evidence of any interest Wolverhampton is a letter he wrote to the Chancellor William Longchamp to denounce the tyranny of the Sheriff of Stafford 54 who was he complained trampling on the church s ancient privileges and oppressing the townspeople The letter was well calculated to win sympathy as the sheriff was Hugh Nonant Bishop of Coventry an enemy of Longchamp because he supported the Prince John the regent It must have been written in 1190 1 as Longchamp s ascendancy dates from mid 1190 and he was forced to leave the country in October 1191 55 Although he championed the church against outsiders Peter considered the prebendaries corrupt He wrote a stinging rebuke to Robert of Shrewsbury who held one of the Wolverhampton prebends and sought to retain it after he was elected Bishop of Bangor 56 nbsp King John from a medieval manuscript of Historia AnglorumAround 1202 Peter resigned his post and put forward a revolutionary plan from outside In a letter to Pope Innocent III Peter denounced the college as composed of a clique so closely and notoriously intermarried that no one was able to prise them apart As they were incorrigible a complete reform was necessary 57 With the assent of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the king a Cistercian monastery could be established as the area abounded in the woods meadows and waters 58 needed by this ascetic French order dedicated to a radical and literal interpretation of the Benedictine Rule Peter did persuade Archbishop Hubert Walter and King John of the advantages of his plan and it received royal assent early in 1203 It appears that John had already appointed one Nicholas to the deanery left vacant by Peter s resignation 59 This Nicholas appeared as Dean of Wolverhampton when he was taken to court in September 1203 by Elias Fitz Philip in a property case involving an estate at Kinvaston 60 Shortly afterwards he appears in court again shorn of his title as plain Nicholas de Hamton 61 and later again under the same designation when it is specified that the dispute is over one virgate of land 62 It appears that this marks his loss of the deanery in line with the king s decision to wind up the college of Wolverhampton Early in 1204 John transferred the deanery and prebends to the archbishop in order for him to establish a monastery which should pray for souls of the king and his ancestors after death as well as in their lifetimes He dispensed with Forest law and exactions for these properties 63 On 28 July 1204 John also granted the manor of Wolverhampton his charter suggests that there were already Cistercian monks waiting there in readiness 64 On 31 May 1205 at Portchester John granted the vill of Tettenhall 65 These were additional to the deanery and prebends and represented a further level of security in possession of the estates the Pipe rolls show that in 1203 4 Hubert Walter had already drawn an income of 20 shillings per quarter or 4 a year from Tettenhall 66 while in 1204 5 he received the same from Tettenhall but in three instalments and 33 shillings quarterly or 6 12s for the year from Wolverhampton 67 On 1 June 1205 still at Portchester John issued a charter transferring to Archbishop Hubert woodland at Kingsley in Kinver Forest which was close to Tettenhall this time specifying that it was for the construction of a Cistercian monastery once again it was dispensed from Forest law and customs 68 John also had a full charter drafted granting in perpetual alms the deanery prebends and whole manor of Wolverhampton the wood of Kingsley and the vill of Tettenhall and all their parts 69 The scheme also received the reforming Innocent III s approval which was still in force when Archbishop Hubert Walter died on 13 July 1205 70 Immediately everything was reversed The draft charter of liberties was marked as cancelled because of archbishop s death 69 John had changed his mind completely and on 5 August 1205 only three weeks after the archbishop s death he appointed a replacement dean of Wolverhampton Henry the son of his Chief Justiciar Geoffrey Fitz Peter 1st Earl of Essex 71 Abandoning any pretence of reform the terms of Henry s appointment specified that he was to hold the deanery with its liberties and honours exactly as his predecessors Well connected to all the centres of power in the kingdom he seems to have held the post of dean for nearly two decades It is often claimed that the new church was begun early in the 13th century 72 probably during the interregnum meaning that it would have been constructed largely under Henry However the building s Historic England listing now suggests that the earliest part of the present building the crossing and south transept date from the late 13th century 73 1224 1300 Disputes and prosperity Edit Giles de Erdington Edit Giles of Erdington who became Dean of St Peter s around 1224 was a talented lawyer and was already set on a career that would make him one of Henry III s most eminent judges 74 a Justice of the Common Bench He soon seized the opportunity afforded by the appointment of a new and inexperienced bishop Alexander Stavensby to make a formal deal with the Diocese of Lichfield The dean s right to appoint and discipline the prebends was recognised The bishop was to intervene only in the last resort if the dean was not carrying out his functions For his part the dean recognised the bishop s right to be received with honour at St Peter s and to administer the sacraments there 75 However the whole issue blew up again in 1260 when Erdington repelled an attempt by Bishop Roger de Meyland to hold a canonical visitation by getting a royal prohibition on 8 November against any person attempting anything against the privileges of Giles de Erdinton king s clerk dean of Wolverhampton or of the king s chapel of Wolverhampton or of the canons or servitors there 76 The prohibition cited a Papal rescript issued at Lyon in 1245 that guaranteed the independence of royal chapels which it characterised as ecclesiae Romanae immediate subjecta directly subordinate to the Roman Church 77 They were therefore immune even from excommunication and interdict pronounced at a lower level which disarmed the local bishop in his dealings with them Erdington was equally vigorous in promoting the economic interests of the college Sometimes this meant taking a firm line over local issues in 1230 he literally raised a stink by taking legal action against a chaplain at Tettenhall over marshland at Codsall that was creating a health hazard 78 Property agreements were carefully recorded often by the device of a fine of lands a conveyance registered by a fictional lawsuit On 18 November 1236 for example he was notionally sued for land at Kinvaston by Athelard the two sides came to an agreement that Athelard s family would rent 1 virgates from the dean and his successors for mark annually 79 To make clear the college s territorial sway he had the boundaries walked ceremonially In 1248 for example the king ordered the sheriff to organise a perambulation with twelve knights near Codsall where the College s lands bordered the Oaken estate of Croxden Abbey 80 Sometimes it was necessary to pursue offenders In June 1253 the Dean and Chapter prosecute 39 local men who had entered the College s lands as an armed band destroying fences and crops None turned up in court and their sureties proved worthless so the sheriff was ordered to take appropriate action 81 Erdington was concerned that the church benefit from the town s booming trade which was based mainly on wool In 1258 Erdington secured for the deanery the lucrative right to hold a weekly market on Wednesaday at Wolverhampton co Stafford and of a yearly fair there on the vigil and Feast of Saints Peter and Paul and the six days following 82 both of which took place thereafter at the foot of the church steps Erdington took care to placate other local magnates who might take offence at the growth of Wolverhampton foremost among them being Roger de Somery lord of neighbouring Sedgley Somery was an ambitious man who wanted to establish himself in a castle at Dudley 83 and had an interest in the town s future In February 1261 the two sides came to a compromise Erdington conceded various useful pieces of land including 20 acres at Wolverhampton and roadside verges on the route through Ettingshall and Sedgley in return for an annual rent of eight pounds of wax 84 useful to the church with its constant need for candles Somery accepted Erdington s market without challenge on condition his own family as well as the burgesses and villeins might travel to and from Wolverhampton without tolls 85 In 1263 Erdington reinforced the position of his own burgesses by granting them the right to succeed to their burgages freely on the same terms as those of Stafford 86 He established a chaplain in the church probably a chantry priest In 1398 a Chantry of St Mary was mentioned when Thomas of Wrottesley was appointed to it by the king this may have been Erdington s chantry 87 Whatever the exemptions granted by earlier kings it is clear that Wolverhampton and the other royal chapels in Staffordshire were paying secular taxation by this time Wolverhampton s payment of 53s 4d towards the levy of a tenth was acknowledged in April 1268 along with similar sums from the chapels at Tettenhall Stafford and Penkridge 88 Theodosius de Camilla Edit The next dean was Theodosius de Camilla an Italian cleric related to the powerful Fieschi family 89 of Genoa and a cousin of Pope Adrian V 90 He was appointed on 10 January 1269 91 following Erdington s death As early as 1218 It was roundly asserted at Lichfield Assizes that the Church and Deanery of Wuvlrenehamtum is of the King s gift Giles de Ardington holds it by gift of the present King 92 However in 1252 after Henry de Hastings perished in the Seventh Crusade it was made clear that he had held the advowson of Wolverhampton deanery Although the king was keen to assert his right it seems likely that he was willing to sell or rent it if the need was great enough However the appointment of Theodosius was by the king himself Moreover the notification made clear that it included collation to the prebends a potentially lucrative right nbsp Pope Adrian V Ottobuono de Fieschi Theodosius was just as vigorous as Erdington in defending the college but his tenure began to demonstrate some of the disadvantages of royal appointment He was a notorious pluralist and a career diplomat rather than a pastor In 1274 he came into conflict with Canterbury over the issue and his rectory of Wingham Kent sequestrated by the Dominican Archbishop Robert Kilwardby 93 until restored to him on the intervention of his cousin Cardinal Ottobuono de Fieschi 90 In 1276 he had even obtained a dispensation from Pope John XXI allowing him to hold both Wingham and Wolverhampton without need of residence or even ordination 94 suggesting he was no more than a sub deacon The dispensation was conditional on his resigning two other benefices one in the Diocese of Lincoln the other York No mention was ever made in this context of his prebends of Bartonsham in Hereford Cathedral 95 and Yetminster Prima in Salisbury Cathedral 89 His absences from the country on royal or personal business continued throughout his life In February 1286 Edward I gave him letters to cover a visit to the Papal Curia and he appointed attorneys for his absence 96 In September 1289 again going overseas he appointed Andrew of Genoa his attorney for a year 97 He was sent abroad again by the king in January 1291 98 and nominated attorneys until Midsummer 99 Andrew of Genoa was the main representative of Theodosius in and around Wolverhampton his bailiff and proctor as well as his attorney The deanery lands were exploited with great thoroughness Around 1274 finding that tenants at Bilbrook had failed to pay their tallage or hand over their best pigs in return for pannage in the woods the deanery simply seized their cattle on the road 100 and sat out their attempt to gain restitution 101 In 1292 Andrew appeared in court for Theodosius as his bailiff in a dispute with the Abbot of Croxden over woodland at Oaken 102 After getting the case postponed with ingenious arguments about the true pronunciation of the name of the place he resorted to challenging the property boundary and the jury found against him It seems that he was ruthless in extracting value from the dean s woodland The exploitation was so intense that Roger Le Strange the Justice in Eyre took deanery woods back into Cannock Chase for protection this area was recovered in June 1293 103 A writ for a full scale inquisition into infractions of deanery and prebendal rights was issued later that year from Cambridge and it was held in Lichfield with numerous issues rehearsed particularly concerning woods and assarts around Hatherton Wednesfield and Codsall 104 At least some of the prebendaries were royal servants with pressing obligations elsewhere while some travelled widely abroad Geoffrey of Aspall was keeper of the wardrobe to Queen Eleanor responsible for her finances 105 Theodosius collated at least three of his relatives to prebends Edward de Camilla is known from a case in which Master Andrew was trying to recover 50 arrears for the farm of the deanery and Edward s prebend which was let to a Wolverhampton entrepreneur 106 the largely absentee dean and canons did not manage their own estates but lived on advance fees paid by the farmers Another Theodosius of Camilla a canon of Wolverhampton made preparations for a two year overseas trip in 1298 nominating Andrew as his attorney three years after Dean Theodosius died 107 Gregory of Camilla was setting off for Rome in July 1304 108 nbsp Effigy of John Peckham on his tomb in Canterbury CathedralAlthough he was seldom if ever present in Wolverhampton the church was important enough to Theodosius for him to face down even the Archbishop of Canterbury in its defence The Second Council of Lyons in 1274 denounced a number of abuses of which the prebendaries were plainly guilty including non residence and pluralism The Franciscan Archbishop John Peckham was determined to bring the royal chapels to book On 1 April 1280 while staying at Trentham Priory he wrote a letter to the king setting out clearly his intention to carry out a metropolitical visitation against an explicit royal prohibition he had just received and of backing it with excommunications where necessary 109 On 27 July 1280 Peckham appeared at the doors of St Peter s which were shut against him He was forced to write to the dean and canons from the church cemetery noting that Tedisius of Camilla who calls himself dean was apparently overseas 110 He threatened them all with excommunication and summoned the prebendaries to meet him on 31 July However the canons of all the royal chapels in the diocese ignored him and on 11 November the sentences of excommunication were confirmed 111 On 13 December Peckham appointed Philip of St Austell a cleric on his own staff to complete the visitation 112 In February 1281 he wrote to the king to reiterate and to justify the sentences 113 apparently he was already feeling the force of royal censure The pressure on Peckham seems to have been building as he was compelled to write to the Bishop of Dublin who was dean of Penkridge and at least twice more to the king arguing his case 114 which rested on his own interpretation of the precedent of Archbishop Boniface On 23 February he wrote to Jordan Bishop Meyland s official at Lichfield warning him that it was a profanation of the sacrament to allow the excommunicated clerics to officiate at Mass 115 However only a day later he wrote to the king to inform him that he had postponed the excommunications excepting those of the clergy at Penkridge pending the calling of a Parliament 116 Peckham agreed to allow the issue to be decided by a tribunal specially constituted for the purpose and on 21 May nominated the Dean of Arches as his proctor 117 An agreement was reached the following month by which Bishop Meyland accepted that six of the chapels including Wolverhampton were beyond the reach of any ordinary on condition that he be honourably received in them as before 118 nbsp Pope Boniface VIII Benedetto Caetani The archbishop s feud with Theodosius continued however He briefed his proctor in Rome for a campaign stressing the dean s absenteeism and pluralism 119 In 1282 Camilla was excommunicated and deprived of his Wingham rectory and the church at Tarring 120 However events began to move in his direction early in the following year when Pope Martin IV ordered Peckham to restore the churches His impunity was largely the result of his powerful contacts including Benedetto Caetani the future Pope Boniface VIII Peckham wrote directly to him in an attempt to improve relations 121 but without result Theodosius then began to pursue Peckham and his associates the incumbents of the disputed churches through the ecclesiastical courts After arguments at a tribunal the sides agreed to arbitration by Bernard Bishop of Porto which resulted in a triumph for Theodosius Peckham and his group were ordered to pay him and his successors a pension of 200 marks in compensation 122 When he died in 1295 he was still Dean of Wolverhampton despite all opposition Erdington and Theodosius brought St Peter s to its medieval peak of prosperity and influence although its spiritual standards were already notorious The economic well being of the church was greatly improved by their unwillingness to pay tax Theodosius was deriving 50 marks a year from the deanery by the 1290s 123 but declared only 20 marks for tax purposes The total taxable value of the church was reported in the Taxatio Ecclesiastica compiled 1291 2 as only 54 13s 4d This included six prebends which are named for the first time at this point Featherstone Willenhall Wobaston Hilton Monmore Kinvaston 124 In addition there was the chantry of St Mary in Hatherton which was shortly to become a seventh prebend 1300 1480 Neglect and revival Edit nbsp Medieval pulpit probably mid 15th century in the nave of the church It is one of the best preserved of its period with a full set of stone steps nbsp The intact carved lion on the balustrade of the pulpitDilapidation of fabric and alienation of land Edit Philip of Everdon was appointed dean by Edward I on 15 September 1295 125 In December 1302 he was warned by the king to revoke the collation of Ottobonus Malespania to a prebend by Papal provision 126 The following month the king ordered the sheriff to defend the rights of Nicholas de Luvetot whom Philip had previously collated to the prebend of Kinvaston against the Italian claimant 127 The incident seems to have marked a serious breach between king and dean Further problems were to follow While the 13th century deans had been shrewd in business enriching themselves through improvements to the church estates their 14th century successors would have struggled because of the economic crisis of the early 14th century and the ensuing Black Death However they frittered away the assets and in some cases resorted to plain embezzlement An underlying problem was the enclosure of waste for sale which alienated it from the church s estates On 1 May 1311 John of Everdon 1303 23 was licensed to enclose no less than 400 acres at Prestwood and Blakeley on the edge of Wednesfield and inside Cannock Chase 128 by 1322 he was selling off this land in fee simple to John Hampton In 1323 after John s death Edward II ordered the escheator to sequester lands that he had alienated without licence to the prejudice of the king and the peril of disherison of the deanery whereat the king is much disturbed 129 An inspeximus of 1376 revealed another of John s land sales in the area and one dating from the time of Theodosius but confirms both notwithstanding that the said plots were of the foundation of the said church which is now called the king s free chapel of Wolvernehampton 130 Dean Hugh Ellis 1328 39 was suspected of giving away much of the stock of the deanery and left the buildings dilapidated After his death Edward III ordered a thorough survey and inquiry by a commission of justices in the presence of his new dean Philip de Weston 131 A further commission in March 1340 added an investigation of the books vestments and ornaments 132 while in the following year the king opined that Ellis had wasted the goods and possessions of the deanery whereby the divine worship and works of piety of old established there have been withdrawn 133 The report revealed great prodigality A vast quantity of expensive cutlery silverware tableware linen precious stones horses livestock even a relic of the True Cross had been dispersed among friends and retainers or stolen from Hugh s custody His own manse had fallen into serious disrepair with defects in the walls kitchen part of the roof and farm buildings Three cottages at Wednesfield had fallen into disrepair and been plundered for the materials Oaks worth 10 had been felled and sold off at Pelsall A mill and its pool were in disrepair There were substantial tax arrears However the vestments and ornaments were not found defective 134 Philip de Weston himself seems to have problems with one of his bailiffs John Buffry who failed to render account of his work and failed to appear in court at Michaelmas 1356 135 It transpired that he had defrauded Weston and a chaplain of 55 marks He was outlawed surrendered himself and was confined in the Fleet Prison the king pardoned him the following May 136 The incompetence and waste seems to have infected many of the royal chapels in the region and in 1368 the king noting that they were immune from ordinary jurisdiction set up commissions to carry out visitations of Wolverhampton St Mary s Church Bridgnorth Stafford Tettenhall and St Mary s Church Shrewsbury He alleged alienation poor estate management loss of books and vestments the dissolute lives of the canons neglect of worship and almsgiving and misappropriation of funds 137 The visitation of Wolverhampton was headed by the Abbots of Halesowen and Evesham In fact Wolverhampton s deans had remained zealous in maintaining the college s rights and privileges getting successive kings to confirm its charters 138 if most of the other accusations were true Continued decay and emerging opposition Edit After the king s visitation the running of the church was much as before Dean Richard Postell 1373 94 was careful of the church s liberties in 1379 he obtained inspeximus and confirmation of letters patent of Edward III a document that confirmed charters further back to the time of Edward the Confessor 139 However an inquisition of 1393 found that he had dismissed the six priests funded by Henry I s grant to celebrate the liturgy and for 19 years he had diverted the income amounting to 26 13s 4d annually to his own uses 18 It seems that he also embezzled money entrusted to him by prominent lay members of the congregation Roger Leveson John Salford and John Waterfall 140 There were complaints and appeals to the king about the judicial functions of his officials 141 with the cases being referred to the Archdeacon of Coventry for decision 142 143 presumably because these were matters concerning marriage and family Near the end of his life his exasperated tenants launched a rent strike 144 Lawrence Allerthorpe 1394 1406 continued to neglect the deanery For his first three years of office he was also dean of St Mary s Stafford 145 In September 1399 he was made a Baron of the Exchequer by Henry IV who had seized power that year 146 In February 1401 Archbishop Thomas Arundel sent delegates to carry out a visitation of St Peter s 147 Allerthorpe objected but had to back down probably as Arundel was a key pillar of the new regime Allerthorpe certainly retained royal favour after the affair and on 31 May 1401 was appointed Lord High Treasurer 148 a near impossible job given the disorder in the country and the low levels of royal receipts as he made clear to the king later in the year 149 At Michaelmas 1402 his attorney appeared in court to complain that a group of Wolverhampton people had attacked and torn down the refreshment stalls he maintained in the town 150 perhaps enraged at a commercial monopoly enforced under spiritual excuses the culprits did not appear and the case disappears from view After Allerthorpe s death rumours reached the king that great damage had been done to the deanery assets the chancel was in disrepair and the estates and fences neglected In July 1406 he set up an inquisition on the issue 151 In 1410 when Dean Thomas Stanley died a further inquisition into dilapidations was set up although it was acknowledged that Allerthorpe s executors had made due allowance for repairs which Stanley had pocketed 152 Lay initiatives Edit Despite this neglect there were still plenty of pious people prepared to make large donations and bequests to the church There were two chantry chapels in the collegiate church both well endowed One of these was St Mary s chapel probably Erdington s The other dated from 1311 when Henry of Prestwood paid 20s for a licence to alienate in mortmain a toft or farmhouse 30 acres of land and rents worth 13s 4d so that a chaplain might sing Mass for him daily in St Peter s 153 To obtain the licence Henry had to attend an inquisition before the king s escheator who was concerned to ensure that the king and the county suffered no unforeseen losses through the donation This valued his gift at a total of 23s 10d per year 154 Henry was not of the landowning class but a middling farmer all of whose lands were held of the dean after his donation he was left with 3 carucates of land 30 acres of meadow and 40 acres of pasture at Wednesfield Lay donations played a major part in securing priests for the outlying areas of the parish By establishing chantries the donors ensured at least one daily act of worship would take place in each chapel The chaplain at Pelsall was maintained by William la Kue s grant of a house 60 acres and rents worth 60s 6d per year in total made two weeks after Henry of Prestwood s grant in 1311 and following an inquisition at Walsall 155 At Willenhall services were sustained from a gift made by Richard Gervase a house 40 acres of land four of meadow and a half share in a mill altogether worth 40s annually 156 This was to support a chantry with one chaplain to celebrate Mass daily for the souls of Richard his wife Felicia and all their relatives After an inquisition in October 1327 at Wolverhampton the king licensed the chantry on 14 February 1328 157 Not until 1447 did Bilston acquire a similar chaplain when Sir Thomas Erdington obtained a licence to found a chantry with one priest in the chapel of St Leonard and to grant land in mortmain to the chaplain up to the value of 40s a year 158 A special lay body the wardens of the light was founded in 1385 to tend a light in honour of St Peter 159 A remarkable product of this lay piety was St Mary s Hospital not a centre for medical treatment but an almshouse and chantry established through the efforts of two wardens of the light William Waterfall a generous layman and Clement Leveson a chaplain at St Peter s 160 On 4 August 1392 in return for five marks they obtained a licence from Richard II to found a hospital for a chaplain and six poor people and to alienate to it in mortmain a messuage and three acres 161 The following month Waterfall got permission to acquire for the hospital property and rents to the value of 10 per year 162 Initially the residents were to pray for the founders and Joan Waterfall William s wife Further permissions were required from the lord of the manor of Stow Heath and from the dean Hence Hugh Lord Burnell a powerful marcher lord 163 and Dean Lawrence Allerthorpe were added to the list of those for whom prayers were offered The first recorded chaplain was John Pepard 164 who seems to have given his name to the hospital Pyper s Chapel It was situated east of the town just in the manor of Stowheath bordering Can Lane to the east 165 today this area is dominated by Wolverhampton bus station on Pipers Row Further information St Mary s Hospital Wolverhampton Reversal of fortune Edit The decline of the church and its estates which stood in stark contrast to the flourishing of lay piety was stemmed by two deans whose work in the town roughly spans the Wars of the Roses and who showed at least a modicum of interest in the church Dean John Barningham 1437 57 sometimes rendered Berningham recommenced work on the church building soon after his appointment On 1 July 1439 a royal commission was issued to John Hampton Thomas Swynforton William Leveson James Leveson John Mollesley William Salford and Nicholas Leveson to quarry stone for the rebuilding from prebendal lands and supply it on reasonable terms 166 It was this that led to the reshaping of the building in substantially its present form Barningham was firm in ensuring records were available and people held to account In 1441 he sued Nicholas Leveson to give up a bag of deeds and charters that belonged to the church 167 Ten years later he sued his former bailiff William Taillour to render proper account of his term of office Taillour did not appear so the sheriff was ordered to arrest him and bring him to court during the Easter sessions 168 However Barningham had much else on his mind as he was deeply involved in the affairs of the Diocese of York as a key supporter of Archbishop John Kemp and a member of the chapter of York Minster This had begun well before his appointment as Dean of Wolverhampton when he was collated to the prebend of Wetwang in 1426 169 In 1432 he was made Treasurer 170 one of the key administrative officers of the cathedral and diocese In 1435 he became a canon of Beverley Minster and in 1450 provost of its chapter 171 He held numerous other benefices and became very wealthy Even while dean of Wolverhampton he was engaged from 1452 in a fruitless struggle to wrest the deanery of York from its holder 172 His will of 29 March 1457 made bequests to the town and its people Item lego ad fabricam navis ecclesiae de Wolverhampton c s Item lego xls pro obitu meo celebrando in ecclesia predicta de Wolverhampton Ixvj s viij d distribuendos ibidem inter pauperes et presertim inter pauperes tenentes meos ejusdem dominii 173 In the same way I set aside for the building of the nave of Wolverhampton church 100 shillings Likewise I set aside 40 shillings for my obit in the aforementioned church of Wolverhampton 66 shillings and 8 pence to be distributed in the same place among the poor particularly the church s poor tenants Barningham was as generous as he was wealthy leaving bequests for many parishes and institutions with which he was associated His generosity to Wolverhampton however contrasts with 50 for York Minster 174 even for this dean Wolverhampton was at the periphery of his activity nbsp St George s Chapel Windsor CastleWilliam Dudley his successor managed much of the rebuilding He was also Dean of Windsor the first Dean of Wolverhampton to hold both posts 175 In 1461 he had the important charters confirmed by Edward IV 176 the first of the new Yorkist dynasty On 31 July 1476 he became Bishop of Durham 177 and was consequently unable to remain dean Despite their many diversions Barningham and Dudley at least gave the town a new church and improved its prestige considerably After Dudley moved to Durham Lionel Woodville the Queen s brother was dean for a few years but he resigned when he became Chancellor of the University of Oxford It must therefore have been immediately after the appointment of a new dean Richard Beauchamp already Bishop of Salisbury and Dean of Windsor that on 21 February 1480 a grant from Edward IV created a permanent union between the deanery of Wolverhampton and that of St George s Chapel Windsor Castle 178 This was explicitly made not only to Beauchamp himself but also to succeeding deans of Windsor Moreover it confirmed their valuable right to collate to prebends at Wolverhampton a right they did not have at Windsor 1480 1603 Royal Peculiar and Reformation Edit nbsp The tomb of John and Joyce Leveson in the Lady Chapel 1575 attributed to Robert Royley of Burton on Trent the oldest surviving monument in the church John was a cousin of James Leveson like him a Merchant of the Staple and like him had financial interests in the deanery and prebends This financial entanglement ultimately proved ruinous for the church It is from this point that Wolverhampton is generally considered a Royal Peculiar or Peculier although it had claimed and vindicated its status as a royal chapel independent of the diocesan authorities for many centuries already From 1480 however it was formally placed on a footing with St George s Chapel Windsor Castle the monarch s own household chapel It was never subsumed into Windsor For about half a century about half of the prebendaries were also canons of Windsor but this practice petered out in the 16th century 179 The link between Wolverhampton and Windsor persisted purely through the dual role of the deans and Wolverhampton kept its own seal a key indicator of institutional independence nbsp Statue of Vice Admiral Sir Richard Leveson 1570 1605 of Lilleshall A distinguished seaman who served in the Spanish Armada campaign and another member of the family who were so closely involved in the history of the church Originally part of a larger family group in the chancel that was vandalised during the English Civil War it is now in the Lady Chapel nbsp Tomb of Thomas and Katherine Lane of Bentley c 1585 attributed to Robert Royley of Burton on Trent in the north chapel The Lanes were important landowners in Staffordshire and although they accepted the Reformation closely allied with the recusant Giffard family of Chillington HallAs the deans and most of the canons continued to be absentees their lands and rights were increasingly farmed out From 1516 it was James Leveson one of the immensely rich and powerful Merchants of the Staple who increasingly took over responsibility for exploiting their estates The rent agreed for the deanery holdings was 38 and Leveson managed to keep it fixed for 25 years despite steady inflation He also gradually extended his investments into the prebendary holdings The Leveson family inherited and extended his interests after he died The name Leveson is pronounced ˈ lj uː s en LEW sɜn and is a patronymic from Louis or Lewis The Reformation brought dissolution for the second time in the college s history It was threatened under the first Chantry Act in 1545 but survived because Henry VIII died before it could be implemented Edward VI s Protestant guardians brought in a second act in 1547 The Dean argued that Wolverhampton should be exempt as Windsor was specifically excluded from the terms of the act Nevertheless the college was dissolved and replaced by a vicar and curates on 20 a year This was not a great hardship for the dean and canons as they continued to receive pensions at the same level as their former income from their benefices In December 1552 William Franklyn who remained dean of Windsor had his and his successors profits from Wolverhampton guaranteed although limited to 40 annually 180 Moreover the canons had farmed out most of their holdings on perpetual leases at fixed and very low rents to the Leveson and Brooke families allegedly in the hope of recovering them later and protecting the college s investments but probably to make a quick gain before dissolution The sale was authorised by the chapter of Windsor which was not lawful as the two colleges had separate seals and finances The prebendal and the deanery estates themselves were confiscated by the Crown then granted to John Dudley 1st Duke of Northumberland then the leading figure in Edward s government and his wife Jane 181 However Queen Mary s Counter Reformation soon restored the old regime As Northumberland was attainted his property was forfeit so it was relatively easy to restore the college s property This was presented by Mary s letters patent of 26 December 1553 as a favour to St George s College Windsor She referred to the great love her ancestors had for the chapel and made clear this was a restoration of the grant of Edward IV Franklyn the seven prebendaries and the sacristan were all named and reinstated in their posts for life and the structure of the college described in detail 182 However Mary s gracious act left the years 1547 53 in legal limbo with the status of any transactions carried out by the canons during those years uncertain St Peter s was the only royal peculiar in the region to be restored all the others proved intractable as the property had been sold or given to landowners in good standing many of them pious Catholics The little hospital of St Mary was not so fortunate The provision to say prayers for the dead would have guaranteed its dissolution as a chantry and it is never heard of again apparently absorbed into the Leveson estates 183 Despite a decision to follow a broadly Protestant path Elizabeth did not pursue the matter further and confirmed the restoration of the college by royal charter in 1564 This meant a restoration of the old abuses The deans and most of the canons stayed away failing to attend even the quarterly chapter meetings and paying scant wages to deacons and in some cases unordained readers to perform their functions at St Peter s The running of Wolverhampton s church devolved upon the sacrist who was paid a separate income amounting to the reasonable sum of 26 by the mid 17th century and given a seat on the chapter It seems that he held the estate allocated to the morrow mass priest before 1548 which may have been the grant of Henry of Prestwood 184 1603 1660 Religious strife and civil war Edit nbsp Fine carving on a pillar of the wooden west gallery The Puritans tended to dislike such ostentatious decoration although their ire was mainly directed against items that symbolised theological differences between radical Protestants and High Churchmen like altars West galleries in many churches were strongholds of popular music making in subsequent centuries That captivated Church Edit A Puritan survey which can be dated fairly confidently to the first three months of 1604 found considerable cause for concern 185 Seven stipendiaries were doing the work four of them were on incomes of 10 nobles 6 6s 8d and three on 6 186 These compare unfavourably with estimates of the incomes required to sustain celibate medieval priests Bishop William Lyndwood had thought 6 13s 4 necessary in the early 15th century 187 well before the inflation of the Tudor period Six of the seven prebends were in the hands of Walter Leveson 186 The parish was said to have a population of 4000 many of them Catholic in sympathy and recusant In the satellite chapel at Pelsall the curate s stipend was 4 At Bilston and Willenhall the curates had no reserved stipend Two of the curates named as Mounsell and Cowper were said to be notorious drunkards and dissolute men No comment was made on the parochial work of the sacristan nbsp Joseph Hall nbsp Marco Antonio de Dominis Archbishop of Spalato Croatian cleric theologian and scientist who left the Roman Catholic Church for a time and was Dean of Windsor and WolverhamptonThe far from Puritan Joseph Hall later Bishop of Exeter and Bishop of Norwich took a similarly negative view of St Peter s Starting his career as a chaplain to Henry Frederick Prince of Wales he was sent in quest of a prebend by a relative Samuel Barton also rendered Burton Archdeacon of Gloucester who knowing in how good terms I stood at Court and pitying the miserable condition of his native Church of Wolverhampton was very desirous to engage me in so difficult and noble a service as the redemption of that captivated Church 188 His connections secured him free collation to the prebend of Willenhall which he seems to have held from 1610 189 Several of his contemporaries at Wolverhampton were also ambitious rising clerics like the consecutive Hatherton prebendaries Godfrey Goodman a Catholic sympathiser and future bishop and Cesar Callendrine 190 a German Calvinist minister who long headed the Dutch Reformed Church in London Hall found St Peter s under the thumb of Walter Leveson the freedom of a goodly Church consisting of a Dean and eight prebendaries competently endowed and many thousand souls lamentably swallowed up by wilful recusants in a pretended fee farm for ever Because of this the prebend was worth only 19 nobles or 6 3s 4d Using the evidence of forged seals and documents Hall and other prebendaries became involved in a protracted action against Leveson in the Kings Bench 191 This was on the brink of complete success with Dean Marco Antonio de Dominis content when Leveson died leaving the situation confused In 1622 Hall resigned the prebend and the Dean appointed in his place a worthy preacher Mr Lee who should constantly reside there and painfully instruct that great and long neglected people which he hath hitherto performed with great mutual contentment and happy success The High Church triumphant Edit nbsp Dean Matthew WrenLee quickly gained a reputation as a forceful Puritan preacher so Hall must have been of an eirenic temper to value his work so highly Lee s preaching seems to have been popular and he met strong opposition from Matthew Wren a prominent Laudian who was appointed Dean in 1628 The High Church party had come into the ascendancy with the accession of Charles I Wren particularly objected to the fact that Lee had taken up residence in Wolverhampton and preached regularly 192 Matthew Wren became Bishop of Hereford in 1634 and was succeeded as dean by his brother Christopher Wren the father of the famous architect Christopher Wren tried unsuccessfully to pursue Hall s work in the courts petitioning Francis Cottington 1st Baron Cottington Master of the Court of Wards and Liveries that the prebendal lands be restored to the Church when the rent of 38 fell into arrears under Walter Leveson s young son Thomas 193 Wren took panic measures to deal with Lee ignoring the traditional independence of the church to call on Archbishop William Laud to institute a metropolitical visitation This was conducted by Nathaniel Brent who toured the Midlands purging churches where there had been complaints of nonconformity 194 Lee was suspended but when Brent acted similarly at Shrewsbury the congregation of St Julian s church installed Lee as their lector On 11 October 1635 Wren celebrated with an elaborate ceremony to consecrate a new High Altar in St Peter s William Prynne the Presbyterian publicist gleefully described an item he saw as bizarre and idolatrous nbsp Perhaps the altar that bemused Prynne it is now in the Lady Chapel nbsp William Prynne by Wenceslaus HollarMaister Edward Latham one of the Proctors of Leichfeild amp Surrogate of Woluerhampton accompanied with some 20 or 30 Persons men weomen and Chorasters came to the Towne many of the Inhabitants but chiefly the Clergie going to meet him The intent of his amp their coming was to performe the solemnity of Dedicating the Communion Table to be an Altar and of consecrating certeyne Altar Cloathes as they said to the glory of God The Table was made new for this purpose being about a yard amp an halfe in length exquisitely wrought and inlaid a fayre wall of waynscot being at the backe of it amp the rayle before it was made to open in the middle amp not at one side the middle where the Ministers tread being matted with a very fayre Matt Vpon the Table was placed a faire Communion Booke couered with cloth of gold amp bossed with great silver Bosses together with a faire Cushion of Damaske with a Carpet of the same both party coulored of skie coulor amp purple the fringe of the Carpet being blew amp white 195 The dedication service itself was replete with incense ritual hand washing and elaborate music all calculated to offend or puzzle the Puritans 196 Over the succeeding years disciplinary action was taken against Puritan laity In June 1638 William Pinson a lawyer who had moved to Birmingham after the visitation was called before the Court of High Commission along with John Rogers for his activities in at St Peter s during 1631 36 appearing before Sir John Lambe Dean of the Arches and Sir Charles Caesar the Master of the Faculties He was accused of maintaining conventicles in his house because he had prayed recalled sermons and discussed scripture with groups of friends although he denied the events had any regular or formal character He was in trouble too because his wife had shown insufficient respect for the churching of women by failing to wear a veil at the service she had put a table napkin on her head when challenged 197 Allegedly Pinson had conducted a campaign of vexatious litigation against Hugh Davies the chaplain involved in the incident Pinson maintained that Mr Davies refused to church her and so she departed unchurched to her and his grief This may have been disingenuous as the churching of women had provided a focus for Puritans in the West Midlands to confront the High Church establishment for some time 198 Further information on Puritan action against the churching of women in the West Midlands Katherine Chidley Pinson got off fairly lightly He was registered as admonished in January 1640 and final sentencing was twice postponed 199 before his case was simply dropped on 6 November 1640 200 However others seem to have suffered prison A letter from one Tarte a Puritan who had fled to America to Edward Latham the dean s official condemned him for imprisoning a Puritan activist called William Knight The letter compared Latham to the notorious Edmund Bonner and threatened him with destruction as a millstone that is cast into the sea 201 The letter was filed with the Court of High Commission Civil war and Commonwealth Edit nbsp The trial of Laud depicted by Wenceslaus Hollar nbsp William Laud after Anthony van DyckThis short lived triumph for the Laudians came at a price for Laud himself When the Long Parliament assembled in 1640 his arrest was one of its first acts In 1644 during the English Civil War he was tried for treason and the events at Wolverhampton formed an important part of the case brought against him Evidence was given by two Wolverhampton men Leonard Lee Richard s brother and William Pinson Richard Lee himself was promoted to curate at St Julian s Shrewsbury in 1642 on the eve of war 202 but cannot have stayed long in the town which quickly fell to the royalists The Clergy of the Church of England database if the identification is correct records his appointment in 1640 as vicar of Melbourne where the advowson was held by John Coke 203 and in 1643 as rector of Rugby where the patron was Humphrey Burnaby 204 However Laud himself referred only to Lee s appointment at Shrewsbury during the trial Prynne mentions that during the trial Lee was residing in Shoreditch by order of Parliament 205 Prynne printed a memorandum of March 1634 that he had found among John Lambe s paper The original he claimed was in the handwriting of Laud s secretary William Dell and it was addressed to Nathaniel Brent In this Laud appeared to prejudice the visitation by singling out Richard Lee And that you take speciall notice of one Mr Lee a Prebend there who hath been the Author of much disorder thereabouts And if you can fasten upon any thing whereby he may justly be censured pray see it be done and home or bring him to the High Commission Court to answer it there amp c But HOWEVER let him not obtain any License to Preach any Lecture there or in another Exempt place hard by at Tetenshall whither those of Wolverhampton do now run after him out of their Parish Note for the Church hath not much need of such men If you speak with Mr Latham of Litchfield who is the Surrogate there he will informe you more fully concerning this Businesse That he the said Mr Lee hath Churched Refractory Women in private amp c That he is averse to all good Orders of the Church As also that in another place thereabouts they caused a Bell man in open Market to make Proclamation for a Sermon 206 At his trial in July 1644 Laud argued that he ordered proceedings against Lee only If there were found against him that which might justly be Censured 207 a wording that differs significantly from Prynne s version Laud claimed the responsibility for singling out Lee was not his because the Dean of Windsor his Ordinary complained unto me that Mr Lee s Carriage was so Factious there that he could contain him in no Order If he were a Man after this approved at Shrewsbury as Mr Walker witnesses I hope the Proceedings at Wolverhampton did him good He then resorted to blaming his secretary for the discrepancy between his intention and the wording of the memorandum I believe your Lordships would not willingly answer for every Phrase of your Secretaries Letters which yet you command them to write Although the trial itself was inconclusive Laud was later attainted and beheaded St Peter s church itself suffered considerable damage at the hands of Parliamentary soldiers in 1642 Much worse was an attack on the chapter house by royalist soldiers under Colonel Leveson which resulted in the loss of all its records 208 Victoria County History attributes the dissolution of the college by Parliament to a law of 1643 that suppressed all deans and chapters and was implemented after the fighting drew to a close However Shaw points out this Ordinance for sequestring notorious Delinquents Estates 209 which did name 14 bishops and refer to deans and prebends was not a law against Church lands but an expedient for raising funds for the Parliamentary army 210 Not until October 1644 did Parliament begin to consider how best to turn the resources of the Church toward better support for the parish ministry This resulted in an act of October 1646 211 to abolish bishops and archbishops and to turn their assets over to trustees 212 and another ordinance the following month to implement the sale of their lands 213 This formed the model for legislation to abolish the deans and chapters which was not introduced until more than a year later However its progress was long delayed and only in April 1649 did Parliament pass the Act for abolishing of Deans Deans and Chapters Canons Prebends and other offices and titles of or belonging to any Cathedral or Collegiate Church or Chappel within England and Wales 214 nbsp A weathercock dated 1646 is perhaps the only item in the church from Richard Lee s incumbency and an apt symbol of the constantly changing fortunes of the time Richard Lee returned to St Peter s as minister in 1646 supported by a grant of 100 215 VCH says that the post of sacrist was abolished and his 26 together with a further 50 was provided for an assistant minister However these figures are derived from a petition of Wolverhampton residents to Oliver Cromwell during the Protectorate dated 10 May 1654 This attributes the sums to the period immediately after the dissolution of the college 216 and it is not entirely clear from it when and for how long they held good the funding had largely dried up by the time of the petition The windfall for the parish ministry did not come not from the sale of prebendal lands which was impossible because they were leased to Colonel Thomas Leveson However as Leveson was considered a royalist delinquent the lands were sequestrated by Parliament and the proceeds earmarked for the support of clergy The records of the Committee for Compounding with Delinquents which dealt with the sequestered property of royalists show how the claims on the sequestered lands built up and the flow of funds reduced From 1650 the Colonel s wife Frances Leveson who claimed to be a Parliamentarian mounted an increasingly successful campaign for maintenance for herself and her children 217 Meanwhile the creditors closed in local man William Hayes demanding title to Heath Manor and Francis Blount of London in search of 200 218 Thomas Leveson himself had fled to Bordeaux where he lived well at the expense of the eccentric Armand de Bourbon Prince of Conti the provincial governor Although he kept servants and horses when he died in September 1652 his furniture had to be sold to pay for his funeral In September 1653 Robert Leveson alleged that his father Thomas who held the tithes of Upper Penn as well as St Peter s and 13 other churches had already settled the estates on himself as early as 1640 before the civil war began The augmentations to the parish clergy were suspended immediately while an enquiry was held On 17 November Leveson won his case and the sequestration of the family estates was discharged The stream of funding was already in decline and now the ministers of those churches which had been receiving augmentations began to complain of serious hardship Ralph Strettel of Shareshill entitled to 100 but finding that he was paid only 10 for 1652 and 27 6s for 1653 to supplement his pittance of 16 nobles 219 Charles Wynn of Penn who had only 3 augmentation for the year worried it might end Edward Barton of Wednesbury who had seven children and only ever received 6 months worth of his 50 augmentation So at Wolverhampton Ambrose Sparry and his assistant Richard Clayton were among a host of claimants left impoverished by the return of the prebendal lands and other estates to the Levesons They complained of the magnitude of the task they were expected to perform the town so swarms with Papists as to be called little Rome and there are 20 gentry families of recusants some of whom were so turbulent last summer that the justices had to call in a troop of horse All of this was echoed in the petition by their supporters In May 1654 it transpired that the County Committee had not even been informed of the discharge of Leveson s sequestration so the meagre augmentations of which the clergy complained were actually overpayments Fortunately the impoverished ministers were not asked to repay the excess 1660 1848 Decline and demise of the old order Edit nbsp The Church of St John in the Square was originally built as a chapel of ease to relieve overcrowding at St Peter s in the 1750s nbsp Bilston revolted against the dean s appointment of clergy in the 1730s and symbolised its independence of spirit by building its own chapel The present St Leonard s church replaced the 18th century building in 1826 nbsp St George s church was built in a Neo Classical style already being superseded by Gothic Revival at the time It relieved the growing overcrowding in churches but proved a short lived success as a church building boom sponsored by the Evangelicals ringed the town centre with ample new seating The building long derelict was incorporated into a supermarket in the 1980s The Restoration of Charles II automatically brought the restoration of the college at St Peter s as the legislation abolishing it was regarded as invalid Everything was restored very quickly However the loss of the records at the hands of Leveson whose family coincidentally had important claims on college property was a serious problem for the restored institution and its financial position continued to be weak Cesar Callendrine 220 and Thomas Wren son of Matthew Wren and prebendary of Willenhall mounted a legal challenge to Leveson dominance in 1661 It quickly ran into problems and Joseph Hall s gains were lost 221 Callendrine was dead by the time the case was finally decided in 1667 with the Court of Chancery dismissing their claim and awarding Robert Leveson costs 222 Leveson sold his Wolverhampton estates to the Earl of Bradford his nephew in 1705 and the college went to court again to recover its alienated lands This time the case was dismissed immediately Not until 1811 did the college finally abandon its attempts to recover its property more than two and a half centuries after its loss Meanwhile Samuel de l Angle a Huguenot who was prebendary of Kinvaston 1684 93 189 had initiated a Chancery suit to recover his prebendal lands After his death the claim was pursued to a successful conclusion by his son and executor 223 However all the dependent chapels but Kinvaston were now very poorly funded and unable to attract able or dedicated ministers They were still expected to contribute to the upkeep of St Peter s and to the expenses of the sacrist who doggedly defended his income from burials and other rites They were now starting to chafe at the bit Bilston revolted against the dean s attempts to impose a curate twice in 1730 and 1735 and the congregation elected their own The population of Wolverhampton itself and of the towns to the east was growing rapidly as manufacturing took hold Peniston Booth a dean who actually spent some of his time at the deanery house in Wolverhampton was sufficiently in touch with opinion to authorise the building of new chapels of ease at Wednesfield Willenhall and Bilston With considerably more persuasion and after a major public campaign fronted by Lord Grey he acquiesced in the building of a new chapel of ease in Wolverhampton itself It was authorised by a private Act of Parliament in 1755 and the fine Neo Classical St John s Church Wolverhampton quickly rose on a site enclosed in a square to the south of St Peter s 224 The college with its deanery and prebends was increasingly proving a straitjacket for the Anglican Church in Wolverhampton The increasing population was a challenge in itself but it also brought social misery and discontent as the crowded housing of the Wolverhampton and the Black Country failed to keep up with demand Increasing religious diversity was another consequence There had been Protestant Dissenters since the Civil War but their numbers were greatly increased by the preaching of Methodism in 1761 John Wesley himself preached at an inn yard in what he called this furious town of Wolverhampton 225 Catholic recusancy was strong in the surrounding countryside Despite the Penal laws in the 1730s the Giffard family of Brewood succeeded in building a Catholic chapel in the guise of a private house just to the west of St Peter s As Catholic Emancipation approached this was rapidly expanded into a functioning Roman Catholic church 226 Already distress in Ireland was bringing immigration and a large working class Irish Catholic community concentrated to the north of St Peter s in the slums of an area known as Caribee Island 227 In 1811 a special Act was passed to reform St Peter s church itself 228 The post of sacrist was replaced by that of perpetual curate Three readerships were abolished and their income signed over to the curate A fund was established from proceeds of mining on the deanery land to improve the income of the curate This did not go far enough The curate was still heavily dependent on fees from the dependent chapels and friction over this continued to sour relations However the curates initially performed their duties very much better than earlier sacrists and things were improved further by the building of a new chapel of ease in the town St George s another Neo Classical structure completed in 1830 to a design by James Morgan It was in connection with a possible post at St George s that William Dalton an Evangelical Anglican clergyman from Ulster first visited Wolverhampton He returned in 1835 after marrying Sarah Marsh the widow of a Bilston ironmaster to take up the living of St Paul s yet another chapel of ease on the south western edge of the town Dalton began a lifelong campaign to build more churches to serve the growing population Dalton s agitation had a venomously anti Catholic edge attacking both Anglo Catholicism and Roman Catholicism 229 but his church building campaign won wide support It further undermined the relevance of the dean and the Royal Peculiar 230 St Peter s itself and all the new chapels already operated as parish churches in all but name but were hampered by lack of funds The deanery was a sinecure that took 600 a year out of the town largely the product of coal mining on deanery lands 231 nbsp George OliverThe radical Whig administration of the 1830s was determined to remedy a wide range of abuses at the local level The establishment of elected municipal self government for Wolverhampton and most of England s towns and cities came in 1836 This swept away the last vestiges of ecclesiastical influence in the politics of Wolverhampton and created a much stronger expectation of local accountability In the same year the Ecclesiastical Commissioners were established aimed at rationalising the finances and structures of the Church of England and charged with recommending further legislation to reform the Church Henry Lewis Hobart the Dean of Windsor and Wolverhampton was generally considered a wealthy nonentity and had failed to win any real support at Court The sacrist or perpetual curate was Dr George Oliver appointed in 1834 who had a distinguished career in the Diocese of Lincoln before his appointment at Wolverhampton and continued as vicar of Scopwick in Lincolnshire until his death 232 A freemason who wrote widely on the craft Oliver was remembered by some as of a kind and genial disposition charitable in the highest sense of the word 233 However he seems also to have had a talent for controversy VCH avers that in Wolverhampton he pursued rather sordid and very public disputes with other clergy 234 These involved clashes in the pulpit and the public prints with the clergy of St George s over burial and other fees with Oliver countering every argument of his opponents with a new pamphlet invariably headed a Candid Reply His Masonic career was at times stormy in 1840 he was suspended from his position as Deputy Grand Master of the Lincolnshire Province over his support for Robert Crucefix a mason involved in controversy over care for aged and sick masons with Prince Augustus Frederick Duke of Sussex the Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England 235 As he was also a prolific author on medieval history particularly important churches it seems unlikely that Oliver had much time to devote to parochial work at St Peter s The old order was suppressed completely under the terms of legislation variously referred to as the Cathedrals Act 1840 and the Ecclesiastical Commissioners Act 1840 but actually entitled An Act to carry into effect with certain Modifications the Fourth Report of the Commissioners of Ecclesiastical Duties and Revenues 236 Section 21 of the act decreed that the deanery should be suppressed along with those of Middleham Heytesbury and Brecon 237 Section 51 restricted the rights of any appointees to positions within the colleges but allowed the existing deans to continue in office until their deaths 238 The prebends were left vacant in readiness and on Hobart s death in 1846 the deanery was wound up In the same year Lord Lyndhurst the Lord Chancellor gave Oliver the rectory of South Hyckham near Lincoln and he subsequently resigned his Wolverhampton post 232 making way for John Dakeyne to be appointed temporary sacrist pending a full reorganisation Dakeyne had been incumbent of St Benedict s Church Lincoln and had defended the traditional doctrine of baptism in 1843 in a book dedicated to Lord Lyndhurst 239 He too was an active Freemason who had spoken in 1844 at a testimonial for Oliver part of the address being used as a preface to some editions of Oliver s Book of the Lodge 240 In 1848 a specific piece of legislation for St Peter s the Wolverhampton Church Act abolished the ancient college altogether and transferred all its assets to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners They swiftly oversaw the establishment of a rectory for St Peter s and confirmed Dakeyne as rector All the dependent chapels were turned into separate parish churches each with its own vicar From the available funds the Commissioners were able to grant the rector a living of 750 a year and to improve the incomes of all 13 of the other clergy involved as well as to contribute to building repairs St Peter s and all the newly established parishes became part of the Diocese of Lichfield subject to the bishop as Ordinary Timeline Edit This summary is based on a University of Wolverhampton publication 241 supplemented by the Victoria County History 242 994 Lady Wulfrun gave lands given to her by King Aethelred II to the Church of St Mary at Heantune Wulfrun heantune Wolvernehampton the town is named Wolverhampton The church is run by a college of canons who are secular priests 1066 The Norman Conquest leads to the church being granted to Samson a royal chaplain who alienates its lands and gives it to Worcester cathedral priory 1135 The church enters a period of great turbulence in the anarchy of King Stephen s reign with several changes of control 1152 54 The church emerges triumphant recognised as a royal chapel and independent of Lichfield s diocesan control constituted as a dean and prebendaries newly dedicated to St Peter or St Peter and St Paul 1203 05 The college is dissolved because of corruption and abortive plans are laid to replace it with a Cistercian monastery Tower crossing oldest extant part of the church constructed College restored now recognised as lord of the manor of Wolverhampton 1258 Right to hold a weekly Market and an annual Fair on the feast of St Peter and St Paul 1263 Autonomy of burgesses recognised 1280 Archbishop of Canterbury turned away at the doors of the church Independence from Canterbury formally recognised 1350 Chapel of our Lady and St George is built 1358 Edward III orders an inspection because of notorious abuses at the church 1440 Nave roof raised to current height 1450 Stone pulpit built 1479 King Edward IV united the Deaneries of Wolverhampton and Windsor in a single holder establishing the Royal Peculiar Deans and prebends are mostly absent and poorly paid curates do most of the work as before 1540 Bells from Much Wenlock Priory installed to replace old bells in 1729 more bells added to make a total of 10 in 1911 the frame replaced and bells recast 1547 The Reformation sweeps away the college and turns it into a parish church 1550 The canons alienate much of the college s property to the Leveson family on perpetual leases 1553 Queen Mary restores the college 1560 The college becomes an Anglican institution unique in the Church of England 1635 Dean Christopher Wren calls in Archbishop Laud to purge Puritans and triumphantly consecrates an altar 1642 43 The church is damaged by Parliamentary troops while Col Leveson s royalists destroy all the college s records 1646 60 Under the Commonwealth St Peter s is a parish church with Puritan incumbents 1667 The restored college loses the first of many actions to recover its property from the Levesons 1755 The building of St John s marks the end of St Peter s church s monopoly in the town although it remains merely a chapel at ease for over a century 1811 St Peter s church is partially reformed with the appointment of a perpetual curate The futile legal wrangle with the Levesons is abandoned 1836 Wolverhampton gains municipal self government as a borough 1840 The Cathedrals Act declares the deanery and the Royal Peculiar abolished from the death of the current dean 1846 Dean Hobart dies and the deanery is suppressed 1847 St Peter s Collegiate School established adjacent to the church 1848 The college is wound up and St Peter s becomes a parish within the Lichfield Diocese with its own Rector The dependent chapels become new parishes each with a vicar 1860 Father Henry Willis built a new organ in 1882 the organ was enlarged revamped with an electrical blowing installation in 1914 rebuilt in 1970 restored in 1983 and rebuilt in 2019 1865 Present chancel completed in decorated Gothic style 1937 A civic and public appeal raises 10 000 in a few days for restoration of the tower and other important repairs 1968 Sanctuary re panelled 1978 Parish of Central Wolverhampton established St Peter s with All Saints St Chad and St Mark Later the two latter were amalgamated and St John in the Square was added Team ministry established under leadership of the Rector Architecture EditSt Peter s Church is built of red sandstone on an elevated site in the centre of the City of Wolverhampton The oldest part of the building above ground is the crossing under the tower which probably dates from the beginnings of the Abbey in 1200 followed by the Chapel of Our Lady and St George Lady Chapel Much of the Church was rebuilt and extended in the fourteenth century in the Decorated Style However the Church was to be substantially altered in the middle of the fifteenth century at the expense of the town s wool merchants with the addition of a clerestory to the nave and reduction in height of the north and south aisles The upper part of the tower was rebuilt around 1475 to a height of 120 feet and the Chapel of St Catherine and St Nicholas Memorial Chapel was completed at the end of the fifteenth century The chancel was reconstructed in 1682 following considerable damage caused to the original medieval one during the Civil War and it was again completely rebuilt in 1867 as part of the extensive restoration of the Church under architect Ewan Christian Unique features include the carved stone pulpit with a figure of a lion at the foot of the steps to protect the minister delivering the sermon The font dates from 1480 with several stone carved figures and the west gallery dates from 1610 paid for by the Merchant Taylors Company for use by the boys of Wolverhampton Grammar School Near the south porch is a 14 foot high stone column carved in the ninth century with birds animals and acanthus It may have been a column pillaged from Roman Viroconium and brought to Heantune either as part of a preaching cross or memorial The carvings have deteriorated but a cast made in 1877 can be seen in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London Bells EditThe bells of St Peter s are the second oldest complete ring of 12 in the country and third oldest in the world all twelve cast in 1911 by Gillett amp Johnston of Croydon Five bells are known to have existed at St Peter s in 1553 In 1698 a new 23 cwt ring of eight was cast by Abraham Rudhall I In 1740 Henry Bagley III of Chacombe cast a large funeral or hour bell of some 35 cwt In 1827 the eight were augmented to ten by Thomas Mears The ten ringing bells were rehung by Barwells in 1889 and the seventh was recast in 1895 by Mears amp Stainbank after cracking during a peal attempt The bells including the hour bell were recast and two new trebles added to produce a new ring of twelve by Gillett amp Johnston This was their first complete ring of twelve to be followed by Coventry in 1927 Croydon in 1936 and Halifax in 1952 They were tuned on the 5 tone Simpson Principle in the key of C sharp major Gillett also provided a new single tier steel and iron H frame with new fittings throughout The clock chime was connected to the 3rd 4th 5th and 8th and the clock generally rearranged They were rung for the first time as 12 for the coronation of King George V after a silence of three years The front eight were subsequently rehung in 1977 and the tenor in 1985 In April 2000 maintenance work was carried out The 9th 10th and 11th were rehung on new bearings and the pulley on the 10th was renewed The 12 ductile iron clappers were replaced by the original overhauled wrought iron clappers and other minor works carried out All work was carried out by Whitechapel Bell Foundry of London The bells are rung twice weekly on Mondays for practice and for the main Sunday service 243 244 Music EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources St Peter s Collegiate Church news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The organ of St Peter s Collegiate Church WolverhamptonThe three manual Father Willis organ was built in 1860 245 A campaign to raise almost 300 000 towards its restoration was launched in 2008 The restoration work designed to return the organ to its former glory after the wear and tear of near daily use was completed by Michael Farley Organ Builders in 2019 On Saturday 25 September 2010 a concert of Elgar s greatest pieces was held at the church which included the very first football chant He Banged The Leather for Goal written by Elgar himself 246 in respect of Wolves star of the time Billy Malpass The concert was a joint venture between the church and Wolverhampton Wanderers to raise funds for the organ appeal and to firm the link that Elgar had between respective organisations Elgar was a Wolves fan and cycled from Malvern a good 40 miles approx to watch the Wolves with close friend Dora Penny daughter of then St Peter s Church Rector Revd Penny St Peter s director of music Peter Morris said We wanted to celebrate the connection between Elgar and the church so we got in touch with Wolves and it just grew We knew about Elgar s connection with the club because the rector s daughter Dora Penny used to write about him going to watch them when he came to visit 247 There is a strong choral tradition more than 40 children and young people are involved in the Music at St Peter s along with Lay Clerks and choral scholars There are separate boys and girls choirs which sing at a Cathedral during the Summer holidays The Boys Choir Lay Clerks and choral scholars sang at Lincoln Cathedral in 2007 York Minster in 2008 Norwich Cathedral in 2009 Rochester Cathedral in 2010 Ely Cathedral in 2011 Wells Cathedral in 2012 Chichester Cathedral in 2013 Ripon Cathedral in 2014 Durham Cathedral 2015 Edinburgh Cathedral in 2016 Salisbury Cathedral in 2017 Chester Cathedral in 2018 and Durham Cathedral again in 2019 The girls choir Lay Clerks and choral scholars sang at Chester Cathedral in 2007 Chichester Cathedral in 2008 and 2010 Carlisle Cathedral in 2009 Canterbury Cathedral in 2011 Truro Cathedral in 2012 Salisbury Cathedral in 2013 Exeter Cathedral in 2014 Canterbury Cathedral in 2015 Edinburgh Cathedral in 2016 Canterbury again in 2017 York Minster in 2018 and Winchester Cathedral in 2019 The full choirs sang at Truro Cathedral in 2021 and Wells Cathedral in 2022 Other recent singing has taken place in Gloucester Cathedral Westminster Abbey St George s Chapel Windsor Castle The Royal Albert Hall at the Proms and Symphony Hall The church has been involved with the Choristers Outreach Programme of the Choir Schools Association and Sing Up which takes choristers into Primary Schools in the city to help the singing programmes in schools The Director of Music is Callum Alger The Assistant Director of Music is Charlie Francis and the Organ Scholar is Elli Mae McGlone The assistant organists are Toby Barnard Dr David Rendell Organist Emeritus amp Peter Morris Organist Emeritus List of organists Edit This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items October 2008 Mr G Hay 1836 248 1842 249 Thomas S Hayward ca 1860 250 1870 afterwards organist of Blackburn Parish Church Arthur Henry Mann 1870 1871 251 Isaac Roper 1874 1908 Frederick Harold Houldershaw 1908 1944 Sidney Campbell 1943 1947 Charles Leslie Parker Hutchings 1947 1964 David Jones 1964 1970 Brian Armfield 1971 1979 Andrew Newberry 1979 1983 Timothy C Storey 1984 1993 Alistair Pow 1994 1998 Gary Cole 1998 2001 Nicholas P Johnson 2001 2003 Peter Morris 2003 2018 Callum Alger acting 2018 2019 Hamish Dustagheer 2019 2020 Callum Alger 2020 nbsp St Peter s from the westToday EditWorship is in the Catholic tradition of the Church of England Vestments reservation and the sacrament of reconciliation are all part of its tradition with incense used at festival services Sunday services usually comprise Holy Communion Choral Eucharist and Choral Evensong Choral Evensong is also sung on Wednesdays at 5 15pm St Peter s is open on weekdays and Saturdays and before and after services on Sundays There is a shop within the church and a coffee lounge in the nearby St Peter s House The church has strong links with St Peter s Collegiate Academy which although founded adjacent to the church in 1847 is now located at Compton Park along with St Edmund s Catholic Academy and the Wolverhampton Wanderers FC training ground Lists of Incumbents EditDeans of Wolverhampton Edit Main article Dean of Wolverhampton Rectors of St Peter s Collegiate Church Edit After the suppression of the deanery a new sacrist John Dakeyne was appointed in 1847 with a view to making him rector on the winding up of the college This duly occurred in the following year John Dakeyne 1848 John Iles 1860 John Jeffcock 1877 Alfred Penny 1895 Joseph Stockley 1919 Robert Hodson 1929 John Brierley 1935 Francis Cocks 1965 John Ginever 1970 John Hall Matthews 1990 David Frith 2003 David Wright 2009See also EditBishop of Wolverhampton Lichfield CathedralFootnotes Edit Organ Appeal PDF Parish of Central Wolverhampton 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2008 Anglia Sacra p 445 S 1380 The Electronic Sawyer Online catalogue of Anglo Saxon charters King s College London Retrieved 27 April 2016 G C Baugh W L Cowie J C Dickinson Duggan A P A K B Evans R H Evans Una C Hannam P Heath D A Johnston Hilda Johnstone Ann J Kettle J L Kirby R Mansfield and A Saltman 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter footnote 1 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link William Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 6 p 1443 Retrieved 27 April 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help In this document probably dated 994 Dugdale gave the date as 996 but this has generally been regarded as incorrect See Bridgeman p 114 Duignan p 9 10 Bridgeman p 112 3 S 860 The Electronic Sawyer Online catalogue of Anglo Saxon charters King s College London Retrieved 27 April 2016 Bridgeman p 103 Kemble p 214 S 720 The Electronic Sawyer Online catalogue of Anglo Saxon charters King s College London Retrieved 27 April 2016 Translation in Bridgeman p 99 100 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter footnote 1 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Duignan p 9 footnote 2 Bridgeman p 119 a b c Wolverhampton in the Domesday Book Domesday text Phillimore reference STS 7 13 a b c Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous 1392 1399 p 20 no 44 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 13 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Penkridge St Michael note anchor 2 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Stenton p 148 9 Stenton p 660 Fletcher p 394 Fletcher p 395 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Stafford St Mary note anchor 1 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Tettenhall St Michael note anchor 1 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Regesta Regum Anglo Normannorum Volume 1 p 125 no XXVI Translation based on Regesta Regum Anglo Normannorum Volume 1 p 57 no 210 Staffordshire Page 4 at Open Domesday Morris John Palmer J N N Palmer Matthew Slater George Caroline Thorn Thorn Frank 2011 Domesday text translation Hydra Digital Repository University of Hull Retrieved 2 May 2016 Bilston in the Domesday Book Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 18 19 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Kinvaston in the Domesday Book Hilton in the Domesday Book Featherstone in the Domesday Book St Peter s Collegiate Church in the Domesday Book Bateson Mary Costambeys Marios Samson Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 24600 Subscription or UK public library membership required Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 22 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 23 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Kemp B R Salisbury Roger of Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23956 Subscription or UK public library membership required Regesta Regum Anglo Normannorum Volume 3 p 170 no 452 Regesta Regum Anglo Normannorum Volume 3 p 170 1 no 453 Collections for History of Staffordshire 1913 p 8 See for example the 13th century seal reproduced at The Collegiate Church of St Peter in Wolverhampton PDF Parish of Central Wolverhampton Archived from the original PDF on 20 November 2008 Retrieved 12 October 2008 Franklin M J Clinton Roger of Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 95152 Subscription or UK public library membership required Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds House of secular canons Lichfield cathedral To the Reformation note anchor 37 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds House of secular canons Lichfield cathedral To the Reformation note anchor 39 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 23 4 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Regesta Regum Anglo Normannorum Volume 3 p 359 no 969 Delisle and Berger p 66 Regesta Regum Anglo Normannorum Volume 3 p 356 no 962 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 30 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 a b Southern R W Peter of Blois Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 22012 Subscription or UK public library membership required Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia Letter 108 Volume 1 p 340 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter footnote 31 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia Letter 97 Volume 2 p 74 Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia Letter 152 Volume 2 p 87 8 Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia Letter 152 Volume 2 p 89 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter footnote 37 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Wrottesley ed p 87 Wrottesley ed p 118 Wrottesley ed p 126 Rotuli Chartarum p 115 Rotuli Chartarum p 135 Rotuli Chartarum p 152 Eyton ed p 119 Eyton ed p 125 Rotuli Chartarum p 153 a b Rotuli Chartarum p 154 Ralph of Coggeshall p 160 Rotuli Chartarum p 156 St Peter s Collegiate Church Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website Bev Parker Retrieved 4 May 2016 Historic England 2016 Church of St Peter 1282467 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 May 2016 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 48 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 49 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1258 1266 p 126 Annales Monastici Volume 1 p 275 Patent Rolls 1225 1232 p 356 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 4 p 232 3 Close Rolls 1247 1251 p 50 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 4 p 124 Calendar of Charter Rolls 1257 1300 p 7 J W Willis Bund Parishes Dudley note anchor 38 in A History of the County of Worcester Volume 3 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 4 pp 248 9 no 53 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 4 p 250 1 no 54 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 57 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1396 1399 p 387 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1266 1272 p 221 a b Greenway Diana J ed 1991 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066 1300 vol 4 pp 108 109 a b Calendar of Papal Registers Volume 1 Regesta 37 4 Kal July 1275 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1266 1272 p 310 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 4 p 69 Calendar of Papal Registers Volume 1 Regesta 37 4 Kal January 1274 Calendar of Papal Registers Volume 1 Regesta 38 Id November 1276 Barrow J S ed 2002 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066 1300 vol 8 pp 29 31 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1281 1292 p 226 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1281 1292 p 318 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1281 1292 p 410 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1281 1292 p 413 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 6 Part 1 p 66 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 6 Part 1 p 70 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 6 Part 1 p 233 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1292 1301 p 24 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1911 p 228 32 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1272 1281 p 469 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 6 Part 1 p 181 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1292 1301 p 346 7 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1301 1307 p 346 7 Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 109 10 translation on p 392n 392o Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 130 1 Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 147 50 Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 154 6 Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 178 9 translation on p 392s Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 179 83 translation of letters to king on p 392t 392u Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 183 4 Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 184 5 translation on p 392v Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 196 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 74 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 1 p 384 7 Calendar of Papal Registers Volume 1 Regesta 41 12 Kal February 1283 Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Volume 2 p 629 30 Calendar of Papal Registers Volume 1 Regesta 43 14 Kal September 1286 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 66 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Benefice of Wolverhampton Collegiate Church at Taxatio Calendar of Patent Rolls 1292 1301 p 147 Calendar of Close Rolls 1302 1307 p 66 7 Calendar of Close Rolls 1302 1307 p 71 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1307 1313 p 342 Calendar of Fine Rolls 1319 1327 p 201 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1374 1377 p 282 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1338 1340 p 482 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1338 1340 p 488 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1340 1343 p 306 Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous Volume 2 p 434 no 1758 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 12 p 143 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1354 1358 p 532 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1367 1370 p 142 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 85 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1377 1381 p 336 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 15 p 82 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1377 1381 p 401 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1381 1385 p 59 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1381 1385 p 91 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1391 1396 p 357 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Stafford St Mary footnote 146 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1399 1401 p 8 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 100 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1399 1401 p 489 Jacob p 75 6 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Volume 15 p 104 5 Calendar of Close Rolls 1405 1409 p 55 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1408 1413 p 223 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1307 1313 p 357 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1911 p 308 9 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1911 p 309 10 Collections for History of Staffordshire 1913 p 8 9 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1327 1330 p 231 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1445 1452 p 77 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 98 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Hospitals Wolverhampton St Mary note anchor 2 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1391 1396 p 139 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1391 1396 p 176 Entry for Hugh Burnell at the peerage com Baugh et al 1970 Hospitals Wolverhampton St Mary note anchor 13 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Baugh et al 1970 Hospitals Wolverhampton St Mary footnote 1 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1445 1452 p 312 Collections for History of Staffordshire Series 2 Volume 3 p 157 Collections for History of Staffordshire Series 2 Volume 3 p 200 Jones B ed 1963 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300 1541 vol 6 pp 90 91 Jones B ed 1963 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300 1541 vol 6 pp 12 15 Testamenta Eboracensia Volume 2 p 203 footnote 2 Jones B ed 1963 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300 1541 vol 6 pp 6 9 Testamenta Eboracensia Volume 2 p 205 Testamenta Eboracensia Volume 2 p 204 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 106 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1461 1467 p 61 Jones B ed 1963 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300 1541 vol 6 pp 107 109 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1476 1485 p 175 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 109 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1550 1553 p 401 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1547 1553 p 179 Calendar of Patent Rolls 1553 1554 p 230 1 Baugh et al 1970 Hospitals Wolverhampton St Mary note anchor 19 21 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1915 p 322 Peel p 339 a b Peel p 351 Bridgett p 124 Hall p xxxiv xxxv a b Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1915 p 331 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1915 p 330 Hall p xxxvi xxxvii Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 141 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I 1635 1636 p 69 Coulton p 88 Prynne A Quenche Coale p 196 Prynne A Quenche Coale p 197 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I 1636 1637 p 382 3 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I 1640 p 379 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I 1640 41 p 383 and p 388 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I 1640 41 p 392 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I 1640 41 p 349 Coulton p 90 Lee Richardus at Melbourne Derbyshire CCEd Appointment ID 227133 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 6 October 2017 Lee Richardus at Rugbye Warwickshire CCEd Appointment ID 187708 The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 Retrieved 6 October 2017 Prynne Canterburies doome p 380 Prynne Canterburies doome p 381 Laud p 371 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 156 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 March 1643 An Ordinance for sequestring notorious Delinquents Estates in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum Shaw Volume 2 p 206 October 1646 An Ordinance for the abolishing of Archbishops and Bishops in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum Shaw Volume 2 p 210 13 November 1646 An Ordinance for explanation and better putting in execution the late Ordinance Entituled An Ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament for appointing the sale of Bishops Lands for the use of the Commonwealth in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum April 1649 An Act for abolishing of Deans etc in Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 148 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series 1655 66 p 142 Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding amp c Volume 4 p 2483 Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding amp c Volume 4 p 2484 Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding amp c Volume 4 p 2485 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1915 p 341 note 42 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1915 p 344 5 note 73 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 165 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 1915 p 343 note 59 Hickman Peter St John s in the Square the New Church Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website Bev Parker Retrieved 27 April 2016 Journal of the Rev John Wesley Volume 3 p 47 Giffard House and St Peter s amp St Paul s Church Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website Bev Parker Retrieved 27 April 2016 Quirke James Quirke Patrick ed Roman Catholicism in Wolverhampton 1828 1865 The Growth of the Catholic Community in Wolverhampton part 4 Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website Bev Parker Retrieved 27 April 2016 Act 51 George III cap 182 Quirke James Quirke Patrick ed Roman Catholicism in Wolverhampton 1828 1865 Anti Catholic agitation in Wolverhampton part 4 Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website Bev Parker Retrieved 27 April 2016 Hickman Peter The Remarkable Story of the Reverend William Dalton Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website Bev Parker Retrieved 27 April 2016 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 184 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 a b Lee Sidney ed 1895 Oliver George 1782 1867 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 42 London Smith Elder amp Co Mackey Encyclopedia of Freemasonry Volume 2 p 529 Baugh et al 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds Colleges Wolverhampton St Peter note anchor 188 and footnote A History of the County of Stafford Volume 3 Mackey Encyclopedia of Freemasonry Volume 2 p 528 Phillimore and Phillimore p 172 Phillimore and Phillimore p 174 Phillimore and Phillimore p 183 Dakeyne Baptismal Regeneration dedication page Oliver Book of the Lodge 1864 edition Christian places of worship in Wolverhampton University of Wolverhampton Retrieved 12 October 2008 G C Baugh W L Cowie J C Dickinson Duggan A P A K B Evans R H Evans Una C Hannam P Heath D A Johnston Hilda Johnstone Ann J Kettle J L Kirby R Mansfield and A Saltman 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds A History of the County of Stafford Vol 3 London British History Online a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The Bells St Peter s Guild of Change Ringers Wolverhampton Retrieved 9 January 2010 The Collegiate Church of St Peter Parish of Central Wolverhampton Archived from the original on 6 January 2009 Retrieved 12 October 2008 ORGAN OF THE MONTH 47 May 2006 Birmingham Organists Association May 2006 Retrieved 12 October 2008 Richard Alleyne 26 September 2010 Sir Edward Elgar wrote football chant along with his classical music Daily Telegraph Retrieved 27 September 2010 Choirs songs to honour Wolves legend Malpass Staffordshire Advertiser Saturday 23 April 1836 Hertford Mercury and Reformer Saturday 22 January 1842 Staffordshire Sentinel and Commercial amp General Advertiser Saturday 28 July 1860 Hubbard William Lines Green Janet M eds 1908 Musical Biographies p 14 Retrieved 27 April 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help References EditBarrow J S ed 2002 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066 1300 Vol 8 Hereford Diocese Institute for Historical Research Retrieved 9 May 2016 Bateson Mary Costambeys Marios Samson Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 24600 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bliss W H ed 1893 Calendar of Papal Registers Relating To Great Britain and Ireland Vol 1 London HMSO Retrieved 9 May 2016 Blois Peter of 1847 Giles J A ed Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia Vol 1 Oxford Parker Retrieved 3 May 2016 Blois Peter of 1847 Giles J A ed Petri Blesensis Bathoniensis Archidiaconi Opera Omnia Vol 2 Oxford Parker Retrieved 3 May 2016 Bridgett Thomas Edward 1908 Thurston Herbert ed A History of the Holy Eucharist in Great Britain London Burns and Oates Retrieved 18 May 2016 Bruce John ed 1866 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I Vol 1635 1636 London Longman Retrieved 20 May 2016 Bruce John ed 1869 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I Vol 1637 1638 London Longman Retrieved 20 May 2016 Bridgeman C G O 1916 William Salt Archaeological Society ed Staffordshire Pre Conquest Charters pp 67 137 Retrieved 27 April 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help The Clergy of the Church of England Database 1540 1835 King s College London Retrieved 27 April 2016 Coggeshall Ralph of 1875 Stevenson Joseph ed Chronicon Anglicanum London Longman Retrieved 3 May 2016 Coulton Barbara 2010 Regime and Religion Shrewsbury 1400 1700 Little Logaston Logaston Press ISBN 978 1 906663 47 6 Dakeyne John Osmond 1843 Baptismal Regeneration London Rivington Retrieved 25 May 2016 Cronne H A Davis R H C eds 1968 Regesta Regum Anglo Normannorum Vol 3 Oxford Oxford University Press Retrieved 3 May 2016 Davis H W C Whitwell R J eds 1913 Regesta Regum Anglo Normannorum Vol 1 Oxford Oxford University Press Retrieved 28 April 2016 Delisle Leopold Berger Elie eds 1916 Recueil des Actes de Henri II Vol 1 Paris Imprimerie nationale Retrieved 1 May 2016 Jeff Denton et al eds 2014 Taxatio HRI Digital HRI Online Sheffield University Archived from the original on 29 June 2016 Retrieved 9 May 2016 William Dugdale 1830 Monasticon Anglicanum 6 Retrieved 27 April 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Duignan William Henry 1888 The Charter of Wulfrun to the monastery at Hamtun Wolverhampton Wolverhampton John Steen Retrieved 27 April 2016 The Electronic Sawyer Online catalogue of Anglo Saxon charters King s College London Retrieved 27 April 2016 Eyton R W William Salt Archaeological Society eds 1881 The Staffordshire Pipe Rolls of the reigns of Richard I and King John pp 1 177 Retrieved 4 May 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Firth C H Rait R S eds 1911 Acts and Ordinances of the Interregnum 1649 1660 London Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 20 May 2016 Fletcher Richard 1997 The Conversion of Europe from Paganism to Christianity 371 1386 AD London HarperCollins ISBN 0002552035 Mary Mary Anne Everett ed 1882 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series Vol 1655 56 London Longman Retrieved 20 May 2016 Mary Mary Anne Everett ed 1892 Calendar of the Proceedings of the Committee for Compounding amp c 1643 1660 Vol 4 London HMSO Retrieved 20 May 2016 G C Baugh W L Cowie J C Dickinson Duggan A P A K B Evans R H Evans Una C Hannam P Heath D A Johnston Hilda Johnstone Ann J Kettle J L Kirby R Mansfield and A Saltman 1970 Greenslade M W Pugh R B eds A History of the County of Stafford Vol 3 London British History Online Retrieved 26 April 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Greenway Diana E ed 1991 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066 1300 Vol 4 Salisbury Diocese Institute for Historical Research Retrieved 9 May 2016 Hamilton William Douglas ed 1880 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I Vol 1640 London Longman Retrieved 20 May 2016 Hamilton William Douglas ed 1882 Calendar of State Papers Domestic Series of the Reign of Charles I Vol 1640 41 London Longman Retrieved 20 May 2016 Hall Joseph 1808 Pratt Josiah ed Works of the Right Reverend Father in God Joseph Hall D D Vol 1 London Williams and Smith Retrieved 20 May 2016 Thomas Duffus Hardy ed 1837 Rotuli Chartarum BSB Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek Retrieved 4 May 2016 Historic England 2016 Church of St Peter 1282467 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 May 2016 Hubbard William Lines Green Janet M eds 1908 Musical Biographies Volume 2 Retrieved 27 April 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Jacob E F 1961 3 The Fifteenth Century Oxford University Press pp 96 98 ISBN 978 0198217145 Jones B ed 1963 Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300 1541 Vol 6 Northern Province York Carlisle and Durham Institute for Historical Research Retrieved 13 May 2016 Kemble John M ed 1845 Codex Diplomaticus Aevi Saxonici Vol 3 London English Historical Society Retrieved 28 April 2016 Kemp B R Salisbury Roger of Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23956 Subscription or UK public library membership required Laud William 1694 The history of the troubles and tryal of the Most Reverend Father in God and blessed martyr William Laud London Richard Chiswell Retrieved 20 May 2016 at Early English Books Text Creation Partnership University of Michigan Oxford University Lee Sidney ed 1895 Oliver George 1782 1867 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 42 London Smith Elder amp Co Lundy Darryl The Peerage Retrieved 27 April 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1906 Calendar of the Charter Rolls of the Reign Preserved in the Public Record Office Henry III Edward I 1257 1300 Vol 2 London HMSO Retrieved 6 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1922 Close Rolls of the Reign of Henry III Preserved in the Public Record Office 1247 1251 Vol 5 London HMSO Retrieved 5 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1908 Calendar of the Close Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward I 1302 1307 Vol 3 London HMSO Retrieved 11 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1908 Calendar of the Close Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Henry IV 1405 1409 Vol 5 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1912 Calendar of the Fine Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward II 1319 1327 Vol 3 London HMSO Retrieved 9 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1916 Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous Vol 2 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1903 Patent Rolls of the Reign of Henry III Preserved in the Public Record Office 1225 1232 Vol 2 London HMSO Retrieved 5 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1910 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Henry III 1258 1266 Vol 5 London HMSO Retrieved 5 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1913 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Henry III 1266 1272 Vol 6 London HMSO Retrieved 6 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1901 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward I 1272 1281 Vol 1 London HMSO Retrieved 6 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1893 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward I 1281 1292 London HMSO Retrieved 6 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1895 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward I 1292 1301 London HMSO Retrieved 7 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1898 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward I 1301 1307 London HMSO Retrieved 7 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1894 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward II 1307 1313 Vol 1 London HMSO Retrieved 9 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1904 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward II 1321 1324 Vol 4 London HMSO ISBN 9780114401962 Retrieved 9 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1891 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward III 1327 1330 Vol 1 London HMSO Retrieved 11 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1898 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward III 1338 1340 Vol 4 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1900 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward III 1340 1343 Vol 5 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1903 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward III 1354 1358 Vol 10 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1913 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward III 1367 1370 Vol 14 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1916 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward III 1374 1377 Vol 16 London HMSO Retrieved 9 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Richard II 1377 1381 Vol 1 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1897 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Richard II 1381 1385 Vol 2 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1905 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Richard II 1391 1396 Vol 5 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1909 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Richard II 1396 1399 Vol 6 London HMSO Retrieved 10 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1906 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Henry IV 1399 1401 Vol 1 London HMSO Retrieved 11 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1909 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Henry IV 1408 1413 Vol 4 London HMSO Retrieved 11 May 2016 at University of Iowa Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1907 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Henry VI 1436 1441 Vol 3 London HMSO Retrieved 13 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1897 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward IV 1461 1467 London HMSO Retrieved 13 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1901 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward IV Edward V Richard III 1476 1485 London HMSO Retrieved 13 May 2016 Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1926 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward VI 1550 1553 Vol 4 London HMSO Retrieved 18 May 2016 at Harold B Lee Library Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1926 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Edward VI 1547 1553 Vol 5 London HMSO Retrieved 18 May 2016 at Harold B Lee Library Maxwell Lyte H C ed 1937 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office Philip and Mary 1553 1554 Vol 1 London HMSO Retrieved 18 May 2016 at Harold B Lee Library Mackey Albert 1912 Hughan William J Hawkins Edward L eds An Encyclopedia of Freemasonry and Its Kindred Sciences Vol 2 1921 ed Chicago Masonic History Company Retrieved 24 May 2016 Morris John Palmer J N N Palmer Matthew Slater George Caroline Thorn Thorn Frank 2011 Domesday text translation Hydra Digital Repository University of Hull Retrieved 2 March 2016 Oliver George 1864 The Book of the Lodge and Officers Manual 3 ed London Longman Retrieved 25 May 2016 Powell Smith Anna Palmer J J N Open Domesday Retrieved 27 April 2016 Peckham John 1882 Martin C T ed Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Archiepiscopi Cantuariensis Vol 1 London Longman Retrieved 9 May 2016 Peckham John 1884 Martin C T ed Registrum Epistolarum Fratris Johannis Peckham Archiepiscopi Cantuariensis Vol 2 London Longman Retrieved 9 May 2016 Peel Albert 1911 Poole Reginald Lane ed A Puritan Survey of the Church in Staffordshire in 1604 English Historical Review Longman 26 338 52 doi 10 1093 ehr XXVI CII 338 Retrieved 18 May 2016 Phillimore Robert 1895 Phillimore Walter George Frank ed The Ecclesiastical Law of the Church of England Vol 1 2 ed London Sweet and Maxwell Stevens and Sons Retrieved 8 January 2016 Prynne William 1637 A quench coale Or A briefe disquisition and inquirie in vvhat place of the church or chancell the Lords table ought to be situated especially vvhen the Sacrament is administered Etc Amsterdam Richt Retrieved 20 May 2016 at Early English Books Text Creation Partnership University of Michigan Oxford University Prynne William 1644 Canterburies doome or The first part of a compleat history of the commitment charge tryall condemnation execution of William Laud London Michael Spark Retrieved 20 May 2016 at Early English Books Text Creation Partnership University of Michigan Oxford University Public Record Office ed 1963 Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous 1392 1399 Vol 6 London HMSO ISBN 9780851159263 Retrieved 28 April 2016 at HathiTrust Raine James 1855 Testamenta Eboracensia a Selection of Wills from the Registry at York Vol 2 Durham Surtees Society Retrieved 13 May 2016 Shaw William A 1900 A History of the English Church during the Civil Wars and under the Commonwealth 1640 1660 Vol 2 London Longmans Green Retrieved 20 May 2016 Southern R W Peter of Blois Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 22012 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stenton F M 1943 Anglo Saxon England ASIN B0007ISNF4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Wesley John The Journal of the Rev John Wesley Vol 3 1906 ed London Dent Retrieved 27 April 2016 Wharton Henry ed 1691 Anglia Sacra Vol 1 London Richard Chiswel Retrieved 27 April 2016 William Salt Archaeological Society ed 1913 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Vol 1913 London Harrison Retrieved 26 April 2016 Wolverhampton History and Heritage Website Bev Parker Retrieved 27 April 2016 William Salt Archaeological Society ed 1883 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Vol 4 London Harrison Retrieved 5 May 2016 Wrottesley George William Salt Archaeological Society eds 1882 Staffordshire Suits extracted from the Plea Rolls temp Richard I and King John pp 1 163 Retrieved 27 April 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help William Salt Archaeological Society ed 1885 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Vol 6 Part 1 London Harrison Retrieved 6 May 2016 William Salt Archaeological Society ed 1891 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Vol 12 London Harrison Retrieved 10 May 2016 William Salt Archaeological Society ed 1894 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Vol 15 London Harrison Retrieved 10 May 2016 William Salt Archaeological Society ed 1900 Collections for a History of Staffordshire 2 Vol 3 London Harrison Retrieved 13 May 2016 William Salt Archaeological Society ed 1911 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Vol 1911 Yearbook London Harrison Retrieved 19 April 2016 William Salt Archaeological Society ed 1915 Collections for a History of Staffordshire Vol 1915 Yearbook London Harrison Retrieved 17 May 2016 John William Willis Bund 1913 Parishes Dudley A History of the County of Worcester Volume 3 Institute of Historical Research Retrieved 6 May 2016 External links EditThe Parish of Central Wolverhampton St Peter s Wolverhampton Choir St Peter s Guild of Change Ringers Diocesan website Google Virtual Tour of St Peters Church Wolverhampton Church of England Statistics 2002 Archived 3 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine 52 35 13 N 2 07 41 W 52 5869 N 2 1280 W 52 5869 2 1280 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Peter 27s Collegiate Church amp oldid 1179779069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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