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St Peter's Church, Nottingham

St Peter's Church, formally The Church of St Peter with St James, is an Anglican parish church in the city centre of Nottingham, England. It is part of the parish of All Saints', St Mary's and St Peter's, Nottingham.

The Church of St Peter with St James
St Peter's Church Nottingham
52°57′8″N 1°8′55″W / 52.95222°N 1.14861°W / 52.95222; -1.14861
LocationNottingham
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipBroad church
Websitenottinghamchurches.org
History
DedicationSt Peter
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade I listed[1]
Specifications
Capacity350
Height150 feet (46 m)[2]
Administration
ProvinceProvince of York
DioceseSouthwell and Nottingham
ArchdeaconryNottingham
DeaneryNottingham South
ParishAll Saints, St Mary and St Peter
Clergy
RectorChristopher Harrison
Assistant priest(s)Richard Davey; James Saxton; Helen Hall
Laity
Organist/Director of musicPeter Siepmann
Organist(s)Michael Leuty
Churchwarden(s)Brian Dunn, Dorothy Mountford

The church is Grade I listed by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport as a building of outstanding architectural or historic interest.[3]

History Edit

St Peter's is one of the three mediaeval parish churches in Nottingham, the others being St Mary's and St Nicholas. The parish of St. James' Church, Standard Hill, founded in 1807 was united with St Peter's in 1933 and the official title "St Peter with St James" came into being. (St James's was demolished a few years later; some monuments from St James's are preserved in St Peter's.)

The church shows traces of many stages of construction from about 1180 onwards (the original church of around 1100 was destroyed by fire).

List of incumbents Edit

  • 1241 - ? Master John de Nottingham
  • 1259? William Bishop
  • 1280 - ? John de Cathalle, "deacon"
  • 1288 - ? Richard de Stapilford
  • 1292 - ? Peter de Brus, of Pykering, "chaplain"
  • 1300 - ? Adam de Kirkeby, "deacon"
  • by 1317 Master Adam de Pykering
  • 1322 - 1323? Lancelot de Corembto, "acolyte"
  • 1323 - ? William de Wylughby, "clerk"
  • by 1347 Robert Jolan
  • 1347 - 1349 William de Whatton, of Stoke
  • 1349 - 1370 Henry de Keworth, "chaplain"
  • 1370 - 1375 Robert de Neubold, "priest"
  • 1375 - 1409? William de Rodyngton, "clerk"
  • by 1411 Richard de Chilwell
  • 1421? - 1426 Master Hugh Martyll
  • 1426 - ? Master John Burton, "priest"
  • 1430 - 1439 Robert Willoughby
  • 1439 - 1445 John Drayton, "clerk"
  • 1445 - 1484 Master William Gull
  • 1484 - 1486 Master John Mayewe
  • 1486 - 1499 Master Robert Colyngham
  • 1499 - 1510 Master William Ilkeston
  • 1510 - 1538 John Plowgh, senior, otherwise Kyngesbury
  • 1539 - c. 1550 John Plough, junior
  • 1550 - 1559 Nicholas Cooke
  • by 1568 Charles Morley
  • 1578 - 1583 John Wytter
  • 1583 - 1588 Charles Aynsworth
  • 1588 - 1600 Ralph Shutte
  • 1600 - 1604 John Pare
  • 1604 - 1606 Francis Rodes
  • 1606 - 1609 Roger Freeman
  • 1610 John Kell
  • 1611 - 1617 Thomas Law
  • 1617 - 1640 George Cotes
  • 1640 - 1645 John Goodall
  • 1645 - 1656 Richard Whitchurch
  • 1656 - 1662 John Barret
  • 1663 - 1667 John Aistrop
  • 1667 - 1672 Samuel Leeke
  • 1673 - 1680 Edward Buxton
  • 1680 - 1692 William Wilson
  • 1693 - 1705 Nathan Drake
  • 1705 - 1721 Timothy Fenton
  • 1721 - 1725 James Wilson
  • 1725 - 1767 Edward Chappell
  • 1767 - 1782 Samuel Martin
  • 1783 - 1797 Jeremiah Bigsby
  • 1797 - 1814 John Ashpinshaw, later Staunton
  • 1814 - 1853 Robert White Almond
  • 1853 - 1866 William Howard (formerly vicar of St. John the Baptist's Church, Leenside, Nottingham)
  • 1866 - 1870 David Whalley (formerly vicar of St. John's Carrington)
  • 1870 - 1906 George Edgcome
  • 1906 - 1918 Arthur Watson Dewick
  • 1918 - 1931 Herbert Percy Hale
  • 1933 - 1936 Herbert Victor Turner later Bishop of Penrith
  • 1937 - 1948 Thomas Arnold Lee
  • 1948 - 1979 Angus Inglis
  • 1979 - 1985 Malcolm Clive Goldsmith
  • 1985 - 1999 Leslie James Morley
  • 2000 - 2008 Andrew Gilchrist Deuchar
  • 2009 - Christopher Harrison

Music Edit

St Peter's has an organ, a choir and a series of Saturday morning concerts. The Organist & Director of Music since 2007 is Peter Siepmann.

Choir Edit

The choral tradition at St Peter's was developed by Vincent Trivett (Organist 1906–1947), Kendrick Partington (Organist 1957–1994) and others. The choir sings in church every Sunday and frequently has concert performances. The choir often sings in other churches and cathedrals across the UK and abroad. This began with a visit to Lichfield Cathedral in 1969. In 2008 the choir sang the services for several days at Westminster Abbey.[4]

Concerts Edit

St Peter's has a regular series of Saturday morning 'coffee break' concerts. These were started in 1988. The church also occasionally hosts more formal evening performances.

Organ Edit

The first organ since the Commonwealth period was installed by Lincoln in 1812. This was enlarged by Lloyd and Dudgeon in 1863[5] and has been adapted and restored several times since by E. Wragg & Son, Henry Willis & Sons and Hill, Norman & Beard. In 1952, much of the organ of St Columba, Mansfield Road was incorporated into the St Peter's instrument.

A new organ was installed in 2010, and combines some ranks of new and re-used pipes with digital simulations of most stops. It is situated in the North-East corner of the church, retaining a historic eighteenth century case. The organ has been designed as a recital instrument, and to provide support for congregational singing, as well as accompanying the church's choir.[6]

Organists Edit

There are notes of payments to organists in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries

  • 1481-1482 And for 5s paid to the organist (lusori ad organa) in the aforesaid Church in this year.[7]
  • 1516/17 - 1517/18 And for 6s 11d paid to Robert Dowse, organist, at the request of the greater part of the parishioners, in augmentation of his salary.[7]
  • On 25 October 1785, William Bradley was allowed one guinea for teaching the boys to sing.
  • Organist paid £12/12 in 1816 but cost was not borne by the church.
  • Miss King - 1818 - 1825 - ?
  • Mr. Woolley c. 1826
  • Miss Price c. 1834
  • William Archer c. 1834
  • Mrs. Holland 1836[8]
  • Mrs Cooper c. 1840
  • Mr. Woolley c. 1844
  • Mr. Vinning 1844[9]
  • Miss Angelina Webb 1847 - 1850[10] (afterwards organist of the parish church, Cheadle)
  • Thomas Gervase Parr - 1854 - 1858 - ?
  • Thomas Leeson Selby c. 1860 - 1883[11]
  • Charles Rogers c. 1893[12]
  • Lawrence J Norman ca 1901
  • Vincent W. Trivett 1906 - 1947 (formerly Lady Bay Church West Bridgford 1901-1906)
  • Harold E F Bebbington 1947 - 1952
  • Cyril Whitehead 1952 - 1953
  • Douglas Madden 1953 - 1957 (formerly organist at St Peter's Church, Ruddington)
  • Kendrick Partington 1957 - 1994
  • Gary Sieling 1994 - 1995
  • Andrew Teague 1995 - 2003
  • Philip Collin 2003 - 2007
  • Peter Siepmann 2007 -

Clock Edit

In 1552 Edward VI's commissioners delivered to 'parson' Nicholas Cooke a clock in the 'steeple', which had probably been there since the fifteenth century. The earliest reference in the church records 'chargs pyed owete fforw the church of St Peter's in the yre off oure lord god 1577 2 sh. to Toms Lockwood for looking after the clock.'[13]

In 1723–4, the Chamberlains' Account record a payment of £1 to the Sexton of St Peter's for ringing a 4 o’clock bell.[14]

On Wednesday 29 April 1846, a vestry meeting was called to consider the offer of new church clock.[15] On Thursday 15 October 1846, as Richard Ward, a man employed by Messrs. Taylor and Garrett, was assisting in taking down the old face of St. Peter's church clock, when it gave way. A rope attached to it dragged him with it.[16]

The new clock was installed in 1847, manufactured by Reuben Bosworth at a cost of £125 (equivalent to £12,153 in 2021)[17] and was at the time, the largest in Nottingham. It had a pendulum 10 feet 4 inches (3.15 m) long and a bob weighing 60 pounds (27 kg). It was an eight-day clock with four dials, each 7 feet (2.1 m) in diameter.[18] The clock was tested for several weeks before the hand on the dials were connected to the mechanism on 7 April 1847.[19] On Christmas Eve 1852 a hurricane broke off one of the minute hands of the clock.[20]

New cast iron clock dials, 7 feet (2.1 m) in diameter were presented by Henry Smith to the church in 1872[21] at a cost of £66 (equivalent to £6,269 in 2021).[17]

A new clock was installed by G. & F. Cope in 1881[22] which had a Denison Remontoire, compensation pendulum and wire rope lines. The strike was provided by a hammer on the hour bell on E. This was replaced by an electrically driven clock by Smiths of Derby in 1965.

References Edit

  1. ^ Historic England. "Church of St Peter with St James (Grade I) (1255013)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  2. ^ "Know your city". Nottingham Evening Post. Nottingham. 12 August 1943. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  3. ^ Historic England. "Grade I (1255013)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 27 January 2009.
  4. ^ "St Peter's Choir - Nottingham Churches". nottinghamchurches.org.
  5. ^ Nottinghamshire Guardian - Friday 8 May 1863
  6. ^ "St Peter's organ - Nottingham Churches". nottinghamchurches.org.
  7. ^ a b Thoroton Society Record Series Volume VII (1939). The account books of the Guilds of St. George and St. Mary in the church of St. Peter, Nottingham. R.F.B. Hodgkinson.
  8. ^ "Mrs. Holland". Nottingham and Newark Mercury. England. 14 May 1836. Retrieved 4 November 2022 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  9. ^ "It gives us the highest satisfaction…". Nottingham Review. England. 31 May 1844. Retrieved 4 November 2022 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  10. ^ Nottinghamshire Guardian - Thursday 26 September 1850
  11. ^ "Presentation to Mr. T.L. Selby". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 28 September 1883. Retrieved 4 November 2022 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  12. ^ Nottinghamshire Guardian - Saturday 2 December 1893
  13. ^ Bramley, J (1938). "St Peter's Church". Transactions of the Thoroton Society. 42: 45.
  14. ^ Records of the Borough of Nottingham. Vol. 6. Thomas Forman and Sons, Nottingham. 1914. p. 96.
  15. ^ "St Peter's Church Clock". Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties. England. 1 May 1846. Retrieved 23 July 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  16. ^ "Accident in taking down St Peter's Church Clock". Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties. England. 16 October 1846. Retrieved 23 July 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  17. ^ a b UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  18. ^ "New clock for Saint Peter's Church, Nottingham". Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties. England. 15 January 1847. Retrieved 23 July 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  19. ^ "St Peter's Church Clock". Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties. England. 9 April 1847. Retrieved 23 July 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  20. ^ "Hurricane in Nottingham". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 30 December 1852. Retrieved 23 July 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  21. ^ "St Peter's Church, Clock". Nottingham Journal. England. 8 November 1872. Retrieved 23 July 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  22. ^ "The new clock of St Peter's, Nottingham". Nottingham Journal. England. 15 September 1881. Retrieved 23 July 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  • Alfred Stapleton, 1905, Churches and monasteries of old and new Nottingham
  • Keith Train, 1981, Train on churches, Nottingham

External links Edit

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

  • Southwell Diocesan Church History Project Website
  • Pictures of St.Peter's from Nottingham21
  • See St. Peter's Church on Google Street View.

peter, church, nottingham, peter, church, formally, church, peter, with, james, anglican, parish, church, city, centre, nottingham, england, part, parish, saints, mary, peter, nottingham, church, peter, with, jamesst, peter, church, nottingham52, 95222, 14861,. St Peter s Church formally The Church of St Peter with St James is an Anglican parish church in the city centre of Nottingham England It is part of the parish of All Saints St Mary s and St Peter s Nottingham The Church of St Peter with St JamesSt Peter s Church Nottingham52 57 8 N 1 8 55 W 52 95222 N 1 14861 W 52 95222 1 14861LocationNottinghamCountryEnglandDenominationChurch of EnglandChurchmanshipBroad churchWebsitenottinghamchurches orgHistoryDedicationSt PeterArchitectureHeritage designationGrade I listed 1 SpecificationsCapacity350Height150 feet 46 m 2 AdministrationProvinceProvince of YorkDioceseSouthwell and NottinghamArchdeaconryNottinghamDeaneryNottingham SouthParishAll Saints St Mary and St PeterClergyRectorChristopher HarrisonAssistant priest s Richard Davey James Saxton Helen HallLaityOrganist Director of musicPeter SiepmannOrganist s Michael LeutyChurchwarden s Brian Dunn Dorothy MountfordThe church is Grade I listed by the Department for Culture Media and Sport as a building of outstanding architectural or historic interest 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 List of incumbents 2 Music 2 1 Choir 2 2 Concerts 2 3 Organ 2 3 1 Organists 3 Clock 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditSt Peter s is one of the three mediaeval parish churches in Nottingham the others being St Mary s and St Nicholas The parish of St James Church Standard Hill founded in 1807 was united with St Peter s in 1933 and the official title St Peter with St James came into being St James s was demolished a few years later some monuments from St James s are preserved in St Peter s The church shows traces of many stages of construction from about 1180 onwards the original church of around 1100 was destroyed by fire List of incumbents Edit 1241 Master John de Nottingham 1259 William Bishop 1280 John de Cathalle deacon 1288 Richard de Stapilford 1292 Peter de Brus of Pykering chaplain 1300 Adam de Kirkeby deacon by 1317 Master Adam de Pykering 1322 1323 Lancelot de Corembto acolyte 1323 William de Wylughby clerk by 1347 Robert Jolan 1347 1349 William de Whatton of Stoke 1349 1370 Henry de Keworth chaplain 1370 1375 Robert de Neubold priest 1375 1409 William de Rodyngton clerk by 1411 Richard de Chilwell 1421 1426 Master Hugh Martyll 1426 Master John Burton priest 1430 1439 Robert Willoughby 1439 1445 John Drayton clerk 1445 1484 Master William Gull 1484 1486 Master John Mayewe 1486 1499 Master Robert Colyngham 1499 1510 Master William Ilkeston 1510 1538 John Plowgh senior otherwise Kyngesbury 1539 c 1550 John Plough junior 1550 1559 Nicholas Cooke by 1568 Charles Morley 1578 1583 John Wytter 1583 1588 Charles Aynsworth 1588 1600 Ralph Shutte 1600 1604 John Pare 1604 1606 Francis Rodes 1606 1609 Roger Freeman 1610 John Kell 1611 1617 Thomas Law 1617 1640 George Cotes 1640 1645 John Goodall 1645 1656 Richard Whitchurch 1656 1662 John Barret 1663 1667 John Aistrop 1667 1672 Samuel Leeke 1673 1680 Edward Buxton 1680 1692 William Wilson 1693 1705 Nathan Drake 1705 1721 Timothy Fenton 1721 1725 James Wilson 1725 1767 Edward Chappell 1767 1782 Samuel Martin 1783 1797 Jeremiah Bigsby 1797 1814 John Ashpinshaw later Staunton 1814 1853 Robert White Almond 1853 1866 William Howard formerly vicar of St John the Baptist s Church Leenside Nottingham 1866 1870 David Whalley formerly vicar of St John s Carrington 1870 1906 George Edgcome 1906 1918 Arthur Watson Dewick 1918 1931 Herbert Percy Hale 1933 1936 Herbert Victor Turner later Bishop of Penrith 1937 1948 Thomas Arnold Lee 1948 1979 Angus Inglis 1979 1985 Malcolm Clive Goldsmith 1985 1999 Leslie James Morley 2000 2008 Andrew Gilchrist Deuchar 2009 Christopher HarrisonMusic EditSt Peter s has an organ a choir and a series of Saturday morning concerts The Organist amp Director of Music since 2007 is Peter Siepmann Choir Edit The choral tradition at St Peter s was developed by Vincent Trivett Organist 1906 1947 Kendrick Partington Organist 1957 1994 and others The choir sings in church every Sunday and frequently has concert performances The choir often sings in other churches and cathedrals across the UK and abroad This began with a visit to Lichfield Cathedral in 1969 In 2008 the choir sang the services for several days at Westminster Abbey 4 Concerts Edit St Peter s has a regular series of Saturday morning coffee break concerts These were started in 1988 The church also occasionally hosts more formal evening performances Organ Edit The first organ since the Commonwealth period was installed by Lincoln in 1812 This was enlarged by Lloyd and Dudgeon in 1863 5 and has been adapted and restored several times since by E Wragg amp Son Henry Willis amp Sons and Hill Norman amp Beard In 1952 much of the organ of St Columba Mansfield Road was incorporated into the St Peter s instrument A new organ was installed in 2010 and combines some ranks of new and re used pipes with digital simulations of most stops It is situated in the North East corner of the church retaining a historic eighteenth century case The organ has been designed as a recital instrument and to provide support for congregational singing as well as accompanying the church s choir 6 Organists Edit There are notes of payments to organists in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries 1481 1482 And for 5s paid to the organist lusori ad organa in the aforesaid Church in this year 7 1516 17 1517 18 And for 6s 11d paid to Robert Dowse organist at the request of the greater part of the parishioners in augmentation of his salary 7 On 25 October 1785 William Bradley was allowed one guinea for teaching the boys to sing Organist paid 12 12 in 1816 but cost was not borne by the church Miss King 1818 1825 Mr Woolley c 1826 Miss Price c 1834 William Archer c 1834 Mrs Holland 1836 8 Mrs Cooper c 1840 Mr Woolley c 1844 Mr Vinning 1844 9 Miss Angelina Webb 1847 1850 10 afterwards organist of the parish church Cheadle Thomas Gervase Parr 1854 1858 Thomas Leeson Selby c 1860 1883 11 Charles Rogers c 1893 12 Lawrence J Norman ca 1901 Vincent W Trivett 1906 1947 formerly Lady Bay Church West Bridgford 1901 1906 Harold E F Bebbington 1947 1952 Cyril Whitehead 1952 1953 Douglas Madden 1953 1957 formerly organist at St Peter s Church Ruddington Kendrick Partington 1957 1994 Gary Sieling 1994 1995 Andrew Teague 1995 2003 Philip Collin 2003 2007 Peter Siepmann 2007 Clock EditIn 1552 Edward VI s commissioners delivered to parson Nicholas Cooke a clock in the steeple which had probably been there since the fifteenth century The earliest reference in the church records chargs pyed owete fforw the church of St Peter s in the yre off oure lord god 1577 2 sh to Toms Lockwood for looking after the clock 13 In 1723 4 the Chamberlains Account record a payment of 1 to the Sexton of St Peter s for ringing a 4 o clock bell 14 On Wednesday 29 April 1846 a vestry meeting was called to consider the offer of new church clock 15 On Thursday 15 October 1846 as Richard Ward a man employed by Messrs Taylor and Garrett was assisting in taking down the old face of St Peter s church clock when it gave way A rope attached to it dragged him with it 16 The new clock was installed in 1847 manufactured by Reuben Bosworth at a cost of 125 equivalent to 12 153 in 2021 17 and was at the time the largest in Nottingham It had a pendulum 10 feet 4 inches 3 15 m long and a bob weighing 60 pounds 27 kg It was an eight day clock with four dials each 7 feet 2 1 m in diameter 18 The clock was tested for several weeks before the hand on the dials were connected to the mechanism on 7 April 1847 19 On Christmas Eve 1852 a hurricane broke off one of the minute hands of the clock 20 New cast iron clock dials 7 feet 2 1 m in diameter were presented by Henry Smith to the church in 1872 21 at a cost of 66 equivalent to 6 269 in 2021 17 A new clock was installed by G amp F Cope in 1881 22 which had a Denison Remontoire compensation pendulum and wire rope lines The strike was provided by a hammer on the hour bell on E This was replaced by an electrically driven clock by Smiths of Derby in 1965 References Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Peter s Church Nottingham Historic England Church of St Peter with St James Grade I 1255013 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 1 September 2015 Know your city Nottingham Evening Post Nottingham 12 August 1943 Retrieved 1 September 2015 Historic England Grade I 1255013 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 27 January 2009 St Peter s Choir Nottingham Churches nottinghamchurches org Nottinghamshire Guardian Friday 8 May 1863 St Peter s organ Nottingham Churches nottinghamchurches org a b Thoroton Society Record Series Volume VII 1939 The account books of the Guilds of St George and St Mary in the church of St Peter Nottingham R F B Hodgkinson Mrs Holland Nottingham and Newark Mercury England 14 May 1836 Retrieved 4 November 2022 via British Newspaper Archive It gives us the highest satisfaction Nottingham Review England 31 May 1844 Retrieved 4 November 2022 via British Newspaper Archive Nottinghamshire Guardian Thursday 26 September 1850 Presentation to Mr T L Selby Nottinghamshire Guardian England 28 September 1883 Retrieved 4 November 2022 via British Newspaper Archive Nottinghamshire Guardian Saturday 2 December 1893 Bramley J 1938 St Peter s Church Transactions of the Thoroton Society 42 45 Records of the Borough of Nottingham Vol 6 Thomas Forman and Sons Nottingham 1914 p 96 St Peter s Church Clock Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties England 1 May 1846 Retrieved 23 July 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Accident in taking down St Peter s Church Clock Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties England 16 October 1846 Retrieved 23 July 2017 via British Newspaper Archive a b UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 New clock for Saint Peter s Church Nottingham Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties England 15 January 1847 Retrieved 23 July 2017 via British Newspaper Archive St Peter s Church Clock Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties England 9 April 1847 Retrieved 23 July 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Hurricane in Nottingham Nottinghamshire Guardian England 30 December 1852 Retrieved 23 July 2017 via British Newspaper Archive St Peter s Church Clock Nottingham Journal England 8 November 1872 Retrieved 23 July 2017 via British Newspaper Archive The new clock of St Peter s Nottingham Nottingham Journal England 15 September 1881 Retrieved 23 July 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Alfred Stapleton 1905 Churches and monasteries of old and new Nottingham Keith Train 1981 Train on churches NottinghamExternal links Edit nbsp Media related to St Peter s Church Nottingham at Wikimedia Commons Southwell Diocesan Church History Project Website Pictures of St Peter s from Nottingham21 See St Peter s Church on Google Street View Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Peter 27s Church Nottingham amp oldid 1161002674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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