Friday 12 January 2018

All Saints, Sandon, Staffordshire

All Saints, Sandon, Staffordshire

There has been a church at this site in Sandon since at least 1130 when records confirm it was gifted to the Abbey of Combermere in Cheshire as part of a parcel of land in Sandon. No traces of the Norman church remain as the church has been adapted and rebuilt from the late 13th Century onwards.    

Standing at the edge of the parkland of Sandon Hall, the church has been associated with a number of influential noble families; the impact of their patronage on the building has been significant. These range from the imposing Chancel tombs (including the impressive Sampson Erdeswicke monument erected by him two years before his death in 1603 and subsequently damaged, allegedly, by Roundhead soldiers on their way to the battle of Hopton Heath across the Trent valley in 1643) to the remodelling and restoration of the church and the provision of the stained glass windows. The Earls of Harrowby have owned Sandon Hall since 1777 and their impact on the church since then has been considerable, including major restorations in the mid 19th and early 20th centuries.
Sarah was employed at Sandon Hall as a Wet Nurse










St Michael and All Angels, Penkridge, Staffordshire

St Michael and All Angels, Penkridge, Staffordshire










Monday 13 March 2017

St Peter, Broughton, Staffordshire

St Peter, Broughton, Staffordshire
St. Peter's at Broughton was built by Thomas Broughton in 1630-34 as a chapel for Broughton Hall, which was being restored and extended at that time. It was built on the site of an earlier chapel. It is thought that the chapel was used exclusively by the family until 1711 when other local gentry worshipped there. Later it became the church for the nearby hamlets.
Sarah was a widow from 1918 until 1971

Aged 102




St Michael and All Angels, Adbston, Staffordshire

St Michael and All Angels, Adbston, Staffordshire

The exterior is mainly in Tudor-Gothic style. The Perpendicular 3-stage tower has angle buttresses, and a restored quatrefoil band (characteristic of Staffordshire) below the embattled parapet with pinnacles.



Christ Church, Knightly, Staffordshire

Christ Church, Knightly, Staffordshire

Christ Church was built in 1840 on land given by Lord Lichfield. The architect was Thomas Trubshaw and the foundation stone was laid by the Countess of Lichfield on the 14th January 1840. The Church cost £752 to complete and funded by the villagers and partly from the Diocese of Lichfield. The chancel extension, vestry and choir aisle were built in 1882 in memory of Major R. Hargreaves who lived at Knightley Grange. Christ Church historically was part of the parish of Gnosall and was established to serve the outlying hamlet of Knightley.

Aged 100

Noel John died on active service in Ceylon - which strictly speaking wasn't a conflict zone.


St Peter, Norbury, Staffordshire

St Peter, Norbury, Staffordshire
(Click on an image for a larger version)


St. Peter's at Norbury was largely built between in the first half of the 14th century. The brick tower may have been built by William Baker in 1759. Unfortunately the church was locked when we called but Pevsner describes the east window as too good to be true. It was designed by Miss C. S. Burne in 1873.
The memorial tablet includes a dramatic example of financial inflation in that a large scale building project running from 1826 to 1829 is reported to have cost only £700.00!

St James the Great, Salt, Staffordshire

St James the Great, Salt, Staffordshire
(Click on an image for a larger version)

The village church is dedicated to St James the Great and was built on land donated by the Earl of Shrewsbury and largely paid for by him. It has a large circular stained glass east window, an unusually tall south porch and an open stone bell turret mounted at the east end of the church hung with two bells. The impressive wood rood screen was designed by Augustus Pugin.
Albert Bassett died "in fatal equine accident" (sic)