Stanford on Soar St John the BaptistHistory
The first recorded Rector of Stanford was Robert de Gloucester in 1229. The
Taxation Roll of Pope Nicholas IV in 1291 gives the annual value of the church
as £10. In Henry VIII’s time the rectory was valued at £9 7s 4d. In
1650, during the time of the Commonwealth, the Parliamentary Commissioners
valued the rectory at £80. Robert Raynes was then patron and Thomas Fould,
a “preaching minister”, the incumbent.
Among the village’s claims to fame is the reported visit of King Charles I
who watered his horses here giving the local stream the name of “Kings
Brook”. On that occasion, under the yew tree near the present lychgate he
met Sir Henry Skipworth, the church’s patron and a loyalist to the
Royalist cause. The yew tree stood until it was blown down during the 1988
gales, and was then found to be 1200 years old.
Not all happenings in the church’s history have been so worthy of remembrance.
In 1566 William Cowle of Stanford was sued for a chalice which disappeared
from the church when he was churchwarden and he was excommunicated for its
loss. The matter was left to arbiters and he was ordered to pay 16s 8d
towards the cost of purchasing a new chalice.
When Cromwell’s Roundheads visited the church they carried away some
of the old brasses, memorials to former residents of the parish.
The Connection with Stanford Hall and its Families
No description of Stanford church would be complete without mention of its
association with the various Stanford Halls which began some eight days before
the death of Queen Mary Tudor. At this point the demesne of a manor of Stanford
was granted to Robert Raynes, the Queen’s goldsmith. Robert Raynes secured
the patronage, giving him the privilege of appointing the rector, in addition
to responsibility for the fabric of the church.
The first Hall was situated not far from the present railway bridge and near
the church. About a century after its building, the grandson of Robert Raynes
decided to build a new Hall in a more elevated position. His own son wasted
his inheritance so this Hall was sold to pay off his debts.
The new owner was a London Alderman called Thomas Lewes. Mr Lewes restored
the church and built the vault in the south
aisle (for members of his family, though it was later shared with the Dashwoods).
In addition he gave the altar silver and flagon, all inscribed with his own
monogram.
The Lewes dynasty continued for four generations. Charles Lewes, great grandson
of the Alderman, was the last member of the family to possess the Hall and
the property then passed by marriage to Samuel Phillipps of Garendon in Leicestershire.
He had married Charles Lewes’ sister Sophia. Samuel Phillipps died without
issue and the property then passed to the Dashwood family.
Some years before Samuel Phillipps’ death, Richard Dashwood, a son of
Sir Richard Dashwood of Kirtlington in Oxfordshire, had married Elizabeth,
daughter of Thomas, eldest son of Alderman Lewes. Through this connection Stanford
Hall came to his descendants. The first Dashwood to occupy the Hall was Charles
Vere Dashwood, who became High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire. The old stone building
proved unsuitable for the new owner’s needs and another new Stanford
Hall was built during 1771-74.
The first Dashwood entry in the baptism records was
in 1741 and the final Dashwood burial entry is 1953, so the Dashwood association
with Stanford on Soar was to last for 212 years. During this period three members
of the family were Rectors, one for over
25 years and another for nearly 50. As country gentlemen and benefactors the
Dashwoods were highly regarded. The 1841-1871 censuses clearly indicate that
they lived at Stanford Hall in style. The 1851 census states that there were
13 domestic staff resident in the Hall with further employees living in housing
in the Hall grounds.
From 1800 to 1827 Samuel Francis Dashwood was Stanford’s Rector. He
was followed later by Samuel Vere Dashwood, grandson of Charles. Samuel Vere
Dashwood was Rector from 1829 until his death in 1877. He married twice and
the two marriages produced a total of 17 children. On his death his son in
law George Horatio Davenport became Rector of the parish for another 4 years.
He had married Sophia Diana Davenport at Stanford in 1866. Many of Samuel Vere
Dashwood’s children expressed a wish to be buried at Stanford even though
they lived in retirement in the south of England in places as far away as the
Isle of Wight.
After Samuel Vere Dashwood’s death the estate passed out of Dashwood
ownership and was purchased by the Ratcliffs, a family with brewing interests
in Burton-on-Trent. The Ratcliff family were great benefactors to Stanford
Church and they also provided employment for many Stanford residents. The Ratcliffe
family was responsible for the great restoration in
1893-4.
After Richard Ratcliffe’s death in 1898 his son, also a Richard, applied
for a Faculty to secure a large plot at the side
of the south entrance door for the purpose of family burials. To support the
application the following remarks were made about his father:
“Richard Ratcliffe of Stanford Hall and owner of
1682 acres of the Stanford Estate spent upwards of £11000 in embellishing
and beautifying the church also extending the churchyard which should accommodate
569 separate graves.”
The Structure of the Building
The Older Fabric
The church comprises a nave with clerestory, north and south aisles, chancel
and western tower. The nave arcade appears originally to have been Early English
work, but the pillars and capitals were converted into circular ones. The lofty
clerestory is an addition of the Perpendicular period. The north aisle is of
the late Decorated period and the south aisle was erected or altered in the
Perpendicular period. The side aisles are separated from the nave by three
pointed arches, chamfered, springing from circular columns, two feet diameter
with foliated caps.
A similar archway lays open the belfry to the church and there is another
arch at the entrance to the chancel. Prior to the 1893-94
restoration, over each of these two arches there was a corbel with an angel
sounding a trumpet. At the east end of the south aisle there is a family vault which
contains members of the Lewes and Dashwood families.
There are blocks of Moutsorrel granite in the base of the splendid 15th century
tower of the church.
Prior to some restoration of the church in 1882, defrayed by the Rector at
the time the Rev G H Davenport and
costing £300, the family pew was over the vault. The pew was then removed
and the roof of the vault was raised several inches above that of the aisle.
During this restoration new pitch pine pews were installed in the nave. These
were replaced by oak pews during the 1893-4 restoration.
Originally the roof timbers were painted to represent veined marble. The floor
was paved with nine inch paving tiles and in it were the remains of several
alabaster floor stones with unintelligible inscriptions, clearly indicating
that the church was built before the 15th century. Until after the Dashwoods
became incumbents there was no east window.
Also the original font was of classical design and resembled an inverted bell
supported on four curved legs with its cover painted in an imitation of marble.
The Restoration of 1893-94
A major restoration, supported by the Ratcliff family, was carried out between
1893 and 1894 under the direction of W S Weatherley. This involved
almost a complete rebuilding of the chancel.
Old photographs (signed by W S Weatherley and Richard Ratcliff and now on
the wall of the north aisle) show the building before restoration, with an
angel blowing a trumpet above the chancel arch, and a similar one above the
arch at the tower entrance.
Photograph
of the interior
before the restoration,
looking east |
Similar
photograph, looking west |
The following work was carried out:
Chancel
The interior and
exterior walls were repaired.
A new east gable
and parapet to the side walls was erected.
The east
window was raised.
The floor was taken
up and relaid with a marble one.
The present roof
was taken off and replaced with a new oak one.
A new vestry and
organ chamber was erected on the north side.
The former seats
were removed and replaced with new oak ones.
A new screen, a
new reredos and panelled walls were erected.
The altar was adapted
and new altar rails were provided.
After the chancel
alterations had been carried out, a new organ was
installed.
Nave and Aisles
The external and
internal walls were repaired.
A new roof with
lead work was provided.
A new oak pulpit was
provided and the church was re-seated with new oak open benches.
A
new font was provided at the west end of the
church and a new porch was erected at the south
side of the south aisle.
The floor was lowered,
the grave slabs relaid and the floor
then paved with tiles.
A new cornice and
parapet was erected round the north aisle.
The tomb in
the north aisle was exposed.
The monument blocking
the window at the east end of the south aisle was removed and repositioned
at the west end of the south aisle.
The wall monuments
for Caroline Dashwood and Samuel
Vere Dashwood, originally fixed in front of the medieval doorway forming
the entrance to the south aisle, were removed and repositioned on the west
end of the same aisle.
Tower
Internal and external
walls were thoroughly repaired.
Doors
New oak doors were
provided throughout the church.
Heating
New heating apparatus
was provided for the whole church.
The Twentieth Century
In 1928 Sir Julian Cahn purchased Stanford Hall. Sir Julian was a cricket
enthusiast and a member of the Magic Circle.
After his death in 1944 the Co-operative Union purchased the Hall to convert
into a College.
In 1967 there was an exchange of correspondence between the General Secretary
of the Co-operative Union and the Southwell Diocesan Registry about the right
of patronage to the living of Stanford-on-Soar which belonged to the Stanford
Hall estate. The suggestion was made that the patronage should be transferred
to the Diocesan Board of Patronage and that the Co-operative Union should meet
the cost of transfer which was anticipated to be approximately ten guineas.
The matter had arisen because of the impending change of incumbent. There could
be a possibility that the living might be in the gift of the trustees of Stanford
Estates Ltd. These recommendations were accepted by both the parties involved.
The Co-operative Union left Stanford Hall in 2002.
During the period when the Co-operative Union owned Stanford Hall an Annual
College Service was held at the church. Among the preachers on these occasions
was Dr Leslie Paul, the author of the much discussed Paul Report on the
Deployment of the Clergy. He was a writer of poetry, books on philosophy and
other subjects
On 21st January 1992 the Church Commissioners, in pursance
of the Pastoral Measure 1983, consented to the union of Stanford-on-Soar with
three other nearby benefices. This was to create a new benefice which should
be named “The Benefice of East Leake, West
Leake, Stanford-on-Soar, Rempstone and Costock”. The new benefice
was to belong to the Archdeaconry of Nottingham and the Deanery of West Bingham.
The Rev Stephen John Smith who was the incumbent of East and West Leake
was appointed as the first incumbent of the new benefice. The parsonage house
of the benefice of Stanford-on-Soar was transferred to the Southwell Diocesan
Board of Finance.
The church is near the Loughborough boundary. It always had strong links with
the town and, according to Mr Graham Unwin who has been a choir member
for over 50 years, until recently many of its congregation came from the town.
Some leading citizens of Loughborough are buried at Stanford.
In 1987 the lead on the roof was stolen, costing the church £4500 to
replace.
Births, Marriages and Deaths
The earliest register is a tall book containing 25 leaves of parchment and
is bound with other documents in leather covers. The entries in English commence
in 1633 for baptisms, marriages and burials. The entries for baptisms and burials
end in 1785 and those for marriages end in 1753, but a gap in entries occurs
between 1639 and 1649. The remaining registers are of more ordinary kind.
During the incumbency of the Rev Mr
Thwaytes from 1686 to 1720 the number of marriages per year averaged
eleven, compared to the usual one or two marriages per year under other rectors.
Couples came from all over the Midlands to be married at this local “Gretna
Green”.
Between the years 1713 and 1776 twenty five persons buried in Stanford Churchyard were
registered as “passengers”.
On 17th August 1844 Maria Lister brought her son Francis Arthur to be baptized
by her brother the Rev Samuel Vere Dashwood. Unfortunately
Maria had married a bigamist so her brother insisted that her child be baptized
with the Dashwood surname despite the fact that the child had a state registration
in his father’s surname. Her brother made appropriate remarks in both
the baptism and marriage record books confirming the situation. Maria then
separated from her husband and spent the rest of her life living in style with
up to five servants in the Loughborough area. Four of her brother’s daughters
were more fortunate in their choice of partners. One married a son of the Rev John
Bateman, Rector of East Leake and West Leake,
and the others married clergymen.
There is note of a typhoid epidemic brought to the village by the navvies
working on the railway as it passed close to Stanford. The little old school
was used as a hospital.
In the 1851 census of religious worship the church was returned as St Luke,
Stanford-on-Soar, and the entry was written by Sam Oakwood, Minister. Oakwood
does not appear as a Rector, and was doubtless the curate who actually ran
the church. Only 147 people lived in the parish. 51 people (including 16 children)
attended the morning service, and 42 (11 children) the afternoon worship. The
building could accommodate 170.
Records indicate there are the following testamentary burials of some of the
earlier Rectors of the church:
Rev Will De Stanford in 1345.
Rev Illingworth on 11th October 1404. He made a request
to be buried “in the Quire before the Image of St Mary ye Virgin”.
Rev William Buxstede on 14th December
1505. He made a request to be buried in the chancel.
Rev Robert Hedworth on 1st January
1532. He requested to be buried “in the churchyard on the south side
of the Quire, a part of his body to lye within the wall of the church”.
Rev John Price on 23rd June 1665.
He died intestate and administration was granted to Mary Price, his relict.
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