St. Michael's | |
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St Michael's Church, Basingstoke | |
51°15′54″N1°05′20″W / 51.265°N 1.089°W | |
Location | Basingstoke, Hampshire |
Country | United Kingdom |
Denomination | Church of England |
Tradition | Liberal central churchmanship |
Website | www |
History | |
Status | Parish church |
Consecrated | c.1510 |
Architecture | |
Functional status | Active |
Heritage designation | Grade I listed building |
Style | Perpendicular |
Years built | 14th–15th century |
Specifications | |
Number of towers | 1 |
Administration | |
Province | Canterbury |
Diocese | Winchester (since 28 July 1919) |
Clergy | |
Rector | John Hudson |
Curate(s) | Ed Haycock |
Minister(s) | PJ Brombley |
Laity | |
Reader(s) | Stephen Leach Mike Browning |
St. Michael's Church is an Anglican parish church in Basingstoke, Hampshire, England. It is located in the lower part of the town, near its centre, towards the northern end of Church Street and is of historical value. It is designated a Grade I listed building.
St. Michael's is a Grade I listed building. It is largely of 16th-century construction in stone and flint. As with many British churches, there is evidence of much alteration made to the building over the centuries [1] The south porch of the church was built in 1539, and a War Memorial Chapel installed in 1920. The building takes the form of a double-aisled church with a west tower and two separate chapels either side of the chancel at the eastern end. There is an attached churchyard, which was closed to burials around 1860.
In the southeast corner, St Stephen's Chapel and the vestry are the earliest parts extant, [2] with exterior walls of rough flint and rubble, and a separate, steeply pitched, red tiled roof with an ostensibly Victorian chimney. During extensive repairs and changes to the interior of the church undertaken in 1840–1841, old foundations were met with, and it was noted that many stones had the remains of "ancient mouldings", suggesting that this part of the church was constructed on the site of, and using material from, an earlier construction. [3]
Interior and exterior evidence indicates that the roof of the chapel was once a lean-to. Interior fitments include an unornamented piscina and a wooden triptych (c. 1549) believed to be the work of Jan Sanders van Hemessen that was presented to the church by the then vicar James Millard in the 1870s. [4]
In his 1895 novel Jude the Obscure , Thomas Hardy described the church as gaunt and unattractive.
In 1908 the newly ordained minister was Ernest Charles Saunders who had recently married Lilian Elwyn Elliott. His new wife had left him by 1909 and went on to be a noted writer and anthropologist. She married again but there is no evidence that she ever divorced Ernest. [5]
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