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The Wreay cross is not a replica of the Bewcastle cross, it differs in style and detail.
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The church, designed and built in [[basilica]] form in 1840–42 by the local landowner [[Sara Losh|Sara or Sarah Losh]], exhibits an original style which she called "early [[Anglo-Saxon architecture|Saxon]] or modified [[Lombard architecture|Lombard]]". It makes striking use of carved plant and animal motifs. As the church website points out, "St Mary’s embodies many of the attributes of the [[Arts and Crafts Movement]] and yet predates it by some 50 years."<ref>St Mary's Church, Wreay. [http://www.stmaryswreay.org/the_church.html Retrieved 20 October 2012.]]</ref> The carvings embody symbolism that "refers to death, rebirth and eternity, drawing upon Christian, pagan and personal references.<ref>St Mary's Church, Wreay. [http://www.stmaryswreay.org/symbolism.html Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> It is a Grade II* listed building.<ref>British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77610-church-of-st-mary-st-cuthbert-without-cum Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> The church replaced a small medieval chapel on a different site, which had become dilapidated by the 1830s.<ref>St Mary's Church, Wreay. [http://www.stmaryswreay.org/index.html Retrieved 20 October 2012]; [[Jenny Uglow|Uglow, Jenny]] (2012): ''The Pinecone'' (London: Faber) ISBN 978-0-571-269501; [[Rosemary Hill]]: "Against Michelangelo", ''London Review of Books'', 11 October 2012 (reviewing Uglow's book); English Lakes. [http://www.english-lakes.com/wreay.htm Retrieved 20 October 2012.]; Visit Cumbria. http://www.visitcumbria.com/car/wreay.htm Retrieved 15 October 2012.]</ref> Recent repairs and restoration of the church have involved relaying sandstone roof slabs, internal redecoration, installation of a new heating and lighting system and the construction of a new vestry.<ref>Architects Plus. [http://www.architectsplus.co.uk/st-marys-church-wreay-cumbria Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> The church received a private visit from HRH [[Charles, Prince of Wales|Prince Charles]] in 2009.<ref>English Lakes...</ref>
The church, designed and built in [[basilica]] form in 1840–42 by the local landowner [[Sara Losh|Sara or Sarah Losh]], exhibits an original style which she called "early [[Anglo-Saxon architecture|Saxon]] or modified [[Lombard architecture|Lombard]]". It makes striking use of carved plant and animal motifs. As the church website points out, "St Mary’s embodies many of the attributes of the [[Arts and Crafts Movement]] and yet predates it by some 50 years."<ref>St Mary's Church, Wreay. [http://www.stmaryswreay.org/the_church.html Retrieved 20 October 2012.]]</ref> The carvings embody symbolism that "refers to death, rebirth and eternity, drawing upon Christian, pagan and personal references.<ref>St Mary's Church, Wreay. [http://www.stmaryswreay.org/symbolism.html Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> It is a Grade II* listed building.<ref>British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77610-church-of-st-mary-st-cuthbert-without-cum Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> The church replaced a small medieval chapel on a different site, which had become dilapidated by the 1830s.<ref>St Mary's Church, Wreay. [http://www.stmaryswreay.org/index.html Retrieved 20 October 2012]; [[Jenny Uglow|Uglow, Jenny]] (2012): ''The Pinecone'' (London: Faber) ISBN 978-0-571-269501; [[Rosemary Hill]]: "Against Michelangelo", ''London Review of Books'', 11 October 2012 (reviewing Uglow's book); English Lakes. [http://www.english-lakes.com/wreay.htm Retrieved 20 October 2012.]; Visit Cumbria. http://www.visitcumbria.com/car/wreay.htm Retrieved 15 October 2012.]</ref> Recent repairs and restoration of the church have involved relaying sandstone roof slabs, internal redecoration, installation of a new heating and lighting system and the construction of a new vestry.<ref>Architects Plus. [http://www.architectsplus.co.uk/st-marys-church-wreay-cumbria Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> The church received a private visit from HRH [[Charles, Prince of Wales|Prince Charles]] in 2009.<ref>English Lakes...</ref>


Near the church is a Grade II listed mausoleum designed by Sara Losh and erected in 1850 in memory of her sister Katharine (1787–1817).<ref>British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77611-wreay-churchyard-losh-mausoleum-st-cuthbe Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> Plans to restore the Grade II chapel of rest designed by Sara Losh were announced in 2012.<ref>BBC News. [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cumbria-18708231 Retrieved 15 October 2012.]; British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77609-mortuary-chapel-st-cuthbert-without-cumbr Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> Next to the mausoleum is a Grade II replica of the Saxon Bewcastle Cross, erected by Sara Losh in 1835 in memory of her parents, John and Isabella Losh.<ref>British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77612-cross-in-wreay-churchyard-st-cuthbert-wit Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> Also by Sara Losh is the Grade II sexton's cottage.<ref>British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77608-sexton-s-cottage-st-cuthbert-without-cumb Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref>
Near the church is a Grade II listed mausoleum designed by Sara Losh and erected in 1850 in memory of her sister Katharine (1787–1817).<ref>British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77611-wreay-churchyard-losh-mausoleum-st-cuthbe Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> Plans to restore the Grade II chapel of rest designed by Sara Losh were announced in 2012.<ref>BBC News. [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cumbria-18708231 Retrieved 15 October 2012.]; British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77609-mortuary-chapel-st-cuthbert-without-cumbr Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> Next to the mausoleum is a Grade II listed reconstruction of the Saxon Bewcastle Cross, erected by Sara Losh around 1835, possibly in memory of her parents, John and Isabella Losh.<ref>British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77612-cross-in-wreay-churchyard-st-cuthbert-wit Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref> but with an inscription apparently referring to the recent loss of her sister.<ref>Matthews, S. 2007. ''Sarah Losh and Wreay Church''; Bookcase, Carlisle</ref> Also by Sara Losh is the Grade II listed sexton's cottage.<ref>British Listed Buildings. [http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-77608-sexton-s-cottage-st-cuthbert-without-cumb Retrieved 20 October 2012.]</ref>


==Heritage==
==Heritage==

Revision as of 12:36, 14 January 2013

Wreay (/[invalid input: 'icon']ˈrə/ REE)[1] is a small village in Cumbria, incorporated in 1934 into the Carlisle parish of St Cuthbert Without. It lies on the River Petteril. The M6 motorway, A6 trunk road and West Coast Main Line railway all skirt the village.

Church

Wreay is noted for St Mary's Church, an adjacent mausoleum, and a copy of the 7th-century Bewcastle Cross.

The church, designed and built in basilica form in 1840–42 by the local landowner Sara or Sarah Losh, exhibits an original style which she called "early Saxon or modified Lombard". It makes striking use of carved plant and animal motifs. As the church website points out, "St Mary’s embodies many of the attributes of the Arts and Crafts Movement and yet predates it by some 50 years."[2] The carvings embody symbolism that "refers to death, rebirth and eternity, drawing upon Christian, pagan and personal references.[3] It is a Grade II* listed building.[4] The church replaced a small medieval chapel on a different site, which had become dilapidated by the 1830s.[5] Recent repairs and restoration of the church have involved relaying sandstone roof slabs, internal redecoration, installation of a new heating and lighting system and the construction of a new vestry.[6] The church received a private visit from HRH Prince Charles in 2009.[7]

Near the church is a Grade II listed mausoleum designed by Sara Losh and erected in 1850 in memory of her sister Katharine (1787–1817).[8] Plans to restore the Grade II chapel of rest designed by Sara Losh were announced in 2012.[9] Next to the mausoleum is a Grade II listed reconstruction of the Saxon Bewcastle Cross, erected by Sara Losh around 1835, possibly in memory of her parents, John and Isabella Losh.[10] but with an inscription apparently referring to the recent loss of her sister.[11] Also by Sara Losh is the Grade II listed sexton's cottage.[12]

Heritage

The chapel was recorded in William Hutchinson’s directory of Cumberland, published in 1738: "The chapel of Wrea, in the parish of St Cuthbert is as ancient, at least, as the reign of King Henry II, for in the year 1319 Bishop Halton allowed a chaplain to it to attend divine office on condition that he resided upon the place.... The chapelry consists of the villages of Wrea of 20 families and Newbiggin."[13]

An entry for the village appeared in 1870–72, in John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales: "WREAY, a chapelry in Carlisle-St. Mary parish, Cumberland; on the Lancaster and Carlisle railway, 5½ miles SSE of Carlisle. It has a post-office under Carlisle, and a r. station. Acres, 1,088. Real property, £1,967. Pop., 166. Houses, 31. The property is divided among a few. The living is a p. curacy in the diocese of Carlisle. Value, £86.* Patrons, the Dean and Chapter of Carlisle. The church was built in 1739 [sic; 1839?]. There is a partially endowed school."[14]

Scalesheugh Hall, which stands near the church, dates from 1746 and was enlarged in 1913–14. It now houses a residential home for cerebral palsy sufferers.[15] There are the remains of a Roman fort at Park Farm House half a mile NE of the village, to the west of the Roman road from York to Carlisle.[16]

The pub restaurant, the Plough Inn, has been the meeting place at Candlemas since the 1660s of local trustees known as the Twelve Men of Wreay, Originally local landowners, they contributed to the upkeep of the church, appointed and paid the salary of the priest-cum-schoolmaster, and acted as guardians of the poor. The Twelve, who second new members as required, still meet annually. Traditionally they would eat a meal of bread, cheese, oatcake, butter and ale, smoke long clay pipes, tell tales of bygone days, and sing songs.[17] The institution of the Twelve Men was the subject of a local television report in 2011.[18]

Visitors to the Plough on Shrove Tuesday 1790 were the local landowner and industrialist John Losh (died 1814), father of Sara and resident at the mansion of Woodside, three miles up the road, Charles Howard, 11th Duke of Norfolk, Losh's brother James, and his cousin Joseph Liddell. They began the custom of annually electing a Mayor of Wreay, but this was abolished 90 years later due to rowdyism.[19]

There is a path from the village to Wreay Woods Nature Reserve, a remnant of a much larger expanse of woodland alongside the River Petteril, managed by the Cumbria Wildlife Trust.[20]

Facilities

The village primary school had 70 pupils in 2011, when it received a very positive school inspectors' report.[21]

The village has an equestrian centre.[22]

Wreay railway station, on what became the West Coast Main Line, opened in 1843 but closed in 1953.[23]

External resources

References

  1. ^ G.M. Miller, BBC Pronouncing Dictionary of British Names (London: Oxford University Press, 1971), p. 164.
  2. ^ St Mary's Church, Wreay. Retrieved 20 October 2012.]
  3. ^ St Mary's Church, Wreay. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  4. ^ British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  5. ^ St Mary's Church, Wreay. Retrieved 20 October 2012; Uglow, Jenny (2012): The Pinecone (London: Faber) ISBN 978-0-571-269501; Rosemary Hill: "Against Michelangelo", London Review of Books, 11 October 2012 (reviewing Uglow's book); English Lakes. Retrieved 20 October 2012.; Visit Cumbria. http://www.visitcumbria.com/car/wreay.htm Retrieved 15 October 2012.]
  6. ^ Architects Plus. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  7. ^ English Lakes...
  8. ^ British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  9. ^ BBC News. Retrieved 15 October 2012.; British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  10. ^ British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  11. ^ Matthews, S. 2007. Sarah Losh and Wreay Church; Bookcase, Carlisle
  12. ^ British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  13. ^ The Plough Inn site. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  14. ^ A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  15. ^ British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 20 October 2012. The Grade II listing includes the note, "There is no physical evidence for the 1684 date over the archway to the farmhouse, and this may refer to references to the family. The house was built in 1913 to 1914 for John R Harrison by the Glasgow architect Alexander N Paterson."
  16. ^ Visit Cumbria...
  17. ^ The Plough Inn...
  18. ^ BBC News Cumbria. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  19. ^ The Plough Inn...
  20. ^ Visit Cumbria. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  21. ^ Ofsted report. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  22. ^ Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  23. ^ R. V. J. Butt (1995): The Directory of Railway Stations (Sparkford, Somerset, UK: Patrick Stephens Ltd). ISBN 978-1-85260-508-7.