Church of St Alkelda, Giggleswick

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St Alkelda's Church
Church of St Alkelda, Giggleswick
Church in Giggleswick - geograph.org.uk - 1370218.jpg
Church of St Alkelda, Giggleswick
54°04′19″N2°17′20″W / 54.072°N 2.289°W / 54.072; -2.289
OS grid reference SD813642
Location Giggleswick, North Yorkshire
CountryEngland
Denomination Church of England
Weekly attendance40 (2018)
Website Official webpage
History
Status Parish church
Dedication Alkelda [note 1]
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Architectural type Early English
Perpendicular
Specifications
Length132 feet (40 m)
Administration
Diocese Leeds
Archdeaconry Richmond and Craven
Deanery Bowland and Ewecross
Benefice Settle
Parish Giggleswick
Clergy
Vicar(s) Reverend Julie Clarkson
Listed Building – Grade I
Designated20 February 1958
Reference no. 1157303

The Church of St Alkelda, Giggleswick (historically St Alkald), is an Anglican church in the village of Giggleswick, North Yorkshire, England. St Alkelda's was the mother church for the extended parish of Giggleswick, until the church in Settle was built in 1838, and later became a separate parish.

Contents

The dedication of the church is to a little-known Saxon princess (Alkelda) with connections to a religious site in Middleham, North Yorkshire, with much speculation as to how the dedication arrived at the church in Giggleswick. The church is still in use as a place of worship.

History

A church is believed to have existed on the site of St Alkelda's since Saxon times, [3] [4] however, the church that stands today is largely from the 14th and 15th centuries, [5] with alterations and renovations in the late 19th and early 21st centuries. [6] A previous church is believed to have been destroyed by marauding scots c.1319. [7] The first documented reference to a church in Giggleswick was in 1160, when "Laurentius, persona de Guckilswic", mentioned the site in a letter written to William de Percy. [8] The church is one of only two that are dedicated to St Alkelda in England, the other, is in Middleham, also in North Yorkshire. [9] Alkelda was a Saxon princess who was said to have been strangled by two Danish women during the Viking invasions. The name Alkelda, is said to derive from either Alchhild or Halig Keld, the latter name has been associated with holy springs. [10] Such a spring existed in Giggleswick, being the source of the now drained Giggleswick Tarn. [1] [note 2] It is possible that the name Alkelda stems from this spring. [12]

Another possibility is that the church had an early association with the church of the same name at Middleham. Alkelda is believed to have been buried at Middleham, and that the church at Giggleswick became a daughter house of worship to the church there, after the Northumbrian kings took over lands in the Craven area c.670. [13] [note 3]

Records show that the church at Giggleswick was given by Henry de Puteaco in 1200, to the monks at Finchale, near Durham. [15] It was still in the possession of Finchale thirty years before the Dissolution of the Monasteries, where a document indicates that the church belonged to the "prior and convent of Durham". [16]

In 1507, a record indicates the granting of half an acre of land to build "a gramar scole[sic] for boys". [17] Staff and pupils from the adjacent Giggleswick School attended services at the church, even paying for gas to be installed for later afternoon services when their numbers threatened to overwhelm the local population. The renovation of 1880 was paid for with money raised from the current and former pupils at the school. [18] This continued until 1901, when the school opened up its own chapel. [19]

Architecturally, the style of the church ranges between Early English and Perpendicular, being described as "..a spacious and handsome structure in the later English style, with a square embattled tower." [20] Most of the glass in the church dates from the 15th century when it was renovated, [21] but a newer piece was installed in the 2010s. Whilst looking through the parish room, two churchwardens discovered a stained glass window depicting St Alkelda being strangled by a sash held by two priestly hands, whilst she was suspended over water. This was later dated to between 1920 and 1930, but no other provenance came to light. The window was later installed in the church. [22]

The organ, built by Abbott and Smith, was installed in 1892 and extensively renovated in 2005 by a company based in York. [23] [24]

The church is linked to the only other Anglican Church dedicated to St Alkelda in Yorkshire, the Church of St Mary and St Alkelda, Middleham, via the 33-mile (53 km) St Alkelda's Way. [25] [26]

In 2020, the church gained permission to install solar panels on its roof to help it save energy and reduce its carbon footprint. No objections were raised by official bodies such as Historic England, as the panels are on a roof that cannot be viewed from ground level. [27]

Churchyard

St Alkelda's was the only official burial place for the parish until the early 19th century. Various estimates have concluded that thousands may have been buried there over the intermediate centuries. [4] The TV chat-show host, Russell Harty, was buried in the churchyard in 1988. [28]

Parish and benefice

The first reference to clergy is as far back as 1160, when the parish was in the Diocese of York. In 1836, the parish was transferred into the Diocese of Ripon, before moved again into the Diocese of Bradford, in 1919. [29] In 2014, it was moved into the newer Diocese of West Yorkshire and the Dales. [30] This, in turn, became the Diocese of Leeds in April 2016. [31]

Despite Settle being the main market town in the area, St Alkelda's was always the mother church, until the Church of Holy Ascension was built in Settle in 1838. [32] The ancient parish that St Alkelda's was responsible for, consisted of over 18,500 acres (7,500 ha) and included; Giggleswick, Langcliffe, Rathmell with Wigglesworth, Settle, and Stainforth. Giggleswick was the ecclesiastical parish town until 1851, when Langcliffe was created as its own parish, [12] with the same happening to Settle in 1898. [33] [34]

St Alkelda's now serves the smaller ecclesiastical Parish of Giggleswick (parish code 460172), and had a weekly attendance of 40 in 2018. [35]

Clergy

Giggleswick Church, Yorkshire, England (c. 1905) Giggleswick Church, Yorkshire, England-LCCN2002708309.jpg
Giggleswick Church, Yorkshire, England (c.1905)

Records are from Genuki and Whitaker's The history and antiquities of the deanery of Craven, in the county of York. [29] [36]

Vicars of St Alkelda's, Giggleswick
YearIncumbentYearIncumbentYearIncumbentYearIncumbent
1230Walter de Vestario1441William Loveday1631John Watson1900Theodore P Brocklehurst
1276John1447Richard Fulthorpe‡1632Robert Dockray1933Guy Walmisley-Dresser
1279Adam1485Hugo Wren‡1638Anthony Lister†1936John G Foster
1316William de Alverton‡1493Christopher Tennant†1686Richard Ellershaw1939Henry M Foyl
1330Henry de Lotyngton‡1496Hugo Wren†1720Josias Dawson [37] 1955Edward A J Miller
1335William de Preston1507James Carr1730John Claphamson1973Martin P Brion
1339William Stalmyn†1509 Alan Percy [note 4] 1738Christopher Swainson1980James H Richardson
1413John Holderness♦‡1517Robert Newton1741Anthony Lister1985G David Rhodes
1414William Catton†1546James Procter‡1756John Thompson2000–2012Peter Yorkstone
1425John Berkheved†1548John Nowell [38] 1782John Clapham‡*2004Susan Bentley [note 5]
1428John Wodhus†1556Thomas Abbott†1839Rowland Ingram2012Hilary Young [40]
1438William de Hackforth‡1576Christopher Shute† [41] 1853William H Coulthurst2019Julie Clarkson [42]
1440Christopher Altham1626John Brooke1893Addison Crofton

Notes

  1. Some sources have St Alkald as the historical dedication. [1] Alkelda is disputed as a Saxon name through its etymology, as female names did not end with an a. [2]
  2. Giggleswick Tarn was supposedly fed by the holy spring, and was large enough to support the needs of a community. In 1863, a 8 feet 2 inches (2.5 m) longboat was discovered on what was believed to be the site of the tarn. The boat was used for fishing. [11]
  3. Edwards suggests that the absence of the name Achhild, Alkelda or other variations from the Liber Vitae Dunelmensis , is evidence that Middleham and Giggleswick did not have close links with Lindisfarne. [14]
  4. Resigned to take up the post of Master of St John's College, Cambridge.
  5. Bentley was the pastor at St James' Episcopal Church in Roanake County, Virginia, US. She and Yorkstone had an exchange of ministries after the two parishes were linked together by the Diocese of Bradford and the Diocese of South West Virginia in the 1980s. [39]

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References

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  2. Edwards 2004, p. 136.
  3. GCAA 2008, p. 13.
  4. 1 2 Brayshaw 1884, p. 280.
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  32. Historic England. "Church of Holy Ascension (Grade II) (1166604)". National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 16 September 2020.
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  36. Whitaker 1805, p. 127.
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Sources