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St Michael's Church, Sutton Bonington

Coordinates: 52°49′26″N 1°15′11″W / 52.824°N 1.253°W / 52.824; -1.253
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52°49′26″N 1°15′11″W / 52.824°N 1.253°W / 52.824; -1.253

St. Michael's Church
The church as viewed from Main Street
Map
LocationMain Street, Bonington
DenominationChurch of England
History
Statusparish church
(United with St. Anne's)
DedicationSt. Michael
Architecture
Functional statusactive
Heritage designationGrade II*
Listed building
Designated13 Oct 1966
Administration
ProvinceYork
DioceseSouthwell and Nottingham
ParishSutton Bonington
(pre-1923: Bonington)
Clergy
Priest in chargeRevd. Michael BROCK
Laity
Churchwarden(s)Mrs B Clarke
Miss S Ward

St. Michael's Church is a parish church in the Church of England in Sutton Bonington, Nottinghamshire.

The church is a 13th-century Grade II* Listed building.[1]

History

The church viewed from the rear

Sutton Bonington has two medieval churches, a result of the merging of the two original villages (Sutton and Bonington); they are St. Michael's Church (Bonington's church) and St Anne's Church (Sutton's church, located down St Anne's Lane).[1] St Michael's is the larger (and much taller) of the two churches.

The two ancient ecclesiastical parishes of Sutton and Bonington were united for civil purposes in 1829 and combined in 1923 into one ecclesiastical parish (with one rector appointed from 1950).[2] St. Michael's Rectory, situated on the other side of the Midland Main Line, is now used by the University of Nottingham, who have a large campus just north of the village, to house postgraduate students. Related to the situation of the two original parishes, Sutton and Bonington are separate manors, named after their churches — St. Anne and St. Michael respectively.

1814 Sutton Bonington parish register safe

Present day

Regular services continue to be held in both churches. The current priest in charge (for both churches in Sutton Bonington) is Glenn Martin, who is also the priest in charge of the neighbouring parish of Normanton on Soar (with its Grade I Church of St. James).

Bells

The tall church tower has a peal of six bells. Originally the peal consisted of just three bells, cast by Henry Oldfield's foundry in Nottingham, two of which remain; the oldest dates back to 1579 and is the second oldest bell in Nottinghamshire. Two more bells were added in 1849/50 and a sixth bell in 1977 purchased for the sum of £320 from St Andrews church Watton at Stone Hertfordshire[3] to commemorate the Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II. The weights of the bells range from 4cwts 86 lbs (treble) to 17cwts 97 lbs (tenor). The installation has recently been restored by John Taylor & Co, a large bell foundry in nearby Loughborough who cast a number of the bells.[4] The bells are rung for Sunday morning services and at fortnightly practice sessions.

References

  1. ^ a b Rushcliffe Borough Council Archived 2010-12-30 at the Wayback Machine Conservation Areas: Sutton Bonington
  2. ^ Sutton Bonington Local History Society Archived 2009-05-11 at the Wayback Machine Remember Sutton Bonington
  3. ^ Parish Magazine, Parish Lines September 2013 Page 9/10
  4. ^ Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers Sutton Bonington