Church of All Saints, Houghton Regis
The Parish Church of All Saints, Houghton Regis | |
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51°54′18″N 0°31′16″W / 51.9049°N 0.5211°W | |
Location | Houghton Regis, Bedfordshire |
Country | England |
Denomination | Church of England |
Churchmanship | Anglo-Catholic |
Website | AllSaintsHR.co.uk |
History | |
Status | Parish church |
Relics held | Saint Aloysius Gonzaga, Saint Anselm of Canterbury, Saint Dominic, Saint Edmund the Martyr, Saint Pope Gregory I, Saint Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor, Saint Scholastica, Saint Stephen |
Associated people | Henry Clutton (Architect, 1856-1857), Somers Clarke (Architect, 1867-1880), Gary Cooper (Baptised here in 1911) |
Architecture | |
Style | Perpendicular Gothic |
Administration | |
Province | Canterbury |
Diocese | Diocese of St Albans |
Episcopal area | Bedford |
Archdeaconry | Bedford |
Deanery | Dunstable |
Benefice | Houghton Regis |
Clergy | |
Priest in charge | Fr Diego Galanzino MA |
Laity | |
Organist(s) | Nigel Steele |
Treasurer | Kirsty Lewis-Hull |
Churchwarden(s) | Steve Burnage, Chris Slough |
Parish administrator | Janet Steele |
Sacristan | David Steele |
The Church of All Saints, Houghton Regis, Bedfordshire, is a medieval Grade I listed building. Characterised by flint and clunch checker work on the exterior, the church dates predominantly from the 13th and 14th centuries, with 15th century additions. All Saints' serves as the Parish Church for Houghton Regis, the parish including the town, parts of North Dunstable, Bidwell West, Thorn, and Linmere, as well as the hamlet of Sewell.[1]
Brief History
[edit]The religious use of the site predates the present building and is claimed to go back one thousand years to Saxon times.[2] During the reign of Edward the Confessor (1042 -1066) Houghton Regis was a royal manor.[3] A pre-Conquest church located on the site of the current Parish Church was one of very few in Bedfordshire to be mentioned in Domesday Book (AD 1086),[4] which records that it was held by William the Chamberlain, who also held St Mary's Church, Luton. Domesday also recorded the church's finances. Its financial endowment, half a hide, was valued at 12s. In 1291 the church's value (mostly from its glebe land) was recorded at £16 13s. 4d.[5]
King Henry I gave Houghton Regis to Earl Robert of Gloucester, and subsequently his son William granted it to the monks of St Albans Abbey in 1153.[6] However, only the font remains today from that church. All Saints’ was reconstructed in later centuries, probably before the leadership of Abbot John Moore of St Albans, who ordered the Tithe Barn adjacent to the churchyard to be constructed between 1396 and 1401.[3]
Upon the Dissolution of the monasteries the vicarage was listed as worth £11 13s. 4d. and the rectory (including parish land) at £41.[5]
The church held six registers antedating 1813: "(1) all entries 1538 to 1678; (2) the same 1704 to 1767, marriages to 1754; (3) marriages 1754 to 1795; (4) baptisms and burials 1768 to 1807; (5) marriages 1795 to 1807; (6) marriages 1807 to 1812."[5] The actor Gary Cooper and his brother Arthur were baptised and confirmed at All Saints' on 3 December 1911.[7] These records are now in the care of Bedfordshire Archives.
The churchyard was closed to new burials in the 1980s.[8]
In 2011, the Mayor, Cllr Robin Hines, unveiled a new Town Sign for Houghton Regis. It was financed by specific grant funding and was intended to “add a sense of place and community to the town.” The sign and crest feature historic and more modern elements including All Saints Church.[2]
In 2019 a major restoration of the outer fabric ensures that All Saints' is taken out of the Heritage At Risk Register.
The church tradition of All Saints’ is rooted in the catholic heritage of the Church of England (sometimes called Anglo-Catholic). The Parish Mass, every Sunday at 10:30am, is the main weekly act of worship.[9]
Architecture and Notable Features
[edit]Charles O'Brien and Nikolaus Pevsner, in the 2014 revised edition of Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire and Peterborough in the Pevsner Buildings of England series, describe All Saints as "a stately church".[10]
The style of the building is mainly Perpendicular (or Rectilinear) Gothic, with some early Curvilinear elements such as the east window in the south aisle.[11] It consists of a chancel, a nave of five bays and clerestory, side aisles, south porch, and tower.
On the outside All Saints’ is characterized by its flint and Totternhoe stone checker work, the battlements, and the stone grotesques which adorn the walls. Battlements were added to the chancel in the 19th century whilst it was being extensively renovated by George Somers Clarke.[11] The cluch, a relatively hard chalk from the Chiltern Hills,[11] used here has been sourced locally, since the construction of the church, for most restoration works. For example, in the 2019 restoration of the outer fabric was provided by H.G. Clarke and Son of Totternhoe.
Tower
[edit]The embattled western tower with an octagonal turret at the south-west angle was remodelled and raised to 70 ft[11] in the 15th century. The cross above the tower is a later addition, to which a weathercock was then added in 1750 that fell during a storm in the 19th century. The tower also houses six bells, a spacious ringing chamber, and a beautiful Victorian stained glass window, flanked by medieval canopied niches.[11]
The specifications of the bells are as follows: the treble (John Briant, Hertford, 1815); Second (John Briant, 1816); Third (Newcombe, 1616, recast 1899 by Taylor); Fourth (John Briant, Hertford, 1811); Fifth (John Dier, 1580, recast 1899 by Taylor); and the tenor (Anthony Chandler, 1673).[5]
Norman Baptismal Font
[edit]The circular Norman font of Totternhoe stone is the oldest known part of the church,[12] having been constructed well before the present building was even begun. The font is one of a number of fonts known collectively as the 'Aylesbury Group' after a particularly fine example in the parish church at Aylesbury. It is made of Totternhoe stone, and its elaborate carvings and cable moulding are particularly good.[13] The lid is made out of reclaimed timber from Houghton Hall.[1] Sir Stephen Glynne, writing before 1840, described it in his Church Notes, as "remarkably fine" and "very richly sculptured throughout".[11]
Sewell Tomb and South Aisle Chantry
[edit]In the south aisle wall is a tomb with the effigy of a knight at with a lion at his feet. This is reputedly the tomb of John de Sewell who accompanied the Black Prince to Aquitaine in 1366 in the retinue of Hugh, Earl of Stafford. It is carved with quatrefoils framing heraldic shields displaying a chevron and three butterflies or stylised bees— the Sewell Arms.[12] Under the tomb are carvings representing the same coat of arms. A medieval piscina and decorated ceiling above the east end of the aisle indicate that an altar stood nearby. And indeed, this area of the church may have been a chantry chapel for John de Sewell and his family.[1]
Nave Ceiling
[edit]The nave ceiling dates to latter part of the 14th century (or the beginning of the 15th); it is a simple but elegant example of Rectilinear gothic architecture.[11] It is supported by stone corbels in the shape of animals and mythical creatures, and it is decorated with carved oak figures of monks bearing shields or coat of arms. These figures are visible reminders of the connection between All Saints’ and the St Albans’ Abbey.[1] To the east end of the nave, the ceiling is more elaborately decorated, with bosses and vine leaf motifs, then the rest of the ceiling, providing a “canopy of honour” for the Cross (or Rood), and marking the original position of the Rood Screen.[1]
Chancel
[edit]The chancel, Rectilinear in style, was partly rebuilt in the 19th century, under the direction of Somers Clarke, after many decades of neglect. At that time the chancel arch was reopened.[11] The restoration also preserved many other original features, such as the medieval wall safes. The altar rail, made from the reclaimed staircase banister of Houghton Hall, divides the chancel in two areas: choir and sanctuary.[1]
The floor is mostly paved with the stone monuments to members of the Brandreth family, save for the chequered marble flooring around the altar and, most notably, two brasses. These bear the effigy of two priests connected to All Saints'; the larger one is of William Walley, 15th century vicar of All Saints', the smaller of John Walley (a relative, of William Walley).[11]
High Altar Triptych
[edit]The high altar triptych was gifted to All Saints’ in memory of Fr Colin Gay SSC, Honorary Assistant Priest from 2002 to 2015 and dedicated by the Rt Revd Norman Banks, Bishop of Richborough, on 26 June 2023.
The central panel measures 210 cm by 131 cm, and the side panels 105 cm by 131 cm. It can be closed during Lent and Passiontide remaining at 210 cm in width. It depicts Christ in glory with the Blessed Virgin Mary and St John the Evangelist in the central panel, St George the Martyr and St John the Baptist in the right section, St Wilfrid and St Theodore of Amasea in the left panel. The piece was painted by Nechita Laurentiu, a Romanian icon writer, using gold leaf. The artist has worked for the Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church, and he has a number of pieces displayed in UK church (e.g. the “Frank Weston altar” at St Matthew's Willesden). The triptych was originally commissioned in 2007 for Preston Minster by the vicar, Fr Timothy Lipscomb, and the PCC. It was placed above the High Altar, encased between the back riddel posts. However, it was sold off in 2020 to a church furniture dealer, where it was purchased by a parishioner of All Saints'.[1]
Stained Glass
[edit]Above the vicinity of the Sewell tomb, in the Lady Chapel, and in the tower there are rather good examples of Victorian stained glass by Thomas Baillie. The west end window was unveiled in 1891 to commemorate the Revd Hugh Blagg Smyth, and it depicts the Resurrection of Jesus, the Baptism of the Lord, and the Institution of the Eucharist.[1] The two windows in the Lady chapel commemorate Smyth's daughter Minna and his wife, dating from 1864.[11] The one above the Sewell tomb commemorates George Marshall, churchwarden.
Pipe Organ
[edit]The organ is two manual and pedal instrument, dates from approximately 1880 and 1914. It was originally believed to have been built by Nicholson and Lord of Walsall. However, in 2021 during cleaning and refurbishment works by Pipe Organ Services it was discovered that the organ was originally built by C. M. Walker of London and only later rebuilt by Nicholson and Lord of Walsall. Several additional stops (including the full-length Conacher trumpet) were installed by Kenneth Breedon of Bletchley in 1992.[1]
Vicars, Parish Priests, and Patrons of All Saints'
[edit]The patronage of the parish (or advowson), meaning the right to present or put forward a person to be inducted as vicar, was exercised by the person or institution owning church land. St Albans Abbey was granted the right when it received All Saints' land in 1153. After the Dissolution, English monarchs, the Brandreth family, the Dukes of Bedford, and other individuals exercised this right over the centuries. The advowson currently rests with the Board of Patronage of the Diocese of St Albans.[14]
Both the lists of Priests, Chaplains (Cappellani), and Vicars of Houghton Regis preserved at All Saints’ Parish Church and Bedfordshire Archives begin in 1226. The names of those who ministered in the parish before this time are not known. The following list is the one preserved at the county archives.
Date | Parish Priest | Patron | Notes | |
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1 | 1226 | Stephen de Herdewicke | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | |
2 | 1241 | Roger | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on resignation of Stephen de Herdewicke |
3 | 1265, 27 October | Walter de Cameseya | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on death of Roger |
4 | John de Dunstaple (Dunstable) | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | ||
5 | 1272, 3 May | William de Labho | Michael Picot and Johan his wife by licence from King Edward I | on death of John de Dunstaple |
6 | 1283 | Walter de Kemesey | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | |
7 | 1291, 16 June | Simon de Wendover | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | |
8 | Adam de Sewell | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | ||
9 | 1336, 23 March | William de Eyton | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on resignation of Adam de Sewell |
10 | 1337, 27 June | Robert de Morton | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on resignation of William de Eyton |
11 | John Walleys | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | Buried in the chancel alongside William Walley (a relative of his). Commemorative brass also in the chancel. | |
12 | 1412, 18 April | John Buneker | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on death of John Waleys |
13 | 1448, 27 July | Thomas Copto (or Copton) | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on death of John Buneker |
14 | 1458, 18 June | Robert Russelle | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on resignation of Thomas Copto, from Rectory of Hardwardstoke, Diocese of London |
15 | 1459, 2 March | Robert Tomlynson | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on death of Robert Russelle |
16 | 1481, 6 November | Thomas Standyssh, MA | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on death of Robert Tomlynson |
17 | 1493, 20 October | William Walley | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on death of Thomas Standyssh;
Buried in the chancel along with John Walley (a relative of his). Commemorative brass also in the chancel. |
18 | 1506, 21 June | Thomas Rither, BA | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | on death of William Walley |
19 | 1526 and 1534 | William Fossey | Abbot & Convent of St Albans | recorded as vicar at two dates; registered as brother of Guild of Holy Trinity, Luton |
20 | 1554, 14 November | John Cowper | John Tymse, yeoman | on death of last vicar
The advowson is passed to Tymse from the "Abbot and Convent of Monastery of St Albans". |
21 | 1557, 14 November | Maurice Penyall | Queen Mary I and King Philip II of Spain | on death of John Cowper.
This entry is missing from the list preserved at All Saints' Parish Church. Penyall is recorded also in the list of vicars of Caddington, 14 March 1561. The advowson rests now with the Monarch. |
22 | 1563, 24 March | George Johnson | Queen Elizabeth I | presented on petition of Mr Brocket |
23 | 1567, 29 August | George Mydelton | Queen Elizabeth I | presented on petition of Bishop Nicholas Bullingham, Bishop of Lincoln |
24 | 1588, 4 May | John Fabian, MA | Queen Elizabeth I | on death of George Mydelton |
25 | 1588, 14 November | Thomas Butler | Queen Elizabeth I | on death of John Fabian |
26 | 1588, 11 December | Roger Rogers | Queen Elizabeth I | on death of Thomas Butler, instituted 17 December 1588 |
27 | 1607, 23 June | Thomas Tompkins, MA | Lord Keeper of Great Seal - Thomas Egerton, 1st Viscount Brackley | on recommendation of Sir Richard Spencer;
married Phoebe Eames on 1 Aug 1607 |
28 | 1659, 27 April | Richard Scott | Henry Brandreth of London, merchant | Brandreth acquires the advowson from John Egerton, 1st Earl of Bridgewater in 1653 |
29 | John Littlejohn | Henry Brandreth of London | ordained priest by Thomas Morton, Bishop of Durham, 23 October 1658.
Littlejohn is recorded at Salford (Bedfordshire) in 1690.[15] | |
30 | 1660, 18 September | Andrew Cater | Henry Brandreth of London | on resignation of Littlejohn |
31 | 1661, 17 August | James Paddon | Henry Brandreth of London | buried 25 Apr 1704 |
32 | 1704, 26 September | Valentine Cressy, BA | Nehemiah Brandreth | on death of James Paddon; buried 27 Aug 1728 |
33 | 1728, 16 September | Jacobus Bradshaw | Henry Brandreth (2nd) | on death of Valentine Cressey; buried 24 Dec 1738 |
34 | 1739, 9 May | John Wilkinson, STB | on death of James Bradshaw; also vicar of Flitwick
Around 1750 Henry Brandreth (3rd) (great-grandson of the Henry "of London") sells the estate to the Duke of Bedford.[16] The advowson is passed to the Duke. | |
35 | 1759, 31 May | Potts Davies, BA | John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford | on death of John Wilkinson |
36 | 1768, 13 May | Edmund Wodley, BA | John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford | |
37 | 1808, 20 August | Thomas Cave, MA | John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford | |
38 | 1819, 18 February | John Donne | John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford | on death of Thomas Cave.
Donne is buired at the east end of All Saints' churchyard. |
39 | 1846, 1 September | William Wilson | Francis Russell, 7th Duke of Bedford | on death of John Donne |
40 | 1856, 16 January | Hugh Blagg Smyth, MA | Francis Russell, 7th Duke of Bedford | |
41 | 1880 | Daniel Pring Alford, MA | Henry Chernocke Gibbs Brandreth | Manor lands of Houghton Regis are reacquired by the Brandreth family, along with the advowson.[16] |
42 | 1883 | William Faux Lovell, MA | Henry Chernocke Gibbs Brandreth | |
43 | 1899, March | William Wedge, BA | Henry Chernocke Gibbs Brandreth | |
44 | 1912, July | Frederick Charles Mahony, MA | Evelyn Lawton, widow of H.C. Gibbs Brandreth | |
45 | 1928, February | Charles Henry Fletcher | S.L. Elbourne | |
46 | 1952, July | Leslie Blackburn, BA | Prebendary W. F. Buttle | |
47 | 1975 | Geoffrey Martin Neal, AKC | Diocesan Board of Patronage (Diocese of St Albans) | |
48 | 1996 | Jonathan Francis Redvers-Harris, LLM | Diocesan Board of Patronage (Diocese of St Albans) | on resignation of Geoffrey Neal |
49 | 2003 | Brian Clifford Wheelhouse SSC, BTh | Diocesan Board of Patronage (Diocese of St Albans) | on resignation of Jonathan Redvers-Harris |
50 | 2015, 1 June | Diego Galanzino, MA | Diocesan Board of Patronage (Diocese of St Albans) | Priest-in-charge, on resignation of Brian Wheelhouse |
Gallery
[edit]-
Nave roof
-
Monument to Sir John Sewell
-
Carved Lion
-
Brass memorial to Sir William Walley
-
Detail of the Norman font
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Notes
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Parish of All Saints Houghton Regis". 20 April 2024.
- ^ a b "The Town Sign Houghton Crest Unveiled". Houghton Regis Town Council. Archived from the original on 29 March 2022. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
There was a church on this site in Saxon times, mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086. The church has a Norman font from the original building, still in use. All Saints was largely rebuilt in the 14th/15th Century, and the tower was added in the 15th century. The tower houses six bells of different dates from 1580 to 1899.
- ^ a b King, Sue (2011). Memories of Houghton Regis (1st ed.). Book Castle Publishing. pp. 1–3. ISBN 978-1-906632-12-0.
- ^ "Houghton Regis General History: A short history of Houghton Regis". Virtual Library. Archived from the original on 1 November 2020. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Parishes: Houghton Regis". A History of the County of Bedford. Vol. 3. London: Victoria County History. 1912. pp. 389–394. Archived from the original on 29 March 2022. Retrieved 29 March 2022 – via British History Online.
- ^ "All Saints, Houghton Regis". Church of All Saints, Houghton Regis. Archived from the original on 14 April 2022. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
- ^ "Gary Cooper Visits Dunstable". Dunstable Borough Gazette. 30 March 1932.
- ^ "All Saints Churchyard". Houghton Regis Town Council. 2020. Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
All Saints Churchyard has been officially closed, this means that no further internments in new plots are permitted, and responsibility of its upkeep and maintenance has been passed to Houghton Regis Town Council.
- ^ "Worship at All Saints'". ALL SAINTS' HOUGHTON REGIS. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
- ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus (2014). Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire and Peterborough. The Buildings of England. Charles O'Brien ed. New Haven, USA and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-20821-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Pickford, Chris (1998). Bedfordshire Churches in the Nineteenth Century - Part II, Parishes H to R (1st ed.). The Bedfordshire Historical Record Society. pp. 376–384. ISBN 0-85155-060-6.
- ^ a b "Houghton Regis – All Saints". Bedfordshire Parish Churches. Archived from the original on 16 May 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
- ^ Archæological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland (1848). The ecclesiastical and architectural topography of England. Bedfordshire (Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire, Oxfordshire, Suffolk). United Kingdom: n.p. p. 49. Archived from the original on 30 April 2022. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
- ^ "HOUGHTON REGIS (All Saints), Vicars". Bedfordshire Archives Service Catalogue. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
- ^ "List of Salford Vicars". bedsarchives.bedford.gov.uk. 22 June 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2024.
- ^ a b Lovering, Pat (1986). Royal Houghton (1st ed.). The Book Castle. p. 92. ISBN 0950977314.
Bibliography
[edit]- This article includes text incorporated from E.R. Kelly's (1885) "Kelly's directory of Bedfordshire, Hunts and Northamptonshire.", p. 66, a publication now in the public domain.
- Archæological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland (1848). The ecclesiastical and architectural topography of England. Bedfordshire (Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire, Oxfordshire, Suffolk). United Kingdom: n.p. p. 49.
- Behrens, James (2008). Practical Church Management: A Guide for Every Parish (Paperback). Gracewing, Limited. p. 15. ISBN 9780852446027.
- Kelly, E.R. (1885). Kelly's directory of Bedfordshire, Hunts and Northamptonshire. London: Kelly and Company. p. 66.
- Meyers, Jeffrey (1998). Gary Cooper: American Hero. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 978-0-688-15494-3.
- O'Brien, Charles; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2014). Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire and Peterborough. The Buildings of England. New Haven, US and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-20821-4.
- "Parishes: Houghton Regis". A History of the County of Bedford. Vol. 3. London: Victoria County History. 1912. pp. 389–394 – via British History Online.
Further reading
[edit]- Buckingham. Francis W. (1937) Church of All Saints Houghton Regis: A Brief Descriptive and Historical Account
External links
[edit]- Official website
- Houghton Regis Bedfordshire Family History Guide 27 March 2022.