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Christ Church, Wharton

Coordinates: 53°11′43″N 2°30′22″W / 53.195400°N 2.506000°W / 53.195400; -2.506000
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Christ Church, Wharton
Map
53°11′43″N 2°30′22″W / 53.195400°N 2.506000°W / 53.195400; -2.506000
LocationWinsford, Cheshire,
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
Previous denominationConservative Evangelical
WebsiteChurch website
History
StatusActive
Consecrated1843 (chapel of ease)
1849 and 1913 (church)
Architecture
Functional statusParish church
Architectural typeChurch
StyleGothic Revival
CompletedRebuilt 1849, with later additions
Construction cost£1,574 10s 7d (1849 building)
Specifications
Capacity350 (1849 seating capacity)
MaterialsBrick with red sandstone facing
Slate roof
Administration
ProvinceProvince of York
DioceseDiocese of Chester
Clergy
Vicar(s)The Revd Tim Hanson
Laity
Churchwarden(s)Matt Woolley and Jerry Warne

Christ Church, Wharton, is in the town of Winsford, Cheshire, England (grid reference SJ663665). It is an active evangelical Anglican parish church in the diocese of Chester, the archdeaconry of Chester and the deanery of Middlewich.

History

Christ Church, Wharton, traces its origins to an unconsecrated chapel of ease built c.1835 at the instigation of John Furnival, a curate of Davenham.[1] This was the first Anglican religious building in Wharton, and was built to be a challenge to the growth of Methodism in the district.[1] The chapel was located at Wharton Bridges. Its exact location is unknown, but Wharton Bridges was the original name of the road bridge on Wharton Road, crossing the London and North Western Railway.[2]

When the parish of Wharton was created in 1843, initially as a district of Davenham parish (it was not until 10 March 1860 that Wharton became a separate ecclesiastical parish),[1] the Wharton Bridges chapel was replaced by a new chapel of ease. It was built by James France-France, of Bostock Hall, Bostock, on Crook Lane, at its junction with School Road. The new chapel, called Christ's Church,[3] was consecrated on 26 June 1843 by the Bishop of Chester, John Bird Sumner.[1] A vicarage was built in 1848, formed from two cottages, at a cost of £673 14s.[1]

During the 1840s the population of Wharton increased by approximately 27 per cent, from 1,400 persons in 1841 to 1,775 persons in 1851,[4] and Christ's Church chapel of ease was soon considered too small for the parish. With money raised from public subscription, including gifts from Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld the Queen Mother (mother of Queen Victoria), John Bird Sumner (the newly appointed Archbishop of Canterbury)[1] and grants from the Church Building Societies, the chapel was substantially enlarged with a nave, chancel and bell tower. The old chapel of ease became the north and south transepts of the new building (called Christ Church), which provided seating on benches for 350 persons.[5] The cost of the rebuilding was £1,574 10s 7d, and the church was consecrated on 20 December 1849 by the Bishop of Chester, John Graham.[1]

In 1913 the chancel was extended, and the church was reconsecrated on 18 October 1913 by the Bishop of Chester, Francis Jayne.[1]

Present day

Two services are held on Sunday mornings, and a Communion service is held each Wednesday morning. The church employs a children's worker and a youth worker, and supports missionary groups Open Doors,[6] Gideons International,[7] and AICMAR (African Institute for Contemporary Mission and Research).[8]

Christ Church is within the Conservative Evangelical tradition of the Church of England. As a parish that rejects the leadership/ordination of women, it receives alternative episcopal oversight from the Bishop of Maidstone (currently Rod Thomas).[9]

Structure

The church is built in brick with a red sandstone facing and a slate roof. It is a small cruciform ("cross-shaped") building in the Gothic Revival (Perpendicular) style of Christian church architecture. At the north-west is a square bell tower, originally surmounted with four slender pinnacles[10] (removed at some time between 1874 and 1892).[11][12] The main entrance to the building is at the foot of the tower. A single bell was installed in the bell tower in the 1849 scheme, but was replaced with a peal of eight tubular bells in 1897, the gift of Mrs Lea of Winsford Lodge, Wharton, in honour of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.[13] The tower clock, made by the Shropshire company of JB Joyce & Co at a cost of £50[1] and installed in 1849, was the gift of saltworks proprietor John Dudley of Wharton Lodge, in memory of his wife, Elizabeth (a Latin inscription on the clock face records the gift).[12][14]

Fittings and furnishings

The church has a number of memorial windows in stained glass, most notable of which are the east window (to Revd John Lothian, died 1859 after being thrown from his horse[1]), and the west window (to Revd John Samuel Bage, died 1873). The north and south transepts contain large metal panels overpainted with the Lord's Prayer, the Creed, and the Ten Commandments. The painting is in the Gothic Revival style, and the panels are probably contemporary with the building of the church. The church has had three organs. The first, installed in 1849, was replaced by the second organ, c.1874.[11] This was replaced in 1920[1] by the present organ, the gift of Mrs Marion Newell in memory of her son, Sub-Lt Jack H.M. Newall, killed in action 13 November 1916, on the outskirts of Beaucourt-sur-l'Ancre, France, during the Battle of the Ancre.[15] His medals are on display next to the organ.[16] At the west end of the nave is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission headstone to Senior Aircraftsman Ian Shinner, killed in a Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) shooting at Roermond, the Netherlands, on May 2, 1988.[17] The interior was lit by gas until electric lights were installed in 1937.[1]

External features

On the approach to the main entrance is a war memorial, an oak crucifix on a stone base erected in 1920 at a cost of £280.[5] It records the names of 78 Wharton parishioners killed in action during World War I. The churchyard contains the war graves of five service personnel of World War I, and four of World War II.[18]

Clergy in the parish of Christ Church, Wharton

Minister Years in office Office
William Charles Dudley BA 1838–1840 Curate
Alleine Rogers 1840–1843 Curate
John Echlin Armstrong BA 1843–1845 Perpetual Curate
John Lowthian 1845–1859 Perpetual Curate (died in office)
John Samuel Bage MA 1859–1873 Perpetual Curate (died in office)
Thomas Davis 1873–1876 Perpetual Curate
Christopher Cay LL.B. 1876–1891 Perpetual Curate
Robert Eden Henley MA 1891–1933 Vicar (died in office)
William Alfred Edwards BA 1892–1893 Assistant Curate
Eric Medder Baden Southwell MA 1933–1938 Vicar
Duncan Baird 1938–1945 Vicar (Chaplain to the Forces 1940-45)
Kenneth Ashworth BA 1940–1947 Curate in Charge
William Alfred Edwards 1941 Assistant Curate
Idris Michael Evans 1941–1946 Curate in Charge
Kenneth Ashworth BA 1945–1946 Vicar
Thomas David Coleman Harrison 1947–1952 Vicar
Archibald Sholto Douglas MA 1952–1955 Vicar
Albert Brooks 1955–1962 Vicar
Thomas Albert Clarke 1962 Vicar (died in office)
Walford Oliver 1962–1972 Vicar
John Leslie Higgins BA M.Ed. 1972–1974 Vicar
John Alfred Minns 1974–1985 Vicar
Timothy David Herbert BA M.Phil. 1985–1993 Vicar
Dennis Tillotson 1986–1988 Assistant Curate (died in office)
Michael Leslie Eaman 1989–1993 Assistant Curate
Mark Andrew Pickles BA 1993–2000 Vicar
Timothy David Hanson BA 2000- Vicar
Thomas Annesley Watts MA M.Th. 2008-2012 Curate

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Back For The Future: Christ Church, Wharton, 1843-1993. Pamphlet published by Christ Church, Wharton, on the occasion of the Church's 150th anniversary. 1993.
  2. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 11 January 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ George Ormerod: History of the County Palatine and City of Chester, 2nd edition, Routledge, 1882
  4. ^ Township Pack series no. 76, Wharton, Cheshire County Council Libraries and Archives, 1997, quoting census data
  5. ^ a b Kelly's Directory, 1939
  6. ^ http://www.opendoorsuk.org/
  7. ^ http://www.gideons.org.uk/
  8. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 24 January 2009. Retrieved 8 January 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ "Spring Newsletter 2017" (pdf). bishopofmaidstone.org. 31 March 2017. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  10. ^ Bagshaw's Directory, 1850
  11. ^ a b Morris & Co's Directory, 1874
  12. ^ a b Kelly's Directory, 1892
  13. ^ Manchester Evening News, 18 June 1897
  14. ^ Robert Curzon: Winsford and Wharton in Times Past (Chorley: Countryside Publications, 1986, p30)
  15. ^ http://www.channel4.com/history/microsites/L/lostgeneration/search/m-record.jsp?id=73233
  16. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 3 February 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ http://www.palacebarracksmemorialgarden.org/Royal%20Air%20Force.htm
  18. ^ WHARTON (CHRIST CHURCH) CHURCHYARD, Commonwealth War Graves Commission, retrieved 4 February 2013