This week the Church Explorer visits St Eigon Llanigon the last of the churches I managed to visit in one day. I found the church locked but was lucky in that I met a lady tending her sisters grave who knew where the key was left which allowed me inside.
"The church of St. Eigon predates the Norman Conquest, though the current building (parts of which are Norman) are somewhat later.
In the 1870s the diarist Rev. Francis Kilvert, curate of Clyro, was a regular visitor to the then vicar of Llanigon, the Rev. William Jones Thomas. Francis, fell in love with his daughter, Frances Eleanor Jane aka Daisy. Her father asked Kilvert not to pursue the matter, probably because as a mere curate he was not sufficiently well-placed. Kilvert noted "On this day when I proposed for the girl who will I trust one day be my wife I had only one sovereign in the world, and I owed that." Daisy never married and is buried in the Llanigon churchyard.[14]
The successor to William Thomas as vicar of St. Eigon was the Rev. William Edward Thomas Morgan. He fell in love with Charlotte Alice, another of the Thomas daughters. Like Kilvert, he was refused permission to marry by William Thomas."
The church from over the wall near the lychgate
Another view zoomed in, I kept wondering why the three openings in the porch, a room perhaps
South west view of the church
Around the north side
Then round to the south east
I might add I cam back a week or so later which you will see the reason in a few more photos, it was a clearer sky on my second visit
The churchyard from the path
Over to the west side of the churchyard
Looking east south of the church
These are around the east end of the church
Looking up at the east end of the church over the headstones
Looking south west across the churchyard, there is another entrance behind me I did not get a photo of
Couple of older headstones near the lychgate
William Howard Thomas Morgan BA was a vicar of the parish
Looking to the north side of the church from the east
Collage of the churchyard
I forgot to look for this grave on my first visit
This is the grave of Rev. William Jones Thomas and his daughters, I personally think he had airs above his station because he was a vicar in not letting two of his daughters marry vicars, Kilvert being one of them. Now adays things like that are less likely to happen
The porch or inside
and what looks like an old font very similar to the one in Bredwardine, my feeling is they came from the former Abbey Cwmhir
I found out what the three openings were for, to let the sound of the bells out but the louvers on the side should have been a hint as well
Inside I found very light and minimilist
Towards the chancel arch
The altar and east window
Portrait shot of the altar and east window
East window
View back though the chancel to the nave
The view from the lectern
Not a great deal different from the pulpit
Organ and \\\\\\what looks like a piano
The Roll of Honour looking a bit tarnished, brass ones I find hard to get a decent photo of
Another Roll of Honour Commemorating the Church which was damaged in WWII and those who died for their country
South wall of the chancel with commandments and Lords Prayer
The plaque commemorates who donated the tablets
South window looking on the churchyard
I will say goodby with another photo of the font with a brass pitcher for christenings.
Till next time may I wish you all a peaceful week
















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