Church of St James, Winscombe

Church of St James
Church of St James
Location Winscombe, Somerset
Country England
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Central
Website www.achurchnearyou.com/winscombe-st-james
History
Dedication St James the Great
Architecture
Status Active
Functional status Parish church
Heritage designation Grade 1
Completed 15th century
Administration
Parish Winscombe and Sandford
Archdeaconry Archdeaconry of Bath
Diocese Diocese of Bath and Wells
Clergy
Priest in charge The Revd Lydia Avery

The Church of St James in Winscombe, Somerset, England, has 12th- or 13th-century origins but the present building dates from the 15th century. It is a Grade I listed building.[1]

There are no records remaining of the Norman church on the site, but there evidence of the building of the church which was consecrated by Bishop Jocelin on 26 August 1236. The 4 stage 100 feet (30.5 m) tower was added around 1435,[2] by Bishop John Harewell, and at the same time stained glass was added.[3]

The church was restored and a new chancel added in 1863.[1] The rebuilding of the chancel was undertaken by William Burges.[4] He was commissioned by the Reverend John Augustus Yatman, whose brother had been Burges's main client for painted furniture.[4] Burges and his team, including Fred Weekes and Gualbert Saunders, also undertook the design of three stained glass lancet windows in the chancel, in memory of Yatman's mother.[4] Pevsner appreciated their quality, "much better aesthetically is the glass in the chancel,"[5] but erroneously attributes them as "one of the best examples of Morris glass in existence and quite unrecorded."[5]

The bells of St James have long called people to worship, the original bells being cast in 1773 by local founders, the Bilbie family.[6] Two newer bells were added in 1903 by Taylors Founders. The eight bells are in the key of E flat and the tenor weighs 18-1-8 18 hundredweight, 1 quarter of a hundredweight and 8 lb (930 kg). St James holds regular services on Sundays, with bell ringing being provided for both the morning service and evensong.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 "Church of St James". Images of England. English Heritage. Retrieved 2008-12-16.
  2. Poyntz Wright, Peter (1981). The Parish Church Towers of Somerset, Their construction, craftsmanship and chronology 1350 - 1550. Avebury Publishing Company. ISBN 0-86127-502-0.
  3. Robinson, W.J. (1916). West Country Churches IV. Bristol Times and Mirror Ltd. pp. 154–158.
  4. 1 2 3 Crook 1981a, p. 225
  5. 1 2 Pevsner, p. 341
  6. Moore, J. Rice, R. and Hucker, E. (1995). Bilbie and the Chew Valley clockmakers: the story of the renowned family of Somerset bellfounder-clockmakers. The authors. ISBN 0-9526702-0-8.

References

External links

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