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St Peter, Diddlebury, Shopshire

In the 1970s, when I used to stay at my Grandparent's house when my Mum and Dad went disco dancing, or whatever they called it before disco dancing was a thing, there was a TV series they used to watch called "How Green was my Valley". I remember little of it, except Granddad saying the valley was go green because of all the rain.

 

So, on Sunday, the rain was due to fall in the valleys, the hills and all else between.

 

What to do when we had come away without coats and umbrella?

 

Churchcrawling.

 

And thanks to the Church Conservation Trust, you ban fairly reply on those under their care to be open. I made a list of their churches in Shropshire, and after breakfast we set off for the first one, passing through the village of Knockin.

 

I kid ye not.

 

Where the village shop is called, of course, The Knockin Shop.

 

I also kid ye not.

 

Rain fell, roads were nearly flooded, so we splish-splashed our way across the county, down valley and up hills until we came to the entrance of an estate.

 

Here be a church.

 

Not sure if we could drive to it, I got out and walked, getting damp as the rain fell through the trees.

 

But the church was there, and open, if poorly lit inside. And I was able to get shots before walking up the hill to the car.

 

Two more churches tried, but they were locked and no keyholder about. So onto Wroxter, where a large and imposing church towered over the road. And to get there we passed through a former Roman settlement from which the modern town too its name. Most impressive was a reconstruction of a villa.

 

But we did not stop.

 

The church was open, light and airy even on a gloomy and wet day. I got loads of shots, especially of the fine tombs.

 

The final church was one not under the CCC, but one I had seen shots of online earlier in the week.

 

It took half an hour to drive to Diddlebury.

 

I kid ye not. Again.

 

And up the hill was the church, with a huge squat Saxon, or early Norman tower, and insode both the north and west walls were Saxon, with the north wall being made of dressed stone laid in a herringbone style.

 

It is an incredible survivor, and glad that I made the effort to come, as the church is amazing.

 

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St. Peter’s church, known by this dedication since at least 1322, is one of four churches in Shropshire with substantial Anglo-Saxon remains. The original building consisted of a nave with a west tower which was subsequently rebuilt in Norman times. The north wall, with its characteristic small double-splayed window and blocked door is the most visible surviving feature and dates from the eleventh century. The combination of dressed square ashlar masonry on the outside with herringbone work on the interior is most unusual, and has been the subject of much academic controversy.

Other Anglo-Saxon work includes some herringbone work in the North West corner, and fragments of sculpture, one of which predates the building by a century.

 

The chancel was added in the twelfth century, and some of the original windows survive. The tower was rebuilt in Norman times, and the later buttresses show that the structure had been unstable from an early date. The large blocked western arch is unusual, and its original purpose is unclear. The tower also features animal heads on the west face, and two sheila-na-gigs (obscene female figures) on the south side.

 

The south aisle originally dated from the fourteenth century, but was rebuilt in 1860. Inside the church, few furnishings survived Nicholson’s restoration in 1883, but the Royal Arms of William III on the west wall, painted in 1700, are worthy of note, as are the Jacobean corbels retained when the old ceiling was replaced in 1860.

Monuments in the church are mostly small mural tablets commemorating local gentry families of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Note the two

fourteenth century tomb recesses in the chancel, one of which contains a later heraldic brass to Charles Baldwyn (1674), and also the small brass high on the north wall of the Vestry (formerly the Baldwyn family aisle of 1609). This commemorates Thomas Baldwyn (1614), who had earlier been imprisoned in the Tower of London for involvement with Mary Queen of Scots. There is good Victorian glass in the chancel.

 

www.diddleburychurch.com/history.html

 

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DIDDLEBURY

 

SO58NW Church of St Peter

1943-1/2/35

12/11/54

 

GV II*

 

Parish church. Saxon, restored C19. Dressed and rubble

sandstone; plain tile roofs. Nave, chancel, west tower, south

aisle and north transept.

EXTERIOR: long and short quoins to base of chancel; Decorated

east window; mid C19 south wall and porch; restored tower with

Norman superstructure over infilled Saxon arch; weather-vane.

Tall narrow north doorway, blocked C19, with semi-circular

arch on chamfered impost blocks.

INTERIOR: good herringbone masonry to north wall; fragments of

interlacing sculpture and piscina; 2 canopies with ballflower

ornament; font; tablets: Cornwall, d.1756; Powell, d.1769;

Fleming, d.1650; Bawdewyn, d.1674; Fleming, d.1761; some early

wood figure-head corbels to roof; funeral hatchments.

 

 

Listing NGR: SO5084385372

 

britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101269882-church-of-st-peter...

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Uploaded on June 21, 2022
Taken on June 5, 2022