St Maddern's Church, Madron
St Maddern's Church, Madron | |
---|---|
50°7′53.81″N 5°33′53.59″W / 50.1316139°N 5.5648861°WCoordinates: 50°7′53.81″N 5°33′53.59″W / 50.1316139°N 5.5648861°W | |
Location | Madron |
Country | England |
Denomination | Church of England |
Churchmanship | Broad Church |
History | |
Dedication | St Maddern |
Consecrated | 1336 |
Architecture | |
Heritage designation | Grade I listed |
Administration | |
Parish | Madron |
Deanery | Penwith |
Archdeaconry | Cornwall |
Diocese | Truro |
Province | Canterbury |
St Maddern's Church is the parish church of Madron, Cornwall, near Penzance.[1] The church was in early times the mother church of Morvah and Penzance.
Architecture
The church is a large building of the 15th century; however it retains some 14th century work in the chancel. The font bowl (disused) is said to be Norman and there are a few old bench ends.[2]
History
Early history In the 12th century the church and estate of Landithy (no doubt formerly a Celtic monastery) were given by one of the Pomeroys to the Knights Hospitallers. A vicarage was established in 1278.[3]
The consecration of Madron Church was performed by the Bishop of Exeter who travelled from Exeter with two archdeacons, the chancellor of the cathedral and the Lord Prior of the Knights of St. John in London; with them also travelled an entourage of clergymen, knights, grooms and servants. This was not a specific journey to Madron by the Bishop, he had 14 other churches to consecrate on that summer tour in 1336.[4] as well as a quiet word with some rebellious parishioners in St Buryan. (The dedication is sometimes given as a male saint, Madernus.)
Early Tudor period The church was not finished until 1500 by which time the vicar Benedict Tregos was probably worrying about having backed Perkin Warbeck when he landed at Sennen 1499 proclaiming himself Richard IV. Warbeck came to a traitor's end and Tregos avoided the wrath of Henry VII and the charge of treason by paying for the north aisle himself, decorating the church in Tudor roses[5] and placing the king’s arms on expensive panelling. He succeeded and died peacefully many years later. The church contains the brass of John Clies and family, 1623.
Restoration A list of the cost of repairing pews in 1837 illustrates the point that persons of substance in the parish had their own personal pews while one must assume that the general populace stood at the rear. By 1855 it was decided "that it is most desirable that an effort be made to restore Madron Church to a condition worthy of the sacred purpose for which it was built." To do this all the old pews were removed and uniform pews set in their place. Heating and lighting were added and the chancel re-floored. By 1889 the church emerged looking much as it does today.
Churchyard
By 1820, the circular acre around the church had filled with the remains of deceased parishioners and it was decided that the churchyard would need to be extended. The work that this involved was extensive and involved extending to the north which in turn involved demolishing a cottage and compensating the leaseholder, diverting the stream from Madron Well and raising the ground level 6 feet to meet the general level. It was not until 1828 that this work was completed and the new burial ground consecrated by the Bishop of Exeter. The total cost of this was £369 11s 6d. Ironically the churchyard was full again by 1878 and the church side of Madron cemetery consecrated the following year by Edward White Benson, the Bishop of the new diocese of Truro. The architect Edmund Sedding is buried here.[6]
Church bells
The set of bells that punctuate life around the church, were first mounted in the church tower in the early 18th century. At that time there were only three bells, however, in 1761 the village decided to sell these three bells and invest in a new peal of five bells. These were ordered from the Bayley foundry in Bridgwater. The third bell caused much trouble and was sent back to be re-cast. It still wasn’t right and was re-cast again in Helston, and yet again in Loughborough. A further two others were still unsatisfactory and were re-cast at Hayle Foundry in 1823. This situation prevailed until 1898 when it was decided that they needed renovation. By happenstance this coincided with Queen Victoria’s diamond jubilee and a sixth bell, a treble was added. The seventh and eighth bells were added in 1950 and the entire peal re-dedicated on 3 March 1951. The peal that rings out over Madron today is:
weight | inscription | founded | |
---|---|---|---|
(cwts, qtrs, lbs) | |||
1 | 3-2-19 = 186kg | “In memory of John Kemp White, 1867-1947, Choirmaster and organist. His children’s gift” | 1950 |
2 | 4-0-0 = 203kg | “The gift of the Truro Diocesan Guild of Ringers. In memory of John Symons MRCS.” | 1950 |
3 | 4-0-5 = 205kg | “God save our Queen and church. William Borlase Tremenheere, vicar.” | 1898 |
4 | 4-2-23 = 239kg | “Number 3” | 1761 |
5 | 4-2-27 = 241kg | "Rev. Michael Nowell Peters (vicar), P. Kempe (churchwarden)." | Recast Loughborough 1842 |
6 | 4-3-3 = 243kg | “Rev. W. Tremenheere (vicar), Jas. Glasson (churchwarden).” | Re-cast Hayle 1823 |
7 | 6-3-15 = 350kg | “Number 2.” | Re-cast Hayle 1823 |
8 | 9-2-8 =486kg | “Walter Borlase (vicar), Thos. Jenkin (churchwarden).” | 1761 |
Organ
The church contains a 2 manual pipe organ by Hele and Co. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.[7]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Category:St Madernus' church, Madron. |
- ↑ Peter Beacham; Nikolaus Pevsner (2014). Cornwall. Yale University Press. pp. 334–35. ISBN 978-0-300-12668-6.
- ↑ Cornish Church Guide Truro: Blackford, 1925; p. 152
- ↑ Cornish Church Guide Truro: Blackford, 1925; p. 151
- ↑ Wladyslaw Somerville Lach-Szyrma A Short History of Penzance, S. Michael's Mount, S. Ives, and the Land's End District. Truro: Lake and Lake, 1878. p. 192.
- ↑ John Van der Kiste. The Little Book of Cornwall. The History Press. 2013
- ↑ The Cornish Church Guide. Oscar Blackford. 1925.
- ↑ "NPOR K00315". National Pipe Organ Register. British Institute of Organ Studies. Retrieved 18 February 2015.