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Treasures with CCT churches

External sideview of the stone built church
St Andrew - Wroxeter - Exterior
© Tudor Barlow

Following on from an exciting Members’ Exclusive Lecture with Canon Janet Gough OBE, who told the stories of 50 fascinating treasures from Cathedrals across the Church of England and Church in Wales, CCT has had a look at just some of the treasures in our care.

To become a member of CCT and enjoy access to exclusive monthly lectures from just £3.50 a month, sign up here on our website. Alternatively, email, supporters@thecct.org.uk, for more information.

Church treasures in Wiltshire

Box pews, stained glass window and wooden cross beams on stone roof
Church of St John the Baptist, Inglesham - seventeenth and eighteenth-century box pews
© CCT

Inglesham, St John the Baptist

An ancient painted wonder saved by William Morris.

This remote 13th-century church with Saxon origins stands on a gentle rise of land above waterside meadows near the Thames and just off the Ridgeway Path. Pioneering Victorian designer William Morris – who lived at nearby Kelmscott – oversaw St John’s restoration in the 19th century, ensuring it kept its original Medieval identity.

An amazing series of paintings, from the thirteenth to the nineteenth century, cover the walls often with one painted over another, in places seven layers thick. While it is not always easy to puzzle out the subjects, you can see fifteenth-century angels above the chancel arch, an early fourteenth-century doom on the east wall of the north aisle, and several nineteenth-century texts, as well as a thirteenth-century masonry pattern throughout the chancel.

There is an unusual and powerful Saxon stone carving of the Madonna and Child set in the south wall. The woodwork of the roofs, the fifteenth-century screens and the seventeenth and eighteenth-century pulpit and box pews are all original to the church, and their arrangement is still much as it would have been in Oliver Cromwell's time.

Find out more about St John the Baptist here

West Dean, Borbach Chantry

elaborate memorial of two kneeling people in elaborate Stuart dress faring each other, beneath them are their children, similarly addressed and in a line facing right
Borbach Chantry, West Dean - kneeling John Evelyn I and his wife wearing grand Stuart fashions
© CCT

Memorial secrets in a secluded chapel.

Striking memorials grace this fascinating rural chapel – which is all that remains of a 14th-century church. The earliest, a wall memorial from the 1620s, shows John Evelyn and his wife kneeling in grand Stuart fashions, with their 11 children in a line below. Perhaps the most imposing memorial is Robert Pierrepont’s – an angel supports his life-sized marble figure. The chapel stands alone in excellent walking country – a great place to take a break.

Find out more about Borbach Chantry, West Dean

Church treasures in Shropshire

Detail of a colourful stained glass window
St Marys Church Shrewsbury - Stained Glass
© CCT

Shrewsbury, St Mary the Virgin

An ancient church with world-famous stained glass spanning six centuries and animals, birds and angels carved in an oak ceiling.

The spire of St Mary’s is one of the tallest in England and for over 500 years it has dominated the skyline of Shrewsbury’s old town. In 1739, showman Robert Cadman made a fatal attempt to slide from it, head first, using a rope and a grooved breastplate. His engraved obituary stands outside the

west door. The church has ancient origins. It dates from Saxon times and has beautiful additions from the 12th century onwards. Inside, the atmosphere is peaceful with the soaring stone arches giving way to the church’s great treasure – its stained glass. There are panels in glorious colour including the world- famous 14th-century ‘Jesse window’ and scenes from the life of St Bernard; a Medieval cartoon strip that shows him ridding flies from an abbey, riding a mule and curing the sick.

Find out more about St Mary the Virgin, Shrewsbury

Battlefield, St Mary Magdalene

A memorial church to a bloody battle.

This large, dignified church stands in open countryside on the site of the ferocious Battle of Shrewsbury, which took place in 1403. Thousands of soldiers are thought to have died in the fray, and the church was built as a memorial to them. A statue of Henry IV, who defeated Henry ‘Hotspur’ Percy in the battle, stands on the outside east wall. On the roof beams inside are representations of the shields of the knights who fought with Henry IV.

Find out more about St Mary Magdalene, Battlefield

Bridgnorth, St Leonard

Vast Medieval church restored by the Victorians

This proud Gothic church is a Victorian restoration. The original church was almost entirely destroyed in the Civil War when Roundhead troops used it as an ammunition store, and it exploded during a battle. Inside, the church has an airy vastness – as you enter, you get an extraordinary sense of space unfolding before you. The 19th-century interior is thoughtfully designed – look for the umbrella stands on the pews.

Find out more about St Leonard's Church, Bridgnorth, Shropshire.

Wroxeter, St Andrew

 A Saxon church built from Roman ruins.

St Andrew’s is built on the site of Viroconium, the fourth largest town of Roman Britain, and evidence of the ancient town is everywhere. The gateposts are made from Roman columns; the walls contain massive Roman stones; and the huge font is made from an inverted Roman column base. Inside, the church are three 16th-century alabaster tombs – each has a life-size, and eerily life-like, painted figure lying in repose.

Find out more about St Andrew Church, Wroxter

Church treasures in Suffolk

Tall church interior with high arches and a large stained glass window
St Mary's Church, Bungay - tall church interior
© CCT

Bungay, St Mary

Brilliant carvings and a legendary beast.

East Anglia was once the most populated region of England. With the arrival of the Normans in 1066, it grew rich on wool, trading with Europe for huge returns. Small villages built mighty churches with their gains. Today, many of those villages have moved or vanished, leaving only the churches behind.

The tower of St Mary’s is a landmark, visible high above the town. Inside, the 15th-century building is filled with light and full of images of wonderful creatures. A wooden dole-cupboard – where bread was left for the poor – is carved with religious worthies and a perky rat. Gaze upwards and you’ll see roof carvings of angels, a lion, two-headed eagles, and a bat. St Mary’s is also famous for the Black Dog of Bungay – it appeared during a terrifying storm in 1577 and attacked the congregation.

Find out more about St Mary, Bungay

Church treasures in Suffolk

thirteenth-century flint church, with a Tudor brick-topped tower photographed through graveyard
All Saints' Church Little Wenham - thirteenth-century flint church
© Andy Marshall

Little Wenham, All Saints

One of Suffolk’s best-kept secrets.

This 13th-century flint church, with a Tudor brick-topped tower, is hidden away up a track past one of the oldest houses in England. Behind the altar, the walls are alive with Medieval paintings: pick out St Margaret with her dragon and St Catherine with her wheel. The saints are elegant and almost ghostlike, with blackened faces from the ageing paint. There are also wall plaques to the local Brewse family – one with the doll-sized figure of John Brewse, kneeling in eternal prayer.

Find out more about All Saints, Little Wenham

Church treasure in Surrey

Small red bring chapel with high pitched roof. Chapel shown in graveyard
Lumley Chapel, Cheam - 900-year-old building exterior
© CCT

Cheam, Lumley Chapel

A tiny treasure full of remarkable carvings.

Lumley Chapel, the oldest building in Cheam, can be found in St Dunstan's churchyard and is the only surviving remnant of a 900-year-old building that once stood on this site. John Lumley, a Catholic aristocrat, and art collector, refurbished the building as a burial place for himself and his two wives in the late sixteenth century. Opulent stone monuments fill the walls and a huge tomb near the door shows Lumley's first wife Jane Fitzalan, carved in alabaster, wearing a starched ruff and headdress, her gown flowing as she kneels in prayer

Find out more about Lumley Chapel, Cheam

Date written: 12th June 2024

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