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词条 St Michael's Church, Kirkham
释义

  1. History

  2. Architecture

     Exterior  Interior 

  3. External features

  4. See also

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Use British English|date=September 2013}}{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2013}}{{Infobox church | name = St Michael's Church, Kirkham| fullname = | image = Kirkham Parish Church.jpg| imagesize = | caption = St Michael's Church, Kirkham, from the southeast | pushpin map = United Kingdom Borough of Fylde | pushpin map alt = | pushpin mapsize = | pushpin label position = | map caption = Location in the Borough of Fylde | location = Church Street, Kirkham, Lancashire| country = England | coordinates = {{coord|53.7843|-2.8710|region:GB_type:landmark|display= title}} | osgraw = SD 427,323| denomination = Anglican | churchmanship = | membership = | attendance = | website = St Michael's, Kirkham | former name = | bull date = | founded date = | founder = | dedication = St Michael| dedicated date = | consecrated date = | cult = | relics = | events = | past bishop = | people = | status = Parish church | functional status = Active| heritage designation = Grade II*| designated date = 20 September 1985| architect = Robert Roper,
Edmund Sharpe,
Joseph Hansom (?)| architectural type = Church | style = Gothic Revival| groundbreaking = 1822 | completed date = 1853 | construction cost = £5,000 (nave)
({{Inflation|UK|5000|1853|r=-4|fmt=eq|cursign=£}}){{Inflation-fn|UK|df=y}}| closed date = | demolished date = | capacity = 600| length = | width = | width nave = | height = | diameter = | other dimensions = | floor count = | floor area = | spire quantity = | spire height = {{convert|150|ft|m|0}}| materials = Ashlar sandstone, slate roofs| parish = Kirkham | deanery = Kirkham| archdeaconry = Lancaster| diocese = Blackburn| province = York| rector = | vicar = Rev Rick Bunday| curate = | priest = | asstpriest = Rev Kevan Thorn| minister = | assistant = | honpriest = | deacon = | seniorpastor = | pastor = | abbot = | chaplain = | reader = Alan Sawyer| organistdom = | director = Edward Rugman| organist = | organscholar = | chapterclerk = | laychapter = | warden = Caroline O'Brien
Caroline Wordsworth| flowerguild = Christine Lever| musicgroup = | parishadmin = Barry Dann| serversguild = | logo = | logosize = }}St Michael's Church is in the town of Kirkham, Lancashire, England. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building.[1] It is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Blackburn, the archdeaconry of Lancaster and the deanery of Kirkham.[2]

History

The earliest evidence of a church on the site is in 684 AD. Kirkham was one of the oldest foundations in Lancashire and one of only three listed in the Doomsday Book as existing in Amounderness. This hundred was part of the vast possessions of Roger earl of Poictou and the church was held by the Priory Church of St. Mary, Lancaster. William of York (died 1154) issued a charter to return the church to Shrewsbury Abbey. In a later charter, dated 5 December 1280, King Edward I conveyed the advowson of Kirkham to the abbott and convent of Vale Royal Abbey which held the church until the Dissolution in the reign King Henry VIII. It was then given to the dean and chapter of Christ Church, Oxford.[3]

The first recorded vicar, in May 1239, was Will de Ebor, also described as "Cancus de Ebor" and said to have been appointed by Richard Duke of Cornwall.[4]

The first christenings recorded in the parish register are those of Thomas Sharrock and Henry Cowbron in March 1539.[5] Porter also notes that the monumental inscriptions in the church ".. are not either very ancient or very numersous", with the oldest being that of Richard Clegg, M.A., made vicar on 22 June 1666, let into the floor of the vestry.[6]

The fabric of the present church dates from 1822 when the nave, designed by Robert Roper, an architect from Preston, was built.[7] The cost of the nave was £5,000 ({{Inflation|UK|5000|1853|r=-4|fmt=eq|cursign=£}}).{{Inflation-fn|UK|df=y}}[8] In 1843–44 the steeple, designed by the Lancaster architect Edmund Sharpe, and built in Longridge stone, was added at the west end.[9] The foundation stone for this was laid on 21 November 1843 by Thomas Clifton of Lytham Hall.[10] In 1853 the chancel was rebuilt, probably by Joseph Hansom, to make the altar visible from the nave.[1] The north and south galleries were removed in the middle of the 20th century and the area under the west gallery has been turned into a separate room.[7] In 2004 it was discovered that the spire had developed structural problems because the iron ties reinforcing the stones had corroded. An appeal to repair the spire was launched.[11]

Architecture

Exterior

The church is built in sandstone ashlar with slate roofs. Its plan consists of a six-bay nave without aisles, a three-bay chancel with aisles which are now used as vestries. To the north and south gabled porches project slightly from the second bays from west. The other bays have lancet windows between gabled buttresses. The nave is in Early English style and the chancel is in Decorated style.[1] The steeple is in Perpendicular style.[10] It has angle buttresses and is in four stages. The parapet is embattled and pinnacles rise from the corners. The octagonal spire is recessed and rises to a height of {{convert|150|ft|m|0}}. It is crocketed, has three tiers of two-light lucarnes and is supported by four flying buttresses.[1] The authors of the Buildings of England series consider it to be "perhaps the finest work of Edmund Sharpe".[8]

Interior

The roof of the nave is painted red and is divided into squares by ribs, at whose intersections are gilded bosses of different designs. The font is located halfway down the north side of the nave. It is Victorian and consists of an octagonal gabled and crocketted bowl on an octagonal column. The wooden pulpit is massive, measuring approximately {{convert|125|ft|m|0}} from the base to the top.[7] To the east of the south door are churchwardens' box pews carved with Gothic details and poppyheads.[1] They bear a brass plate dated 1770.[8] In the nave are monuments to the memory of the Cliftons of Lytham Hall, including one to Thomas Clifton who died in 1688. A wall tablet commemorates Richard Bradkirk of Bryning Hall who died in 1813[1] and another monument is to Henry Rishton Buck, a lieutenant aged 27 who died at the Battle of Waterloo.[7] Behind the altar is a folding reredos dated 1900 which was made by Kempe and moved from Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford.[7] The brass chandelier dated 1725 was made by Brown of Wigan.[8] The organ dates back to 1769 when it was built by Glyn Parker of Salford. Later modifications were made by R. W. Nicholson of Bradford (at an unrecorded date), by Harrison & Harrison in 1905, and by the Pendlebury Organ Company of Cleveleys in 1979.[12] There is a ring of eight bells which were cast by Charles & George Mears at the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in 1846.[13]

External features

In the churchyard is a sundial made of sandstone dating probably from the 18th century with a 20th-century top. It consists of a fluted circular column without a base set into a circular slab and capped with a Tuscan capital which carries a round bronze dial and a gnomon. It is listed at Grade II.[14] Also in the churchyard and listed Grade II are a tomb chest to Edward and Dorothy King dating from the early 19th century,[15] a tomb chest to Edward and Elizabeth Birley dating from around 1836,[16] and a monument in the style of a Gothic tabernacle to William Birley and others dating from the middle of the 19th century.[17] The churchyard and its extension contain the war graves of three service personnel of World War I, and ten of World War II.[18]

See also

{{portal|Lancashire}}
  • Grade II listed buildings in Lancashire
  • Listed buildings in Kirkham, Lancashire
  • List of architectural works by Edmund Sharpe

References

1. ^{{NHLE |num= 1362357|desc= Church of St Michael, Kirkham |accessdate= 20 February 2012|mode=cs2|ps=none}}
2. ^{{citation |url= http://www.achurchnearyou.com/kirkham-st-michael/ |title= St Michael, Kirkham |accessdate=17 May 2011 |publisher= Church of England }}
3. ^Porter, J. MRCS, LSA (1878) History of the Fylde of Lancashire, Fleetwood and Blackpool, W. Porter and Sons Publisher, Chapter II – Ecclesiastical History.
4. ^Porter, J. MRCS, LSA (1878) History of the Fylde of Lancashire, Fleetwood and Blackpool, W. Porter and Sons Publisher, Chapter IV – The Vicars of Kirkham.
5. ^Porter, J. MRCS, LSA (1878) History of the Fylde of Lancashire, Fleetwood and Blackpool, W. Porter and Sons Publisher, Chapter VI – The Church Wardens and the Parish Registers.
6. ^Porter, J. MRCS, LSA (1878) History of the Fylde of Lancashire, Fleetwood and Blackpool, W. Porter and Sons Publisher, Chapter VII – The Monumemts and Inscriptions in the Church and Churchyard at Kirkham.
7. ^{{citation |url=http://www.stmichaelskirkham.org.uk/thechurchbuilding.htm |title=The Church Building |accessdate=1 March 2008 |publisher=St Michael's, Kirkham }}
8. ^{{Citation | last =Hartwell| first =Clare| authorlink = | last2 = Pevsner | first2 = Nikolaus | author2-link =Nikolaus Pevsner| series= The Buildings of England| title =Lancashire: North |edition= | publisher =Yale University Press | year =2009 | origyear=1969 | location = New Haven and London| page = 355| url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 978-0-300-12667-9}}
9. ^{{Citation | last = Brandwood| first = Geoff| author-link = | last2 = Austin| first2 = Tim| last3 = Hughes| first3 = John| last4 = Price| first4 = James| publication-date = | date = | year = 2012| title = The Architecture of Sharpe, Paley and Austin| edition = | volume = | series = | publication-place = Swindon| place = | publisher = English Heritage| pages = | page = 213| format = | id = | isbn = 978-1-84802-049-8| doi = | oclc = | url = | accessdate =}}
10. ^{{Citation | last = Hughes| first = John M.| author-link = | publication-date = | date = | year = 2010| title = Edmund Sharpe: Man of Lancaster| edition = | volume = | series = | publication-place = | place = | publisher = John M. Hughes| pages = | page = 209| format = | id = | isbn = | doi = | oclc = | url = | accessdate =}}
11. ^{{citation |url=http://www.stmichaelskirkham.org.uk/thespire.htm |title=The Spire |accessdate=1 March 2008 |publisher=St Michael's, Kirkham }}
12. ^{{citation |url= http://www.npor.org.uk/cgi-bin/Rsearch.cgi?Fn=Rsearch&rec_index=N10907 |title= Kirkham St. Michael |accessdate=15 August 2008 |publisher= British Institute of Organ Studies }}
13. ^{{citation |url= http://dove.cccbr.org.uk/detail.php?searchString=Kirkham%2C+S+Michael&Submit=++Go++&DoveID=KIRKHAM |title= Kirkham S Michael |accessdate=15 August 2008 |publisher= Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers }}
14. ^{{NHLE |num= 1072022|desc= Sundial in churchyard circa 20 metres south of the south porch of the Church of St Michael, Kirkham |accessdate= 28 May 2012|mode=cs2|ps=none|fewer-links=x}}
15. ^{{NHLE |num= 1072023|desc= Tomb of Edward and Dorothy King in churchyard circa 50 metres south east of the porch of the Church of St Michael, Kirkham |accessdate= 28 May 2012|mode=cs2|ps=none|fewer-links=x}}
16. ^{{NHLE |num= 1163974|desc= Tomb of Edward and Elizabeth Birley in churchyard circa 50 metres south east of the porch of the Church of St Michael, Kirkham |accessdate= 28 May 2012|mode=cs2|ps=none|fewer-links=x}}
17. ^{{NHLE |num= 1362358|desc= Tomb of William Birley and others in churchyard circa 50 metres south east of the porch of the Church of St Michael, Kirkham |accessdate= 28 May 2012|mode=cs2|ps=none|fewer-links=x}}
18. ^{{Citation | url = http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/40532/KIRKHAM%20%28ST.%20MICHAEL%29%20CHURCHYARD%20AND%20EXTENSION| title = KIRKHAM (ST. MICHAEL) CHURCHYARD AND EXTENSION| accessdate =15 February 2013| publisher = Commonwealth War Graves Commission}}

External links

  • {{Commonscat-inline|St Michael's Church, Kirkham}}
{{Lancashire churches|II*}}{{Borough of Fylde buildings}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Kirkham, Saint Michaels Church}}

11 : Church of England church buildings in Lancashire|Grade II* listed churches in Lancashire|Gothic Revival church buildings in England|Gothic Revival architecture in Lancashire|Churches completed in 1822|Churches completed in 1844|Churches completed in 1853|19th-century Church of England church buildings|Edmund Sharpe buildings|Diocese of Blackburn|Buildings and structures in the Borough of Fylde

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