Nominal: 571 Hz Weight: 3136 lbs Diameter: 54" Bell 1 of 8
Founded by John Warner & Sons 1863
Dove Bell ID: 6891 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Diocese of Exeter
Major Parish Church, 615365
https://www.stmarysandstjohnstotnes.org/This church is on the Heritage at Risk Register (verified 2024-11-14)
View more information about this church on the Heritage at Risk website
Grid reference: SX 802 604
The church of St Mary the Virgin is the historic parish church of Totnes, the site of Christian worship here since at least the 11th, and probably the 10th century. It is the oldest building in Totnes still in use for its original purpose. The church is an integral element of Totnes and has a historic relationship to other important buildings in the town, including the Guildhall and Grammar school which incorporate parts of the medieval priory, but also the town defences and the old town.
Building is open for worship
Ground plan:
The church building consists of a west tower, 4-bay aisled nave with outer north aisle, 2-bay chancel with flanking chapels of one bay, north-east vestry off the chancel, and a south-west porch.
Dimensions:
The nave measures 65ft (20m) x 25ft (8m), the aisles are 12 ft (3.5m) wide, the outer north aisle 5m (16ft). The west bay of the chancel and the side chapels are 19ft (6m) long, the protruding sanctuary bay is also 19ft (6m) long. The tower is 5m (16ft) square.
Footprint of Church buildings: 699 m²
The role of the church in the community has changed several times since the construction of the original church, but it has always been closely involved with it. This was from the beginning an urban foundation, closely bound up with the history of the town and borough of Totnes. The date of origin of the first church building is unclear but there has certainly been a church on the site for over 900, and probably over 1000 years.
The building served the dual function of parish church and priory church after the Norman baron Judhael gave the church to the Benedictine monastic order at some point shortly after the Conquest in 1066. The identification of the church with the priory is part of the self image and history of the town and people of Totnes, and parts of the priory cloister survive in the Guildhall, another iconic Totnes building. St Mary’s is also the municipal church, of which traditional role the Carolean Corporation pews are an obvious symbol. These were situated at the very front of the nave by the screen until the late 19th-century reordering “relegated” them to the second bay from the west. At this time the Totnes coat of arms was carved onto new bench ends for these pews, again symbolic of the church’s civic function. The Town Council still attends the church in full regalia for civic functions.
Totnes is an historic town in south Devon, 10 miles north-west of Dartmouth and 22 miles south-west of Exeter,just to the south-east of Dartmoor and strategically situated on the River Dart.The landscape of the surounding area consists of rolling hills and valleys, dotted with small towns. White’s Devonshire Directory (1850) remarks on the location of Totnes “in the heart of the fruitful district called the South Hams, or garden of Devonshire, which abounds in rich pastures, meadows, corn fields, and orchards…” The area has lost none of its charm in the early 21st century.
Totnes therefore occupies a prime site for settlement and there is archaeological evidence of human activity in the area from at least the Neolithic period. The limited archaeological work in and near the town has generally been in response to development and of a small scale nature. Settlement of the ridge and the river banks by the late Iron Age seems certain, as does some form of Roman presence here.
The foundation of the Saxon royal burh in the early 10th-century, attested by coinage and references in the Burghal Hideage and supported by archaeological evidence from the early 11th, is still the earliest firm evidence for permanent settlement here, and the layout established then can still be confidently traced in the town today.
The volcanic ridge on which the Saxon defended town (burh) was founded in the early 10th century stretches itself along the brow of a volcanic outcrop rising from the west bank of the river, and commands a fine view of the valley and the winding river, but sheltered on every side by higher grounds. This defensive position was exploited after the Norman conquest by Judhael of Totnes and his successors, who established a castle at the west end of the burh. A church is likely to have existed from the foundation of the burh, which was presented to the Benedictines after the Norman Conquest. The castle and the church still dominate the views of Totnes today.
Totnes expanded from the Saxon burh down the hill to the river following the conquest and became one of the wealthiest towns in Medieval and Tudor Devon during the 15th-17thcenturies (second only to Exeter), the town’s wealth built mainly upon the export of wool from sheep reared on nearby Dartmoor, cloth manufacture and the export of locally mined tin and lead and slate, as well as the import of wine from France. The town’s location helped contribute to this success, being both the highest port navigable, and the lowest bridging place on the River Dart.
There are many houses of medieval origin, though all were remodelled or rebuilt in the 16th and 17th centuries, and this period tends to define the character of the town. Totnes declined thereafter, helping to keep it as one of the best preserved and most attractive small historic towns in England, and of exceptional historical and archaeological significance and potential. The castle and the parish and priory church continue to dominate the town with their physical presence today, and the curtilages of both preserve the best sequences of archaeological stratigraphy in the town, as well as the oldest fabric.
The church may have been founded as early as the 10th century, but was certainly standing by the middle of the 11th century. After the Norman conquest it was presented by Judhael of Totnes to the Benedictine Order, and functioned as a priory and parish church. It was rebuilt in the 12thcentury. The priory may have built a separate chapel or church adjacent in the 13th century. The church was completely rebuilt in the 15th century by the town after an agreement was struck with the priory, the details of which are not yet well understood.
After the Reformation it continued to serve as the parish church of Totnes, the surviving priory buildings were converted to the town’s Guildhall and Grammar School. The church was thoroughly restored and enlarged under the direction of G G Scott in the late 19th century, and reordered under the direction of RH Blacking in the 1950s.
The church was wholly rebuilt between 1432 and 1460 in the mature Devon Perpendicular style. With the exception of fragments of 12th- or early 13thcentury carving and other re-used material, no visible fabric remains from earlier buildings on the site. There have been some additions and changes since this date, the most radical of which was the addition of an extra north aisle and the vestry in the late 19th century, but basically this campaign created the church we see today, at least in form.
The Tower
To begin the description at the west end with the west tower. It is 35m (120 ft) high, and the base is 8m (25 ft) square externally. It was built to the designs of master mason Roger Crowden (or Growden), who may have been responsible for at least the later stages of the work on the church as a whole. The tower was consciously modelled (a delegation including Crowden was sent to inspect these) on the towers at Ashburton, Buckland(probably Buckland Monachorum), Callington and Tavistock which were also built during the office of Bishop Lacy, the closest parallel being Ashburton. The other churches mentioned here are dated by reference to this unusually detailed documentary evidence of the work at Totnes. It elaborates on these predecessors to produce something which has given its name to the “Totnes type” (better described perhaps as a sub-type), perhaps copied for example at Littlehempston and Ipplepen (although the dating is very similar to Totnes and which came first is uncertain), which also have the stair turret on the south side and large pinnacles, often thought a Somerset motif. Ipplepen is indeed an interesting case for comparison, not only rebuilt at the same time and very similar in style and form, but also possessing a stone rood screen with parclose screens. As with the other towers mentioned above the 3-stage tower is sheer, with only the barest definition of the stages in the form of narrow continuous string-courses, simply moulded.
The west face has a continuously moulded depressed Renaissance doorway with quatrefoils in the spandrels within an earlier 4-pointed frame, presumably the original (15thcentury) doorway head. Above this is a large 4- light window with Perpendicular tracery. There is also a stone low down on a buttress in the south face with the letters IR, presumably commemorating some work in the reign of King James I (1603-25), and the west doorway may also be from this period. The east face, half hidden by the nave roof from most angles, has a 2- light pointed window which is clearly a Scott insertion replacing an earlier window, as has the north face. Above this in the east, west, and north faces is an original 3- light opening in Beer stone to the belfry stage, probably the only surviving medieval tracery in the church. These faces have set-back buttresses without weatherings.
The south (High Street) face is of symmetrical composition, with setback buttresses without weatherings flanking a central stair turret with crenellated parapet. The tower is capped by a crenellated parapet and large, polygonal crocketed pinnacles in what appears to be Bath stone or similar rising from the buttresses (most or all replaced at various times). There are single quatrefoil openings at regular intervals up the south face of the turret, and two pointed louvred belfry openings squeezed in between the turret and buttresses.
One aspect which is almost unique to Totnes is the apparent depiction of the benefactors or patrons of the new church in the tower facade itself. The three figures are set within tall rectangular niches, each under a tall ogee crocketed canopy under the string-course. There are carved lions heads as flanking corbels to each niche base. Above the string-course on all faces except the west rise engaged pinnacles, triangular in section.
In the central niche in the turret is what appears to be, most unusually for this period, the bust of a bearded man with a mitre with the inscription underneath “I mad thys tore” (or more probably fote), probably referring to Bishop Lacy whose devices also appears on the chancel screen inside and in the porch (although Cotton thought perhaps it represented God). This might then be the earliest medieval portrait bust surviving in England. It seems unlikely that the present appearance is the result of weathering and a coincidence, therefore either it is indeed unusual, or a fake created either deliberately or out of ignorance at some date after the Reformation. A detailed conservation report on this fascinating feature would be welcome.
The two figures flanking the turret are set into the buttresses in similar niches. On the left is the full but much eroded figure of a knight with crossed legs with his left hand on his sword, for whom the Earl of Devon (one wonders how the colourful and influential Thomas Courtenay, Earl of Devon 1414-1458 would have had the time to be involved) or St George have variously been proposed. Given that the town had formed a Guild of St George to collect money for the rebuilding of the church, the latter seems the most likely explanation. On the right is that of a seated robed figure for whom Prior Stoke has been put forward as a candidate. However, Cotton writing in 1850 thought it a woman, in which case the enthroned Virgin Mary as represented by the priory seal (see cover) is likely, and this would seem a reasonable interpretation. The eroded figure certainly has many similarities, the hands raised, seated on a throne, draped robe. Taken together are meant to symbolise the co-operation of priory, town and Bishop in rebuilding the church, and of its shared use. Little can be said here to add to this question, as all three figures are now very badly eroded.
The Nave
The aisled nave is of four bays. There is no clearstorey, but the nave roof is steeply pitched and is visible from most angles, whereby the shallow aisle roofs cannot be seen behind the aisle parapets. The two north aisles have a lead valley gutter between them with outlets at each end. All roofs have lead parapet gutters discharging through the walls to external hoppers.
The east and west ends are masked by the chancel and tower, so the nave is “buried” as seen from the outside. Since the interior is whitewashed, this makes it impossible to tell if any masonry from the pre-15th century building survives in the nave (the only possibility for such survival is in the tower arch and footings). The nave and north aisle may preserve or contain the footprint of its Norman predecessor.
The south aisle
The medieval south aisle has diagonal buttresses to the east end and buttresses to each bay, all of two weatherings. It has crenelated parapets in beer stone with gargoyles and moulded pyramid pinnacles to each bay, some of these restored. The medieval gargoyles are easily distinguishable, being severely eroded, from the fresher heads of the (perhaps) 17th century.
The fenestration of all aisle windows is of 4- light 4-centred pointed windows with complex Perpendicular tracery. The central mullion bifurcates to form the inner arms of two arches enclosing the pairs of outer lights, which meet as an ogee and then continue up framing pairs of lozenges. The window in the west wall of the aisle is a 3- light. There is a post-Reformation sundial in the western bay, a simple rectangular inscribed slate tablet with a copper gnomon. Under this a blank Ashburton stone tablet.
The North Aisle
The only part of the original north aisle which can be seen from the outside is the west end, which is pierced by a 3-light pointed window. This has mullions which continue unbroken into the head, similar to the window in the east wall of the outer north aisle. The tracery is badly eroded, which might be due to the presence of the boiler room adjacent to the west, with its modern concrete cap, an ugly intrusion. An octagonal stone outlet for this rises sheer at the junction of the two aisles, adjacent to the window.
The Outer North Aisle
The outer north aisle was added c 1824 and enlarged and remodelled circa1869. It has a separate, shallowly gabled roof covered in lead. As noted above the fabric and the fenestration has clearly been renewed throughout, in a grey stone quite distinct from the medieval masonry. It has a central octagonal stair turret, superfluous since the galleries inside were removed in 1903. It is crenellated in continuation of the aisle parapet in red sandstone, this parapet continues around the north chapel. There are two quatrefoil openings to light the stairs (copied from the tower), entry is through adoorway in the north face with an ogee head. These details belong to the Scott restoration.
The Chancel
The crenellated 3-bay chancel has setback buttresses of two weatherings. The large north-east buttress to the east wall would appear to contain masonry from another structure which the chancel abutted, and there is a short stretch of eroded dog-tooth carving set within it. A now partly blocked pointed tunnel-arch runs diagonally through the buttress. There is also a small blocked pointed doorway in the north wall above this, interpreted as a possible night-stair, for access for the prior and monks.
There are several 20th-century memorial tablets within the blocked passage arches. The east wall has a large 6-light east chancel window with Perpendicular tracery. One bay protrudes beyond the flanking chapels, this has a pointed 4-light window in each side wall. There is a medieval mass or scratch dial with a deep hole for the missing gnomon and radiating grooves on the eastern buttress of the south wall.
A vestry added in the Scott restoration occupies most of the north-west bay. This low flat-roofed block has minimal visual impact as was no doubt intended, its plain parapet at the height of the sills of the blocked chapel windows. The fenestration consists of a 3-light rectangular window in the east wall, the lights with cusped pointed heads, there is a simple pointed doorway in the north wall.
Side chapels
There are roughly symmetrical chancel aisle-chapels, both of two bays, which are structurally continuations of the nave aisles. The eastern bay of both as well as their east windows have been blocked, certainly in the post-medieval period, probably in the late 18thcentury; an 18th-century tablet with pediment is mounted within that to the south chapel. A small square 2-light with a thick unmoulded mullion was inserted through the blocked arch of the south chapel east wall, presumably to light a priest’s room (vestry) at this level. The others are still blind, the blocked pointed window frames are still visible. The surviving western windows are again of four lights, with similar tracery to the aisle windows.
There is a chamfered and partly blocked opening low in the north chapel north wall, perhaps allowing a view of the altar. Note the higher cill, lower head and narrower width to the blocked window. This is also the case with the south chapel windows. This would seem to point to Scott having replaced the original windows with larger, deeper ones. The reason for the discolouration (blackening) of the wall up to the plinth is unclear. This is not seen in the vestry, for example. The protruding east corner below the plinth has been chamfered to meet the vestry wall. The parapet was rebuilt by Scott. There are slate tablets along the foot of the north wall, 20th century.
Porch
Access to the church is through the fine gabled south porch, which is of two storeys topped with battlements and pinnacles and framed by diagonal buttresses of two weatherings. The external doorway is pointed with a 2-centred arch and enriched with carved paterae within a hollow chamfer. Above the doorway arch is a 2-light window in a square frame, the lights with cusped heads, lighting the upper room. The sharply pointed gable of grey stone above is carved with three shields, much eroded, the middle one is thought to be the Pomeroy arms, reflecting the fact that the patronage of the church lay with the Earls of Berry Pomeroy (Dukes of Somerset) from the 17th century. There is a stair turret in the east angle with the aisle, which rises slightly above the roof, with a hexagonal lead cap.
The Tower
The west tower arch is very tall and sharply pointed compared to the aisle arcades, but is clearly of the same construction phase and identical in moulding details. This may however be at least partly due to the fact that it is much renewed, the arch was in a “much mutilated” state (according to the 1866 appeal) before the restoration.
The upper part of the arch displays the tall white organ console, case, and organ pipes, the lower part of the arch is filled with Blacking’s 1959 dark-stained balcony with doorway under, with double doors opening to the tower space beneath. The floor of this space is laid with the ledger slabs removed by Scott from the main body of the church, mostly the chancel. They are of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries, some in the attractive veined Ashburton stone.
A simple pointed doorway with antique door gives access to the tower stair, which has clearly been restored. The ringing chamber is entered through a similar pointed doorway, with round-headed door. It is lined with ringing boards. The belfry stage is entered through another pointed arch. The ring of eight bells is housed in an iron frame. Above this one exits onto the lead-clad roof through a trapdoor, enjoying excellent views of the roofs and surrounding town. The lead has scratched graffiti, some recording repairs.
The Aisled Nave
Looking east from under the tower arch, the interior has more traces of the influence of Bishop Lacy, or perhaps better his cathedral. While Ashburton may have inspired the builders of the tower, the inspiration for the architecture of the interior was probably Exeter cathedral itself. This is most clearly demonstrated by the two defining features, the aisle arcades and the screen, or rather screens, as the main chancel screen is carried round as parclose screens to define the side chapels.
To describe the frame of the interior and the general impression before going into detail. The piers and arches of the arcades and tower arch are left bare stone. The nave aisle arcades are of Beer stone, pointed but only just so (segmental arches as in the windows). The moulded arches are carried on clustered piers of Pevsner’s Devon type B, that is quatrefoil, of four major shafts with minor shafts in the hollows as at Brixham (where the priory had possessions), with much in common with the style of those at the cathedral, despite the century between. The capitals barely interrupt the mouldings as they pass upwards into the arches, being of the appearance and effect of annulets (shaft-rings). The bases are octagonal with tall moulded bases.
There are boarded tunnel-vault roofs with gilded bosses in the nave and chancel, with cross-bracing like that in the porch in the latter of very high quality. The roof is continuous, there is no chancel arch, its place taken by the rood screen. The braces in the chancel are taken down to 11 plainly moulded stone corbels on each side, with angels bearing painted shields above the springing. The nave and aisles are of the same height, the nave aisle roofs flat. The outer north aisle is gabled.
All wall surfaces are whitewashed, and this and the ranks of bench pews which fill the nave and aisles are a defining feature of the visual appearance of the interior, though there are now gaps. The floors are of red and black quarry tiles, some of which are loose. Carpet has been laid at the west end of the south aisle in a reception area here, and there are gentle ramps leading east and north from here.
The large expanses of glass in the aisle and chancel walls helps to balance what could otherwise have been gloomy, the light reflected from the whitewashed walls. The many monuments mounted in rows and ranks on the walls give texture, so that the interior does not appear blank or stark, but mellow and mature.
The outer north aisle is split into zones, with a baptistery around the font at the west end lined with dark-stained benches, a middle zone with information stands, and a children’s chapel at the east end with altar table on a platform and a sitting area around the Blackhall monument in the eastern bays. The floor here is of beige brown artificial stone flags around the font, and woodblock elsewhere. This is all work of Blacking in the 1950s with later changes.
The Medieval Screens
The most significant single element of the furnishings and fittings in the church are the magnificent rood and parclose screens of Beer stone, a major architectural feature. These were erected in 1459-60 by order of the Corporation, who expressly directed that the chancel should be separated from the body of the church by a stone screen as in Exeter Cathedral; again, the influence of Bishop Lacy looms large.
The screens are considered among the finest in this material in Devon, noted for the richness of the tracery, niches, and tabernacle work. The rood screen consists of eight narrow, 2-light bays plus two for the doors to the nave; the sections separating the chancel chapels from the nave have three broader bays with depressed ogee arches, of which the middle ones serve as entrances. The aisle sections are of slightly different design but are contemporary, perhaps added a few years later. All have a coved frieze and thin cornice.
Around the chancel entrance are carved grapes and vine leaves, and over the doorway is a carved angel, suspended as it were from the centre of the arch. Amongst the gilded whorls at the interstices of the cornice tracery there are what appear to be knots descending from the bosses of the cornice vaulting, Bishop Lacy’s symbol. On the south door there are carved scallop shells on the jambs repeated several times; the possible significance of this has already been discussed.
The dado panels at one time held paintings, but these have been obliterated (or painted over?), doubtless after the Reformation. Much polychromy and gilding survives, and much of this would appear to be original, though the screen was restored in 1879; a conservation report on this nationally important screen would be welcome. The doors to the screens may possibly be the originals; this might be the subject of more research.
In front of the screen to the south of the central entrance is the large stone pulpit, not in its original position (described below). A fine Baroque brass candelabrum of 1701 hangs in front of the central entrance to the chancel.
The parclose screens are of also a slightly different design with simpler Perpendicular tracery, and no traces of colouring. They have a blank dado.
The Chancel
The eastern bay of the chancel is filled with the choir stalls, set facing each other across the entrance (collegiatewise). East of these, the stone rood stair turret is a notable feature in itself in rather an unusual position, being situated one bay inside the chancel on the north side. Generally these staircases are on the west side of the screen, and in a few instances on the east side, but close to the screen. Within this is a pointed doorway closed with a modern iron gate leading to a heavily restored staircase and steps. The turret is 5/8 in section, decorated and has niches. It is painted dark red with gilding, which may be of the Scott restoration. An arc is cut out of the wall above the staircase in the chancel, which would have allowed one to exit above to the loft gallery without banging one’s head.
There are three stone steps up to the sanctuary. The oak altar, reredos, the ornate piscina and plain sedilia in the south wall all date to the 1906 reordering, perhaps by John Oldrid Scott. Suffused with coloured light from the stained glass windows, this is not an unattractive scheme, though in no way exceptional.
The Vestry
Adjacent to the rood staircase is a doorway giving access to the Victorian vestry, however this doorway is clearly Medieval (it is shown in Bentall’s 1824 plan). The door frame is pointed (Victorian), set within a depressed arch (Medieval) through the thickness of the wall here. It gave access to the chancel from outside (to the north). The vestry itself has a flat panelled ceiling with moulded beams similar to that in the porch. There is an attractive stone fireplace in the north-west corner, no longer used.
The North Chapel
A blocked doorway previously leading up to the roof survives on the north wall of the north chapel just above the screen, from which it was reached; there is a bulge in the wall to accommodate the steps within. The chapel itself has a 15th-century piscina with ogee arched head and middle shelf in the south wall with traces of paint (behind this wall is the rood stair), and a tomb recess in the north wall. A glazed case in the recess contains the original Bishop Lacy Indulgence, a 17th-century bible and prayer book and explanatory notes. The adjacent external squint is now blocked and invisible from the inside. Today it has an altar table. The blocking of the north chapel windows and the external squint, and probably also the piscina in the north chapel (preserving it) suggest that the traditional functions of this chapel were also lost at the Reformation. A brass candelabrum of 1701 hangs here.
The South Chapel
This is now dedicated to St George and is kept as a chapel for private prayer. It has a squint in the wall to the chancel, see below, which though perhaps restored is certainly medieval.
Nominal: 571 Hz Weight: 3136 lbs Diameter: 54" Bell 1 of 8
Founded by John Warner & Sons 1863
Dove Bell ID: 6891 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Weight: 672 lbs Diameter: 31.5" Bell 2 of 8
Founded by Abraham II Rudhall 1732
Dove Bell ID: 43165 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Nominal: 1076 Hz Weight: 869 lbs Diameter: 33.13" Bell 3 of 8
Founded by Gillett & Johnston 1935
Dove Bell ID: 43166 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Weight: 952 lbs Diameter: 35.38" Bell 4 of 8
Founded by Abraham II Rudhall 1732
Dove Bell ID: 43167 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Weight: 1176 lbs Diameter: 38.63" Bell 5 of 8
Founded by John Warner & Sons 1897
Dove Bell ID: 43168 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Weight: 1400 lbs Diameter: 40.63" Bell 6 of 8
Founded by John Warner & Sons 1863
Dove Bell ID: 43169 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Weight: 1680 lbs Diameter: 43.38" Bell 7 of 8
Founded by Abraham II Rudhall 1732
Dove Bell ID: 43170 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Weight: 2352 lbs Diameter: 48.38" Bell 8 of 8
Founded by Abraham II Rudhall 1732
Dove Bell ID: 43171 Tower ID: 15167 - View Tower Listed: No Canons: Removed Cracked: No
Grid reference: SX 802 604
The church/building is consecrated.
The churchyard has been used for burial.
It is unknown whether the churchyard is used for burial.
The churchyard is closed for burial by order in council.
The date of the burial closure order is 13/09/1854
It is unknown whether the churchyard has war graves.
Caring for God's Acre is a conservation charity working to support groups and individuals to investigate, care for, and enjoy the wildlife and heritage treasures found within churchyards and other burial grounds. Look on their website for information and advice and please contact their staff directly. They can help you manage this churchyard for people and wildlife.
To learn more about all the species recorded against this church, go to the Burial Ground Portal within the NBN Atlas. You can check the spread of records through the years, discovering what has been recorded and when, plus what discoveries might remain to be uncovered.
There are no records of Ancient, Veteran or Notable Trees within the curtilage of this site.
| Renewable | Installed |
|---|---|
| Solar PV Panels | No |
| Solar Thermal Panels | No |
| Biomass | No |
| Wind Turbine | No |
| Air Source Heat Pump | No |
| Ground Source Heat Pump | No |
| Ev Charging | No |
There are no records of species within the curtilage of this site.
Caring for God's Acre is a conservation charity working to support groups and individuals to investigate, care for, and enjoy the wildlife and heritage treasures found within churchyards and other burial grounds. Look on their website for information and advice and please contact their staff directly. They can help you manage this churchyard for people and wildlife.
To learn more about all the species recorded against this church, go to the Burial Ground Portal within the NBN Atlas. You can check the spread of records through the years, discovering what has been recorded and when, plus what discoveries might remain to be uncovered.
More information on species and action to be taken upon discovery.
Caring for God's Acre is a conservation charity working to support groups and individuals to investigate, care for, and enjoy the wildlife and heritage treasures found within churchyards and other burial grounds. Look on their website for information and advice and please contact their staff directly. They can help you manage this churchyard for people and wildlife.
To learn more about all the species recorded against this church, go to the Burial Ground Portal within the NBN Atlas. You can check the spread of records through the years, discovering what has been recorded and when, plus what discoveries might remain to be uncovered.
If you notice something incorrect or missing, please explain it in the form below and submit it to our team for review.