All Saints Church, Loughborough

Coordinates: 52°46′27.66″N 1°12′13.60″W / 52.7743500°N 1.2037778°W / 52.7743500; -1.2037778
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52°46′27.66″N 1°12′13.60″W / 52.7743500°N 1.2037778°W / 52.7743500; -1.2037778

All Saints with Holy Trinity, Loughborough
All Saints with Holy Trinity, Loughborough
Map
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipBroad Church
Websitewww.allsaintsloughborough.org.uk
History
DedicationAll Saints
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseLeicester
ParishLoughborough
Clergy
RectorIn interregnum

All Saints Church, officially All Saints with Holy Trinity is the Church of England parish church of the town of Loughborough, Leicestershire within the Diocese of Leicester.

History[edit]

The church dates from the 14th century; the tower from the 15th century.[citation needed] It is located on a slight rise within the old town and is probably the site of a pre-Christian place of worship.[citation needed] All Saints is one of the largest parish churches in England, which is an indication of the importance of Loughborough in the mediaeval wool trade.[citation needed] Loughborough Grammar School was likely founded by a priest at the church c. 1496, paid for in the will of local wool merchant Thomas Burton, and the school was housed within the church grounds until it moved away to its purpose-built campus in 1850.[citation needed] The hymn composer G. W. Briggs (himself an Old Loughburian) was rector of All Saints from 1918 to 1934.[citation needed]

Next door is the Old Rectory, originally a mediaeval manor house, the earliest record of which is 1228. It was mostly demolished before it was recognised that large parts of the mediaeval house remained.[1][2] It now contains a museum which is open on summer Saturdays.

The postcode for the church is LE11 1UX, and its official address is on Rectory Road.[citation needed] However, the main entrance leads onto Steeple Row and Church Gate, the latter a mediaeval street that connects the old town and the church to the modern town centre (Market Place), though now devoid of mediaeval buildings is of mediaeval width and now partially pedestrianised.[citation needed]

In December 2022, the church garnered controversy after they used a revised set of lyrics to the hymn God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen with references to “queer and questioning” individuals and “women, who by men have been erased.”[3]

List of rectors[edit]

[citation needed]

  • Richard de Dalham, Dean of Lichfield 1193 – 1214
  • Robert de Verdon 1215 – 1227
  • Thomas de Turville 1227 – 1244
  • Thomas de Torp 1244 – 1280 x[clarification needed] 1286
  • ? 1280 x 1286 – 1315
  • Thomas de Stanton 1315 – 1321
  • John de Denton 1321 – 1325
  • John Whitstone 1325 – 1348
  • John Leeke 1349 – 1353
  • Robert de Hull de Segrave 1353 – 1358
  • John Leeke 1358 – 1369 (again)
  • Richard Bokelly 1369 – 1375
  • John de Campeden 1375 – 1381
  • Thomas Wroxton 1381 – 1408
  • John Southam 1408 – 1416
  • Thomas Henkeston 1416 – 1419
  • Robert Fry 1419 – 1435
  • Thomas Loughborough 1435 – 1450
  • John Auncell 1450 – 1452
  • John Trypp 1452 – 1454
  • Henry Greene 1454 – 1473
  • John Fisher 1473 – 1494
  • Simon Tavenour 1494 – 1500
  • Richard Lavender 1500 – 1508
  • Robert Blackwall 1508 – 1509
  • Geoffrey Wren 1509 – 1527[4]
  • Robert Fabyan alias Clerke 1527 – 1533
  • Thomas Adeson 1533 – 1540
  • Peter Ashton 1540 – 1548
  • John Willock 1548 – 1554 (ejected)
  • Arthur Lowe 1554 – 1559 (ejected)
  • John Willock 1559 – 1585 (restored)
  • John Browne, sr 1586 – 1616
  • John Browne, jr 1616 – 1643
  • Nicholas Hall 1643 – 1647 (ejected)
  • Oliver Bromskill 1647 – 1662 (ejected)[5] Bromskill was appointed by the Leicestershire Parliamentary committee during the imposition of a Presbyterian polity and removed during the Great Ejection.
  • Nicholas Hall 1662 – 1669 (restored)
  • George Bright 1669 – 1696
  • John Alleyne 1696 – 1739
  • Thomas Alleyne 1739 – 1761
  • James Bickham 1761 – 1785
  • Samuel Blackall 1786 – 1792
  • Francis Wilcox 1792 – 1798
  • Richard Hardy 1798 – 1826
  • William Holme 1826 – 1848
  • Henry Fearon 1848 – 1885 (also Archdeacon of Leicester 1863 – 1885)
  • Thomas Pitts 1885 – 1917
  • George Wallace Briggs 1918 – 1934
  • William John Lyon 1934 – 1958
  • Ronald Albert Jones 1959 – 1976
  • Leonard George Edward Hancock 1976 – 1993
  • Stephen Arthur Cherry 1994 – 2006 (now Dean of Kings College Cambridge)
  • Rachel Anne Ross 2008 – 2014
  • Wendy Dalrymple 2015 – 2023

Organisation[edit]

All Saints is the official seat of the Archdeacon of Loughborough, previously The Venerable Paul Hackwood, who nevertheless normally resides at St Peter's, Glenfield in Leicester.[citation needed] The Archdeacon oversees the 6 deaneries in Western Leicestershire which are named after ancient hundreds; Akeley East (Loughborough), Akeley South (Coalville), Akeley West (Ashby-de-la-Zouch), Guthlaxton, Sparkenhoe West (Hinckley and Market Bosworth) and Sparkenhoe East.[citation needed]

All Saints is the more traditional one of the two main Anglican churches in Loughborough, the other being Emmanuel Church (1835), which is Evangelical and frequented by many Loughborough University students.[citation needed] Emmanuel has St Mary's, Nanpantan as a sister-church. [citation needed]In Loughborough, there is also The Good Shepherd Church in Shelthorpe and All Saints Thorpe Acre with Dishley.[citation needed]

The Akeley East deanery is headed by a rural dean, The Reverend Wendy Dalrymple, rector of this parish until 2023.

Bells[edit]

The tower contains a ring of ten bells hung for change ringing with a tenor weighing 30 long cwt 2 qr (3,420 lb or 1,550 kg) in Db. The present peal were cast between 1897 and 1899 at the John Taylor Bellfoundry in Loughborough., whose foundry was less than a mile away.[6][7] The largest four bells are lost wax castings and have intricate patterns cast on to the waist of the bells.[8]

Bell Diameter Weight
feet & inches (metric equivalent) hundredweights-quarters-pounds (metric equivalent)
Treble 2 ft 4 in (711 mm) 7-1-2 (369 kg)
2nd 2 ft 5½ in (749 mm) 7-0-21 (365 kg)
3rd 2 ft 7½ in (800 mm) 7-2-10 (386 kg)
4th 2 ft 8½ in (826 mm) 7-1-7 (371 kg)
5th 2 ft 10 in (864 mm) 8-1-13 (425 kg)
6th 3 ft 1½ in (953 mm) 9-3-3 (497 kg)
7th 3 ft 5½ in (1054 mm) 12-2-23 (645 kg)
8th 3 ft 8 in (1117 mm) 15-1-25 (786 kg)
9th 4 ft 1 in (1245 mm) 20-3-6 (1057 kg)
Tenor 4 ft 7 in (1397 mm) 30-2-0 (1549 kg)

Music[edit]

Director of Mission through Music[edit]

Musical ensembles[edit]

  • Adult choir
  • Children's choir
  • All-Age Music Group
  • Contemporary Collective
  • Taize Musicians

Organ[edit]

The church contains a 2-manual pipe organ. It was installed in 1966 by Henry Willis. It uses much pipework from a redundant organ from Bridgway Hall in Nottingham. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.

Organists[edit]

  • John Baptist Cramer 1838–1877[9]
  • Dr. Charles Hage Briggs 1878 - 1902[10]
  • R. T. Bedford 1903–1917[11]
  • C. Milton-Bill 1917–1919[12] (afterwards organist of Holy Trinity Church, Swansea).
  • Miss Rigg 1920– ????
  • Albert Ernest Barton Hart 1924–1960s
  • David Briers 1970s
  • Dr. Peter J. Underwood, M.A. [Downing, Cambridge], M.Mus. [London], Ph.D. [Birmingham], FRCO (CHM), FTCL, LRAM, ARCM, ADCM: 1985–2017
  • David Cowen, M.A. [St Peter's, Oxford], FRCO, LRSM, DipNSC: 2017–2018 (Acting)
  • Simon Headley, B.A. [University of Central England], ARCO: (principal organist) 2019–Present

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Loughborough - the rectory". Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  2. ^ "The Old Rectory". Charnwood council. Retrieved 18 September 2015.
  3. ^ Gryboski, Michael (23 December 2022). "Church faces backlash for changing lyrics to Christmas carol about Jesus' birth to celebrate 'queer' identity". Christian Post. Retrieved 4 July 2023.
  4. ^ Fasti Wyndesorienses, May 1950. S.L. Ollard. Published by the Dean and Canons of St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle
  5. ^ Fletcher, W. G. D. (1894). "Lady Margaret Bromley" (PDF). Transactions of the Leicestershire Architectural Society. 8 (2). Leicestershire Architectural Society: 70–73. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  6. ^ "John Taylor & Co to All Saints Church, Loughborough". John Taylor & Co to All Saints Church, Loughborough.
  7. ^ "Tower details". dove.cccbr.org.uk.
  8. ^ "History: The Church's Bells". www.allsaintsloughborough.org.uk.
  9. ^ Leicester Chronicle - 8 December 1877
  10. ^ Nottingham Evening Post - 18 June 1902
  11. ^ Dictionary of Organs and Organists. First Edition. 1912
  12. ^ "Mr. Milton-Bill". Loughborough Echo. England. 19 September 1919. Retrieved 22 February 2018 – via British Newspaper Archive.

External links[edit]