With our month long lockdown now finished I thought it was time I went out to visit some churches, looking at where to go I decided on a one I had passed by many times and not that far away. St Mary Garsington
"The oldest part of the parish church of Saint Mary includes the tower, built towards the end of the 12th century in the transitional style between Norman and Early English. The chancel is pure Early English and was built or rebuilt in about 1300. St Mary's has Decorated Gothic north and south aisles, which were added in the 14th century and have four-bay arcades.
St Mary's was restored in 1849 under the direction of the Gothic Revival architect Joseph Clarke. Clarke's alterations included rebuilding the chancel arch to match the north arcade, adding gargoyles to the south aisle and much remodelling of the north aisle. St Mary's is a Grade II* listed building.
Inside, next to the entrance door, is a memorial to Garsington's most illustrious inhabitant, Ottoline Morrell, by Eric Gill.
The west tower has a ring of six bells. Richard Keene of Woodstock cast the treble bell in 1696. Abraham II Rudhall of Gloucester cast the second bell in 1720. Henry III Bagley of Chacombe, Northamptonshire cast the third bell in 1733, presumably at his then foundry in Witney. John Rudhall of Gloucester cast the tenor bell in 1788. W&J Taylor cast the fifth bell in 1825, presumably at their then foundry in Oxford. The fourth bell was cast in 1732 but Mears and Stainbank of the Whitechapel Bell Foundry recast it in 1929. The bells were restored in 2013.
Thomas Thwaites of Clerkenwell in London built the turret clock for the tower in 1796 at a cost of £172 4s 0d. It is a 30-hour clock and it strikes the hours on the tenor bell. Its dials still have only an hour hand.
St Mary's parish is now part of the Benefice of Garsington, Cuddesdon and Horspath.
The wedding scene in the 2006 film Amazing Grace was filmed at the church."
First clear view of the church as you come out of the trees along the path
waling over to the boundary wall is the best place to see the whole church. The scaffold is there as they are working on the roof of the South aisle because some thieves decided they needed the lead flashing more than the church did.
The chancel end of the church
View of the North side including the aisle
12 comments:
I always keep quiet when I see the renovation of monuments. This church will regain its former splendor. Your photos are beautiful, the weather is wonderful and the unblocked exit encouraged you to leave.
Hugs and greetings, Billy:)
Looks great bathed in golden light.
I love the gargoyle! I don't understand how someone could rip off a church!
I look forward to the time when you can go inside the church. Eric Gill's work for Ottoline Morrell's memorial must be interesting. Your photos of the outside are great. Our parish church had the same problem re. the lead on the roof some time back. Funds are then needed to restore the fabric of a building. Thank you for sharing. Have a good week Bill.
I was really lucky with the weather
It does look nice
They do, it is quite a problem around the country
Good thing is it can be replaced with a cheaper material
Great churchyard picture (the first one)! Lovely mood! ;o)
Hi Bill. As always, excellent photos of St Mary Garsington. You have so much history there … it’s impressive! I thought about you when I put together my December 9 post about Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada.
https://john-s-island.blogspot.com/2020/12/charlottetown-prince-edward-island.html
I included a couple of my pictures of St Dunstan’s Basillica, which is over 100 years old. Gorgeous building. I admire your efforts to get out there and photograph churches. Thanks for sharing. Take care and stay safe! John
Yes the Haha wall sets it off
Thank you John, it has not been an easy year
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