Over the years I have passed this church many times as I drove along the A34 (now the A339) or through the village it is in. After starting the blog I now write I thought I should pop in and check it out when I get a chance, well I made that happen the other week.
The place is called Shaw cum Donnington as it co-joins the neighbouring village. You have to come off the A339 at Newbury of if you know the area like I do then you come along the B4009 and turn off to get to the church. Now the history on this church is sparse or non extant on Wikipedia but RBH history does have a little.
"The
building was erected in 1840, after the vicar had been on holiday to the
Isle of Wight. Seeing a church there that he fell in love with, he returned home
to build a copy, or at least a building inspired by it. I've been unable to
discover which church on the island he saw. The results at Shaw are a not
unpleasing Norman Revival building with a short spire.
The
old church that he pulled down is said to have been Saxon in origin, but
weren't they all? The new church has retained several of its monuments and
added further ones of interest. Sadly the heraldic ledger stones to the
owners of adjoining Shaw House have been relegated to outside the south wall
and are now largely hidden by bushes: the Dolmans, the Andrewses and even
the flamboyant Duke of Chandos' third duchess. Thomas Dolman still has a
fine mural monument inside though. Other less impressive plaques include members of the Bacon
family, some of the richest men in Britain. Anthony and his brother, Thomas, were great Welsh Ironmasters whose
father made Merthyr Tydfil what it today."
I have to admit I was unsure if the church would be open but as I thought it turned out to be locked because of the Covid 19 restrictions
Your fist view of the church would be like this on the left as you came along the road.
As you walked up to the church you are greeted by a Lychgate
Walk though the gate and you see the church tower and spire which dominates it.
Walking left takes you to the North side of the church
Above the porch on the South side the doors have chipboard screwed to them which makes me think they are damaged.
Left the path through the churchyard to the new church offices
Above the entrance on the West end under the tower.
Right the churchyard from across the road nearby
Above the grave of Sidney T Pocock MM with the Royal Breconshire emblem on the top.
Left some of the chest tomes near the porch
9 comments:
Great shots.
Thank you Jim
Hello Billy!
Your photos are very beautiful. I was delighted with the Anglican church and historic cemetery. I dream to enter the church and pray in the silence of the temple.
Hugs and greetings, Billy:)
Very nice. I love the historic cemetery. I wish churches in Canada had cemeteries. I've only seen them in Europe.
Too bad it was closed but you did a great job documenting the exterior. Stay safe!
I have not seen any photos from inside so I'll have to wait till it is open again
It is a nice one with some interesting headstones
I'm afraid that is how it is going to be for a while
Such a shame that the Saxon one was pulled down, I don't know why they did that.
Post a Comment