The last church in my recent visit to West Berkshire and one I kept missing till now. Looking at the outside did not give me the feeling it would show any old features to it and reading the history from Wikipedia only goes to confirm I missed none.
"The Church of England parish church of All Saints existed by the time of the Domesday Book of 1086. The building was demolished in 1863 and replaced by a Gothic Revival one designed by GE Street, who was architect to the Diocese of Oxford. Street retained and re-used some 13th century Early English Gothic features from the original building."
There is a wrought iron arch of sorts over the gate and as you go through you get this view of the South side
The West end on the left and right the North side of the church
Back to the South side
Looking over to the East end, getting a view of the East end wall proved nigh on impossible
The porch and inside the door to the church
Coming out in the nave and looking down to the chancel
In the chancel you can see the decorated altar with the carved back and above the chancel window
The carving and chancel window
A simple altar cross and candle holders are enough to set it off
Looking back past the choir stalls to the nave
Here we have one bank of choir stalls with the organ behind
Above the small stair way to the pulpit with left the view you get from it
Turn around you get a nice view of the chancel
A charity box sits on the wall by the entrance
The church does have a few memorials you can see including the rather nice First World War Roll of Honour
The memorials seem to honour past rectors
Though taking a photo of them shows the wording hard to read
You can see some very nice stained glass windows and a more modern one
The window is dedicated to Richard Bernard Abraham who was a local physician and his wife Nancy
The other windows are Gothic Revival
Left the window in the bell tower and one the South aisle
Here we look over to the nave
A tub font is in the belltower
Above one of the tall candle holders by the altar in the nave.
Left & right the South aisle
Left the South aisle from the nave
In the bell tower a couple of brasses can be seen on the wall along with pictures and framed bell ringer lists. The brasses I suspect come from the previous church
The churchyard has may headstones
Above a wooden cross fallen over and rotting away the owners name lost
Here we look west towards where the church school is
This part has most graves
Though I doubt many date back further than when the church was built
Even then the words have disappeared on some
Looking back East from under the tree.
Right more graves here on the West end
On the North side is a churchyard extension where the more recent burials take place now
The North side of the church from the churchyard extension
After walking down the road to see the village war memorial I took one last photo of the church.
Till next time I wish you all a pleasant weekend
6 comments:
oh I feel sad that the original church was demolished but through your photos I can still see a few of the pieces that were once there.
It is looking awesome especially the windows...
...what a beautiful day you had to visit this lovely church. It's Wonderful that you are able to see the interior, something that I am rarely able to see.
A pretty nice example of High Victorian style. That's a very odd-looking spire though, reminds me of a sharpened pencil!
The stained glass windows particularly draw my eye.
Once again your post if filled with incredible detail. Lovely interior shots!
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