All Saints | |
---|---|
All Saints Church | |
51°24′37″N0°18′22″W / 51.4104°N 0.3061°W | |
Location | Market Place, Kingston upon Thames |
Country | United Kingdom |
Denomination | Church of England |
Website | allsaintskingston.co.uk |
Architecture | |
Style | Norman, Decorated, Perpendicular |
Years built | 1120 |
Administration | |
Diocese | Southwark |
Archdeaconry | Wandsworth |
Deanery | Kingston |
Parish | Kingston |
Clergy | |
Rector | Joe Moffatt |
Laity | |
Director of music | David Condry |
Organist(s) | Matthew O'Malley |
Churchwarden(s) | Anne Packer Mary Mundy |
Listed Building – Grade I | |
Designated | 30 July 1951 |
Reference no. | 1358437 |
All Saints Church is the historic parish church of Kingston upon Thames in southwest London, and is set between the ancient Market Place and the main shopping centre. It forms part of the Diocese of Southwark and together with the church of St John, and St John the Divine, it forms a team of Anglican churches serving residents, businesses, schools and Kingston University. The church is the only Grade I listed building (but not structure) in Kingston.
A church at Kingston sprang up in Saxon times and Egbert, king of Wessex, held his great council at the site in 838. Seven Saxon kings of England, including Æthelstan and Æthelred the Unready, were crowned here in the 10th century. The current church was begun in 1120 under the orders of Henry I and has been developed since then. It is a cruciform church with a central tower and a four-bay nave, with Perpendicular clerestory, choir, north and south aisles, transepts and chapels. The exterior is of flint with stone dressings and a parapet of stone battlements. [1] [2]
Edward the Elder was crowned in Kingston in 900 at the Coronation Stone, as was his son Athelstan in 925. In the following years Kingston was the site of the consecrations of Edmund I in 940, Eadred in 946, Eadwig in 955, Edward the Martyr in 975 and, finally, Ethelred, who was crowned by Bishop Oswald of Worcester in 978.
Outside the south door of the present building are some outlines marked by stones, which are all that remain of the Saxon church and chapel of St Mary. The present church was begun in 1120 under the orders of Henry I and has been developed since then. During the 14th century, the Norman nave was widened. The chancel and the chapels of the Holy Trinity to the north and St James to the south were added during the 15th century. The original high wooden spire on top of the tower was struck by lightning and almost entirely destroyed in 1445 and was rebuilt in 1505. In 1600, the church was described at vestry meeting as being "much out of repair and there being a need for a speedy repair of the same in several places ... to prevent further damages and inconvenience." The tower was taken down to the level of the nave and was strengthened and rebuilt in 1708 in brick, with dipped parapet and pineapple ornaments on the corners. [1] The chapel of St. Mary, which stood at the south-east of the church, next to the south chapel of St. James, was pulled down in 1730 after some of the walls fell, killing the sexton. [3]
The church was much restored in the 19th century, by Brandon from 1862 to 1866 and Pearson in 1883. [1] A 12th-century doorway was discovered in the west wall of the nave in about 1865 but destroyed. Ceilings were reconstructed and the organ gallery at the west end was removed. In the 1890s, remaining galleries were removed and new roofs provided to the nave, aisles and transepts. [3] After the First World War, the choir vestry was built on the north wall and a memorial chapel dedicated to the East Surrey Regiment. The same regiment also has a set of memorial gates at the south entrance to the churchyard, on Market Place (the regiment's badge appears over them). The gates were formally opened on Remembrance Sunday 1924 by the Bishop of Kingston, Percy Herbert. [4] The gates became a separate Grade II listed building in April 2016; the church is Grade I listed. [5]
The church contains a 14th-century wall painting of St. Blaise, a 17th-century marble font attributed to Sir Christopher Wren, twelve bells and an 18th-century carillon, the great west window of the 19th century, and the Frobenius organ installed in 1988.
There are embroideries of four of the seven kings crowned in Kingston, made by Jacky Puzey to designs by Sophia Pearson with beading by Beatrice Mayfield of the Royal School of Needlework. [6] These are:
Æthelstan (924-939), first King of England. Crowned in Kingston in 925.
Edmund (939-946), half brother of Athelstan. Known as a law maker. Captured the Vikings Raven banner 878. The stag is from a legend of how Edmund granted Glastonbury to Dunstan. Crowned 1 December 939 in Kingston.
Eadred (946-955). Defeated Eric Bloodaxe in 954 to bring Northumbria under English control. The flames are burning Ripon Minster. Coronation 16 August 946 in Kingston upon Thames.
Eadwig (955-959). King at 15. At his coronation feast, January 956, he left to consort with his wife. He ruled lands south of the Thames while Edgar ruled that to the north.
There are several notable monuments in the church.
There is a memorial by John Bacon the younger to Peter de la Rive Esq. of Hampton Wick. He was a merchant in London originally from Geneva, who died in 1803 aged 97, leaving his house to his housekeeper. [7] [8]
Cesar Picton (c. 1755–1836) has a simple memorial on the south wall of the nave. He was presumably enslaved in Africa by the time he was about six years old. He was bought and brought to England by an English army officer who had been in Senegal, and in 1761 was "presented" as a servant to Sir John Philipps, who lived at Norbiton Place, near Kingston. When Lady Philipps died she left him £100 and he became a wealthy coal merchant in Kingston.
There is a memorial to Edmund Staunton (1600-1671), vicar of Kingston 1633–1658, and ten of his children. [8]
There are several incised ledger stones in the floor of the chancel, now the seating area for the cafe. These include ones for William Cleave (d 1667), who founded Cleaves Almshouses, John Milner, Her Majesty's Consul General to the Kingdom of Portugal (d. 1712 in Lisbon), Samuel Robinson, Secretary to the Company of Merchant Adventurers (d. 1625), [9] [10] and Dr William Evelyn St Lawrence Finny (1864-1952), physician, local politician (Mayor of Kingston seven times) and historian, author of 'All Saints, Kingston upon Thames (1930)'. [11]
There is a monumental brass to Robert Skerne (d 1437) and his wife Joanna. He was a lawyer and MP for Surrey in 1420 and again in 1422. They had a house, Down Hall, near the river. [10]
Another brass, which is damaged, is to the merchant John Hertcombe (d 1488) and his wife Katherine.
In a recess on the south wall of the south chapel is the tomb of Sir Anthony Benn, Recorder of Kingston and afterwards Recorder of London, who died in 1618, containing his recumbent effigy in his lawyer's robe and ruff collar and cuffs. [3]
Between the south door and the tower is the sculpture of Countess Louisa Theodosia (1767-1821), gracefully seated in meditation, by Sir Francis Chantrey. She was the wife of Lord Liverpool, Prime Minister (1812-1827). [1] The inscription on the back records that "She visited the fatherless and widows in their affliction and kept herself unspotted from the world." [12] Their country house was Coombe House near Kingston, where she died. The statue was originally in Coombe House and moved to the church on Lord Liverpool's death. While Louisa was buried at Hawkesbury, Gloucestershire, Lord Liverpool's second wife, Mary was interred at All Saints after her death in October 1846. [13]
There are two memorials in the eastern end of the south transept to members of the Scottish Davidson family, merchants and slave owners. [14]
The monument for Duncan Davidson (1733-1799) is of a woman weeping over an urn and is by the sculptor Charles Regnart. He was a West India merchant with premises at 14 Fenchurch Buildings, London, who owned Tulloch Castle, Ross-shire, inheriting from Henry (d. 1781), his elder brother and business partner. He was a Member of Parliament for Cromartyshire 1790–1796. The family owned plantations in Jamaica, Surinam and Grenada. [15]
The monument which shows Henry Davidson (1771-1827) relaxed and seated on a chair, is by the sculptor John Ternouth. Henry Davidson, the son of Duncan Davidson and Louisa (née Spencer), was a merchant, plantation owner, and a director of the Bank of England, who died at Rosslyn House, Hampstead. [16] The urn records his wife, Elizabeth Caroline (née Deffell), who died the year after her husband. [17]
This monument by John Flaxman, is of a winged cherub by an urn, facing out, holding open the pages of a book. Sir Philip Medows (1717-1781), was deputy ranger of Richmond Park and husband of Lady Frances Pierrepont, daughter of the Earl of Kingston upon Hull.
The church contains twenty stained glass windows, mostly belonging to the Victorian Gothic Revival period, the earliest dating from 1852. Five were designed by Nathaniel Westlake for Lavers and Barraud; Nathaniel Lavers (1828-1911) lived in Long Ditton and donated one of the windows. Other windows in the south transept and the south wall of the nave are by Burlison and Grylls and date from Pearson's restoration of the 1880s. [18]
Location | By | Date | Photograph | Description | Notes | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
South aisle east window | Possibly Ward and Nixon | 1852 | Christ and the four Evangelists. | Dedicated to the vicar Samuel Gandy (d 1851) | |||
East window | Henry Hughes of Ward and Hughes | 1860 | Scenes from the life of Christ, with the Crucifixion in the centre | ||||
Chancel south wall eastern window | William Wailes | 1861 | The angels announcing the birth of Jesus to the shepherds. | Donated by William Mercer in memory of his four daughters | [19] | ||
South aisle central window | Burlison and Grylls | 1886 | St Peter and the Centurion Cornelius. | In memory of Major William Anthony Grey-Smith, (1849-1886) 70th and East Surrey Regiments. | |||
Holy Trinity Chapel, East window | Nathaniel Westlake for Lavers and Barraud | 1860 | Scenes from the Old Testament: Abel's sacrifice, Noah, Crossing the Red Sea, Jacob blessing the sons of Joseph. | In memory of George Reynell (1785-1859) | [20] | ||
Holy Trinity Chapel, eastern window on north wall | Christopher Webb | 1953 | St Michael slaying the dragon. Arms of the East Surrey Regiment, Ireland, the Longley family, and a Jerusalem cross. | In memory of Major General Sir John Raynsford Longley and his son Charles who was killed at the Battle of Jutland (1916). | |||
Holy Trinity Chapel, western window on north wall | Christopher Webb | 1928 | St George slaying the dragon, Arms of the East Surrey Regiment, England, the Pearse family, and Scotland. | In memory of Col. Hugh Wodehouse Pearse DSO. | |||
North aisle eastern window | Lowndes and Drury | 1956 | Four roundels and other pieces of 15th & 16th century glass from the Thomas and Drake collection | ||||
North aisle west wall window | Nathaniel Westlake for Lavers and Barraud | 1866 | The three Maries at the Tomb. | In memory of Charles Octavius Parnell | [21] | ||
North aisle western window | Lowndes and Drury | 1956 | Arms of King's College, Cambridge and Henry VI. Arms attributed to the Saxon king Edward the Elder, son of Alfred the Great, crowned at Kingston. The arms of Merton Abbey, Patrons of the living from All Saints’ | ||||
North clerestory window | Lavers and Barraud | 1860 | St Andrew, St Peter, St James. | [22] | |||
South aisle eastern window | Burlison and Grylls | 1887 | Martha and Mary | ||||
South aisle western window | Burlison and Grylls | 1920 | St Michael and the dragon, angels with trumpets | In memory of Lieut. Col Francis Richard Pennefather Kane (1854-1920), East Surrey Regiment. | |||
South clerestory window | Lavers and Barraud | 1860 | Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel | ||||
South transept west aisle window | Burlison and Grylls | 1887 | "Nunc Dimittris", the song of Simeon, presentation of Jesus in the Temple. Mary, Simeon with Jesus, Anna. | In memory of Robert Thomas Kent and Abiah Kent. | |||
South transept window | Burlison and Grylls | 1886 | The "Magnificat", the annunciation. | In memory of John Shrubsole. | |||
South wall chancel western window | Nathaniel Westlake for Lavers and Barraud | 1861 | Scenes from the life of Abraham | [23] | |||
Vicar's burial ground east window | Nathaniel Westlake for Lavers and Barraud | 1860 | Jesus healing of a woman with issue of blood, with Martha and Mary, raising Jairus' daughter. | Given by Lavers in memory of his father and sister. | |||
South aisle west wall window | Nathaniel Westlake for Lavers and Barraud | 1880 | Jesus with his disciples and children. | In memory of Henry Shrubsole. | |||
West window | Possibly designed by John Milner Allen for Lavers and Barraud | 1863 | Christ in Majesty, surrounded by the apostles, with 24 elders from the book of Revelation. | In memory of William and Susannah Wilhelmina Sandford. | [24] |
Cottesbrooke is a village and civil parish in West Northamptonshire in England. At the time of the 2001 census, the parish's population was 144 people, falling marginally to 143 at the 2011 census.
Chester Cathedral is a Church of England cathedral and the mother church of the Diocese of Chester. It is located in the city of Chester, Cheshire, England. The cathedral, formerly the abbey church of a Benedictine monastery dedicated to Saint Werburgh, is dedicated to Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary. Since 1541, it has been the seat of the Bishop of Chester.
St Nicholas Church in Thames Ditton, Surrey, England, is a Grade I listed Anglican parish church that has parts that date back to the 12th century.
St Laurence's Church, Ludlow, is a Church of England parish church in Ludlow, Shropshire, England. It is a grade I listed building.
Warborough is a village and civil parish in South Oxfordshire, about 2.5 miles (4 km) north of Wallingford and about 9 miles (14 km) south of Oxford. The parish also includes the hamlet of Shillingford, south of Warborough beside the River Thames.
St Mary's Church is an Anglican parish church in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building. It has been called the "Cathedral of South Cheshire" and it is considered by some to be one of the finest medieval churches, not only in Cheshire, but in the whole of England. The architectural writer Raymond Richards described it as "one of the great architectural treasures of Cheshire", and Alec Clifton-Taylor included it in his list of "outstanding" English parish churches.
St John the Baptist's Church is the former cathedral of Chester, Cheshire, England during the Early Middle Ages. The church, which was first founded in the late 7th Century by the Anglo Saxons, is outside Chester's city walls on a cliff above the north bank of the River Dee. It is now considered to be the best example of 11th–12th century church architecture in Cheshire, and was once the seat of the Bishop of Lichfield from 1075 to 1095.
St John the Evangelist's Church is in the village of Sandiway, Cheshire, England. It is an active Anglican parish church of Sandiway and Cuddington in the diocese of Chester, the archdeaconry of Chester and the deanery of Middlewich. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.
St Mary's Church is in Knowsley Lane, Knowsley Village, Merseyside, England. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building. It is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Liverpool, the archdeaconry of Liverpool and the deanery of Huyton. In the Buildings of England series, Pollard and Pevsner describe the church as being "largish" with "an intimate interior".
The Minster Church of All Saints or Rotherham Minster is the Anglican minster church of Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England. The Minster is a prominent example of Perpendicular Gothic architecture and various architectural historians have rated it highly. Nikolaus Pevsner describes it as "one of the largest and stateliest churches in Yorkshire", Simon Jenkins states it is "the best work in the county", and Alec Clifton-Taylor calls it the "glory of Rotherham". With its tall spire, it is Rotherham's most predominant landmark, and amongst the tallest churches in Yorkshire.
St Mary's Parish Church, Hampton, is an Anglican church in Hampton in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames.
St George's Church, Beckenham is the Church of England parish church of Beckenham, Greater London. It is Grade II* listed.
Nathaniel Hubert John WestlakeFSA (1833–1921) was a 19th-century British artist specialising in stained glass.
St Peter's Church is an Anglican church in the village of Deene, Northamptonshire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building, and is under the care of The Churches Conservation Trust and East Northamptonshire Council.
The Parish Church of St Peter, Great Berkhamsted, is a Church of England, Grade II* listed church in the town of Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, in the United Kingdom. It stands on the main High Street of the town and is recognisable by its 85-foot (26 m) clock tower.
St Helen's Church is the Anglican parish church of Ashby-de-la-Zouch, in the deanery of North West Leicestershire and the Diocese of Leicester. There was a church in the town in the 11th century, but the core of the present building mainly dates from work started in 1474, when the church was rebuilt by William Hastings at the same time that he converted his neighbouring manor house into a castle. The church was refurbished in about 1670 to create more space, but the large and increasing size of the congregation led to further work in 1829, and a major rebuild in 1878–80, including the widening of the nave by the addition of two outer aisles.
St Mary's Church stands on a hill in the town of Ellesmere, Shropshire, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Ellesmere, the archdeaconry of Salop, and the diocese of Lichfield. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building.
Charles Regnart was an English sculptor, specialising in funerary monuments. His masterpiece is said to be the 17th century-style recumbent figure of George Rush in the parish church in Farthinghoe. The figure shows Rush in old age, lying with his slippers on, clutching a Bible and staring to heaven. Regnart flourished from 1790 until 1830. His style has been described as "pseudo-Classical" and is typified by much folded drapery and an overall pattern of white against a black background.
The Church of St Mary the Virgin is a Grade II* listed church of the Church of England in the village of Sunbury next to the river Thames.
{{cite book}}
: |work=
ignored (help)