St Mary's Church, Ottery St Mary

St Mary’s Church, Ottery St Mary

St Mary’s Church from the south east
Coordinates: 50°45′11.04″N 3°16′44.03″W / 50.7530667°N 3.2788972°W / 50.7530667; -3.2788972
Location Ottery St Mary
Country England
Denomination Church of England
Previous denomination Roman Catholic
Churchmanship Broad Church
Website otterystmary.org.uk
History
Dedication St Mary the Virgin
Consecrated 1260
Architecture
Heritage designation Grade I listed[1]
Specifications
Length 163 feet (50 m)
Height 71 feet (22 m)
Administration
Parish Ottery St Mary
Deanery Ottery
Archdeaconry Exeter
Diocese Diocese of Exeter
Province Province of Canterbury
Clergy
Rector Revd Stephen Weston

St Mary’s Church, Ottery St Mary is a Grade I listed[1] parish church in the Church of England in Ottery St Mary, Devon.

History

The parish church of St Mary's has been referred to as "a miniature Exeter Cathedral". Like the cathedral it is cruciform in plan, with transepts formed by towers[2]

Nikolaus Pevsner described the building as “lying large and low like a tired beast”. It is 163 feet long, and the towers are 71 feet high. It was consecrated in 1260, at which time the manor and patronage of the church belonged to Rouen Cathedral, as it had from before the Norman invasion. Pevsner assumed that the tower-transepts and the outer walls of the chancel date back to 1260, and that the towers were built in imitation of those at Exeter.[3]

St Mary's College

In 1335 John Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter, bought the manor and advowson from Rouen and on 22 January 1338 established a collegiate foundation with forty members. He rebuilt much of the church, and the present nave, chancel, aisles and Lady chapel date from this time. The nave is of five bays, and the chancel, unusually long in proportion, is of six, with vestry chapels to north and south.[2][3]

The roof

The church is noted for its painted roof and early sixteenth-century fan vaulted aisle, the Dorset Aisle, designed and commissioned by Cecily Bonville, 7th Baroness Harington, whose first husband was Thomas Grey, 1st Marquess of Dorset. The church has ten misericords dating from the building of the church in 1350, five showing the arms of Bishop John de Grandisson. The church interior also has two medieval carved stone green men. Other interesting features include the tombs of Otho de Grandisson and his wife, the altar screen, sedilia, and a wooden eagle given by Bishop Grandisson.[4]

The college was dissolved on 24 December 1545.

Parish church

The building was closed on 21 May 1849[5] for a full restoration by the architect William Butterfield. His alterations included lowering the floor level of the transepts, crossing and western part of the chancel to that of the nave, making the east end, designed for the needs of the collegiate foundation, more suitable for parochial use.[2][3] All of the galleries were removed, except for that in the south transept which was retained for the organ. The pews were removed and substituted with open seating. The altar area was paved with encaustic tiles. The walls were scraped of plaster and cleaned.[6] The church reopened on 22 May 1850.[7] The restoration was achieved by voluntary donation, including one of £1,200 from Mr. Justice Coleridge.

New choir stalls were dedicated in 1908.[8] They were designed by John Duke Coleridge and paid for by Miss Mary Dickinson in memory of her father, the late Rev. Frederick Binley Dickinson.

The ancient altar screen had three vacant niches filled with sculptured scenes in 1934.[9] The sculptural work was done in Beer stone, by Herbert Read, sculptor of Exeter, funded by Mrs Winstanley in memory of her husband, Harold WInstanley.

There ia a small stone plaque commemorating the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge in the south churchyard wall. Ottery St Mary parish registers are held in the Devon Record Office and begin in 1601.

On 26 September 2015, St Mary's was the location of the first ordination service in the Church of England to be led by a woman: Sarah Mullally, Bishop of Crediton, ordained two deacons as priests.[10]

List of vicars

  • 1154 William
  • 1191 Peter the Clerk (resigned)
  • 1191 Roger the Chaplain
  • 1283 John de Wolfrington
  • 1297 John de Middleton
  • 1310 Gulfridus
  • 1310 John de Thormerton
  • 1335 Oliver de Fayrsy

Wardens of St Mary's college

  • 1338 Richard de Gonisale
  • 1349 Henry Bonet
  • 1350 Andrew Attemore
  • 1379 John Coterell
  • 1397 William Slade
  • 1399 John Bokeland
  • 1412 John Tyrel
  • 1415 John Sarger
  • 1446 John Hancock
  • 1490 Thomas Cornyssh
  • 1511 Thomas Mitchell
  • 1513 Thomas Chard
  • 1518 Walter Dudman
  • 1525 Oliver Smythe
  • 1544 John Fyssher

Vicars of the parish church

  • 1550 John Bagster
  • 1580 Ralph Manwayringe
  • 1590 Nicholas Forward
  • 1626 John Forward
  • 1661 Melchisedeck Alford
  • 1696 Thomas Gatchell
  • 1713 Hugh Lewes
  • ???? Richard Jenkinson
  • 1722 Ralph Farthing
  • 1744 Richard Holme
  • 1760 John Coleridge
  • 1781 Fulwood Smerdon
  • 1794 George Smith
  • 1841 Sidney William Cornish
  • 1874 William Henry Metcalfe
  • 1890 Maitland Kelly
  • 1900 William Emmanuel Pryke
  • 1908 John William Metcalfe
  • 1920 Leonard Bristow Stallard
  • 1938 Bernard Cecil Jackson
  • 1950 David Rufus Price
  • 1978 Peter John McGee
  • 1996 Simon George Franklin

Astronomical clock

Astronomical Clock

The south transept (bell tower) houses the Ottery St Mary astronomical clock, one of the oldest surviving mechanical clocks in the country. It is commonly attributed to Bishop John de Grandisson, who was Bishop of Exeter (1327–69) and adheres to Ptolemaic cosmology with the Earth at the centre of the solar system.[11]

The clock was restored to working condition in 1907.[12]

Organ

The church has had organs since at least the 14th century, as they are mentioned in Bishop Grandisson’s statues for the foundation of the collegiate church. By the time the college was dissolved in 1545, there were three organs, but whatever organs survived into the 17th century were destroyed in 1645 during the English Civil War.

Around 1828, Flight and Robson provided a new organ in the west gallery. This was moved to the south tower in 1849. Hele & Co carried out work in 1878 and again in 1901. After further work in 1934, Eustace and Alldridge from Exeter enlarged the organ by incorporating pipework by Willis and William Hill, and the organ was rebuilt again in 1990 by Michael Farley. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.[13]

Parish status

The church is in a joint parish with

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Mary, Ottery St Mary.
  1. 1 2 Historic England. "Church of St Mary  (Grade I) (1212599)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 Cornish, Sidney W (1869). Short Notes on the Church and Parish of Ottery St Mary, Devon.
  3. 1 2 3 Pevsner, Nikolaus (1952). South Devon. The Buildings of England. Harmondsworth: Penguin. pp. 219–23.
  4. Betjeman, John, ed. (1968). Collins Pocket Guide to English Parish Churches; the South. London: Collins. pp. 164–65.
  5. "Ottery St Mary". Exeter and Plymouth Gazette (Exeter). 30 March 1850. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  6. "Ottery St Mary. Re-opening of Ottery Church. The voluntary principle triumphant". Western Times (Exeter). 18 May 1850. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  7. "Restoration of the Parish Church of Ottery St Mary". Exeter and Plymouth Gazette (Exeter). 25 May 1850. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  8. "Dedication of New Choir Stalls". Exeter and Plymouth Gazette (Exeter). 22 June 1908. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  9. "Ottery St Mary Church. Dedication of New Work on Altar Screen". Exeter and Plymouth Gazette (Exeter). 14 September 1934. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  10. "Woman bishop leads first Church of England ordination service". BBC News. 27 September 2015. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  11. Whitham, J. A. The Church of St Mary of Ottery in the County of Devon: a short history and guide.
  12. "Curious astronomical clock in Ottery St Mary church Church". Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser (Manchester). 29 March 1907. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  13. "NPOR E01696". National Pipe Organ Register. British Institute of Organ Studies.
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