Showing posts with label Wednesbury. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wednesbury. Show all posts

24 August 2024

Daily prayer in Ordinary Time 2024:
106, Saturday 24 August 2024,
Saint Bartholomew the Apostle

Saint Bartholomew the Apostle … a statue on the west front of Lichfield Cathedral (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Patrick Comerford

We are continuing in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar and tomorrow is the Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity (Trinity XIII).

The Church Calendar today celebrates the feast of Saint Bartholomew the Apostle (24 August).

Before today begins, I am taking some quiet time this morning to give thanks, for reflection, prayer and reading in these ways:

1, today’s Gospel reading;

2, a reflection on the Gospel reading;

3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary;

4, the Collects and Post-Communion prayer of the day.

A statue of Saint Bartholomew above the south porch of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Luke 22: 24-30 (NRSVA):

24 A dispute also arose among them as to which one of them was to be regarded as the greatest. 25 But he said to them, ‘The kings of the Gentiles lord it over them; and those in authority over them are called benefactors. 26 But not so with you; rather the greatest among you must become like the youngest, and the leader like one who serves. 27 For who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one at the table? But I am among you as one who serves.

28 ‘You are those who have stood by me in my trials; 29 and I confer on you, just as my Father has conferred on me, a kingdom, 30 so that you may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom, and you will sit on thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel.’

Damien Hirst’s sculpture of Saint Bartholomew, ‘Exquisite Pain’, in Saint Bartholomew the Great Church, Smithfield, London (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Today’s Reflection:

The Church Calendar today celebrates Saint Bartholomew the Apostle (24 August). Exciting Holiness recalls that it has long been assumed that Bartholomew is the same as Nathanael, ‘though it is not a certainty’.

The gospels speak of Philip bringing Nathanael to Jesus, who calls him an Israelite worthy of the name. He is also present beside the Sea of Galilee at the resurrection. Although he seems initially a somewhat cynical man, he recognises Jesus for who he is and proclaims him as Son of God and King of Israel.

Bartholomew is listed iamong the Twelve in the three Synoptic Gospels: Matthew, Mark and Luke, and in Acts of the Apostles. But, apart from the narrative about Nathanael, we are keft with silence when it comes to the story of Bartholomew.

One of my favourite walks in silence in the English countryside is along Cross in Hand Lane, which starts at the back of the Hedgehog Vintage Inn in Lichfield and leads to Farewell and Saint Bartholomew’s Church, on the northern fringe of Lichfield.

This walk along Cross in Hand Lane marks the beginning – or the end – of the pilgrim route between the shrine of Saint Chad in Lichfield and the shrine of Saint Werburgh in Chester Cathedral.

Today, this pilgrim route is marked out as the Two Saints’ Way. And little has changed in the landscape along this route since mediaeval times. The road twists and turns, rises and falls, with countryside that has changed little over the centuries.

At this time of the year, the fields are green and golden under the clear blue skies of summer. There are horses in paddocks here, or cows there, and most of the land is arable or being used for grazing.

Although farming patterns have changed in the last 30 or 40 years, these fields may not have changed in shape or altered in their use for centuries, and even the names on new-built houses can reflect names that date back to a period in the 12th to 14th century.

Apart from the occasional passing car or van, one other walker and two cyclists, the only hints of modernity are the overhead pylons, and until their demolition last year the smoking towers of the power station in Rugeley could be glimpsed in the distance.

This walk often offers me opportunities to clear out the cobwebbed corners of my brain and (hopefully) my soul, and allows me time to enjoy this walk as this walk and as nothing more.

I have stopped to admire the shapes and patterns of the fields and the trees. I have stopped in silence at the babbling brook. I have stopped to look at Farewell Mill. The local historian Kate Gomez suggests the name has nothing to do with saying goodbye and points out that the alternative spelling of ‘Fairwell’ refers to a nearby ‘fair or clear spring.’

Often as priests, we think we should be filling the silent spaces in time with intense prayers and thoughts about sermons and services that need preparation. But sometimes we need to just let go and empty our minds, our thoughts – even our prayers. We take everything else to be recycled as we clear out spaces in our houses, our offices, our studies and our garden sheds. But we seldom give time to clearing out the clutter in our inner spiritual spaces, allowing them to benefit from recycling.

Silence is prayer in itself, on its own, alone.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Farewell … at the end of a walk along Cross in Hand Lane from the Hedgehog Vintage Inn in Lichfield (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Today’s Prayers (Saturday 24 August 2024, Feast of Saint Bartholomew the Apostle):

The theme this week in ‘Pray With the World Church,’ the Prayer Diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), has been ‘What price is the Gospel?’ This theme was introduced on Sunday with a programme update from Dr Jo Sadgrove, Research and Learning Advisor, USPG.

The USPG Prayer Diary today (Saturday 24 August 2024, Feast of Saint Bartholomew the Apostle) invites us to pray:

We pray for all institutions whose patron is the Apostle Bartholomew, saint and martyr.

The Collect:

Almighty and everlasting God,
who gave to your apostle Bartholomew grace
truly to believe and to preach your word:
grant that your Church
may love that word which he believed
and may faithfully preach and receive the same;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

The Post Communion Prayer:

Almighty God,
who on the day of Pentecost
sent your Holy Spirit to the apostles
with the wind from heaven and in tongues of flame,
filling them with joy and boldness to preach the gospel
: by the power of the same Spirit
strengthen us to witness to your truth
and to draw everyone to the fire of your love;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Collect on the Eve of Trinity XIII:

Almighty God,
who called your Church to bear witness
that you were in Christ reconciling the world to yourself:
help us to proclaim the good news of your love,
that all who hear it may be drawn to you;
through him who was lifted up on the cross,
and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

The glass panels in Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Dromcollogher, Co Limerick, depict scenes from the life of Saint Bartholomew, including the calling of Saint Nathaniel (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Yesterday’s reflection

Continued tomorrow

Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicised Edition copyright © 1989, 1995, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org

Saint Bartholomew’s Church at the junction of Clyde Road and Elgin Road in Ballsbridge, Dublin (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

22 August 2024

How Saint Mary’s Church in
Handsworth has links with
the Industrial Revolution …
and the Comberford family

Saint Mary’s Church, Handsworth, also known as Handsworth Old Church, is sometimes described as the ‘Cathedral of the Industrial Revolution’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Patrick Comerford

When I was in Birmingham last week, after finding the tomb of William Holte in Saint Peter and Saint Paul Church in Aston, with its early depiction of a Comberford coat-of-arms, I decided to walk from Aston to Handsworth, where Saint Mary’s Church is associated with some members of the Comberford family through intermarriage with the Stanford family.

The Stanford and Comberford families were among the leading ‘conforming Catholic’ families in Staffordshire, and in the post-Reformation decades in the second half of the 16th century, the River Tame was like a Tudor motorway, providing easy access between the Comberford and Stanford manors in Wednesbury, Handsworth, Perry Barr, Kingsbury, the Moat House in Tamworth and Comberford Hall.

Saint Mary’s Church, Handsworth, also known as Handsworth Old Church, is a Grade II* listed building beside Handsworth Park, formerly Victoria Park, and is close to the Birmingham Outer Circle.

The church is sometimes described as the ‘Cathedral of the Industrial Revolution’, and Saint Mary’s is the burial place of key figures in the Industrial Revolution in Birmingham and the Midlands, including James Watt, Matthew Boulton and William Murdoch, members of the Lunar Society.

Handsworth was originally in the Diocese of Lichfield until it was transferred to the Diocese of Birmingham, and it was in Staffordshire until it was transferred to Warwickshire and became part of Birmingham in 1911.

The west end of Saint Mary’s Church, Handsworth … the church dates back to at least 1160 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Despite its strong connections with the Industrial Revolution, the earliest parish register for Saint Mary’s begins in 1558, and the church dates back to at least 1160. The Manor of Handsworth is even older and existed since Saxon times, so there may have been an earlier timber church in Handsworth.

The first stone church on the site of Saint Mary’s was built ca 1160, when a priest was recorded in Handsworth. It was a small and austere Norman structure, filling about half the site of the present south aisle. The few surviving Norman features of the church can be seen at the lower stages of the sandstone tower at the east end of the original church.

Saint Mary’s Church was enlarged in the 14th century. The tower, which has six bells, is in the decorated style of the reign of Edward III, like the other remaining parts of the ancient fabric. In the chancel are two effigies of members of the Wyrley family, and an ancient piscina.

William de Wirleia was Rector of Handsworth in 1228, and remained there until he died in 1247. He is the earliest recorded member of the Wyrley family in Handsworth.

The tower of Saint Mary’s Church, which was enlarged in the 14th century (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

All the manors in Handsworth were held by a single succession of overlords in the early Middle Ages. William FitzAnsculf held Birmingham, Edgbaston, Aston, Erdington, Witton, Handsworth, Perry Barr and Little Barr in 1086. His successors were lords of other manors in Aston parish – Bordesley, Little Bromwich, Duddeston, Saltley and Nechells – that were first named in the 12th or 13th century. The estates and Dudley Castle passed to the Paynel family, and from them to successive members of the Somery family until John de Somery died in 1322.

The Somery family shared their interests in Handsworth Manor with the Parles family, whose estates and wealth were eventually inherited by an heiress Anne Parles, who married John Comberford (ca 1440-1508), of Comberford Hall, who was a Justice of the Peace and MP for Staffordshire 1502-1508. John Comberford’s sister Margaret married William Holte (ca 1430-post 1498).

As for the Somery family, when John de Somery died in 1322, his co-heirs were his sisters: Dudley and the manors of Birmingham, Perry Barr and Little Barr went to Margaret, wife of John de Sutton, while Handsworth Manor, Edgbaston Manor and the manors in Aston parish went to Joan, widow of Thomas Botetourt.

Handsworth Manor then passed through the Botetourt and Beauchamp families to Joan Beauchamp’s son, James Butler (1420-1461), 5th Earl of Ormond, who was beheaded as a Lancastrian in 1461. Butler’s estates and interests were recovered eventually and in time passed to his youngest brother, Thomas Butler (1426-1515), 7th Earl of Ormond – grandfather of Anne Boylen – and from him to his daughter Lady Anne Butler (1455-1533) and her husband Sir James St Leger, and to their grandson John St Leger in 1519.

John St Leger sold Handsworth Manor in 1555 to Sir William Stanford (1509-1558), Justice of Common Pleas and MP for Stafford and Newcastle-under-Lyme. He consolidated his links with Staffordshire by buying the neighbouring Manor of Perry Barr and Manor of Handsworth, which he bought from Sir John St Leger, who had inherited the estate through his descent from James Butler, 5th Earl of Ormond.

Sir Robert Stanford (1540-1607), succeeded to Handsworth Manor and Perry Barr, and built Perry Hall in 1576 (Image: Lost Heritage)

Stebbing Shaw in his History of Staffordshire (vol 2, p 108) says Sir William Stanford married Elizabeth Comberford, a daughter of Thomas Comberford (1530-1597) of Comberford Hall and Wednesbury and his wife Dorothy, daughter of William Wyrley of Hampstead in Handsworth. However, most authorities agree William’s wife was Alice Palmer, daughter of John Palmer of Kentish Town, Middlesex.

Shaw appears to have confused her with a much later Elizabeth Comberford who married William Stanford of Packington, a first cousin twice removed of the judge. This Elizabeth Comberford was a daughter of Thomas Comberford (1472-1532) and Dorothy Fitzherbert; she was a sister of Humphrey Comberford of Comberford Hall, Canon Henry Comberford, Precentor of Lichfield, and Richard Comberford, sometimes (confusingly) identified as the ancestor of the Comerford family of Co Kilkenny and Co Wexford.

Sir William Stanford of Handsworth and Handsworth and Anne Palmer were the parents of six sons and three daughters. His eldest son, Sir Robert Stanford (1540-1607), succeeded to Handsworth Manor and Perry Barr, and built Perry Hall in 1576.

Robert Stanford’s eldest son, Edward Stanford, who succeeded to Handsworth Manor and Perry Hall in 1607, was a witness to a Comberford family deed in 1599 signed by William Comberford of Tamworth and his brothers John Comberford and Thomas Comberford. Edward Stanford died in 1632 and was succeeded in turn by his son William Stanford.

One of Sir Robert Stanford’s daughters, Mary, married Humphrey Comberford, on 30 January 1591. Humphrey Comberford died at Comberford during his father’s lifetime, and he was buried in Saint Editha’s, Tamworth, on 6 August 1609.

William Comberford (1594-1653) was baptised in 1595 in Saint Mary’s Church, Handsworth, where his mother’s brother, the Revd Henry Stanford, was the Rector in 1604-1608 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Mary (Stanford) and Humphrey Comberford were the parents of five sons and four daughters. Their eldest son, William Comberford (ca 1593/1594-1653), was born ca 1593/1594, and was baptised on 8 February 1594/5 in Saint Mary’s Church, Handsworth, where later his mother’s brother, the Revd Henry Stanford, son of Sir William Stanford, was the Rector in 1604-1608.

William Comberford inherited Comberford Hall 1611, and his grandfather William Comberford died in 1625. At the Visitation of Warwickshire he was described as ‘de Cumberford et Kingsberrow’ or Kingsbury, Warwickshire, a reference to his interest in one-ninth of the manor of Mancetter within the Parish of Kingsbury.

When his grandfather died in 1625, William Comberford as his heir succeeded to the Comberford family estates. But he did not take possession of them as the bulk of the estates, including the Moat House in Lichfield Street, Tamworth, and the Manor of Wednesbury, had been leased in trust by his grandfather to his uncle William Comberford.

William Comberford died in 1653, perhaps at the Marshalsea in Southwark. Although he asked in his will to be buried in the Comberford family vault in Saint Editha’s Church, Tamworth, it appears he was buried at Saint George the Martyr, Southwark.

William Comberford’s next brother, the second son of Mary (Stanford) and Humphrey Comberford, was Robert Comberford (ca 1594-1671) of Comberford Hall, the last of the senior line of the family to live at Comberford Hall, although his widow Catherine (Bates) continued to live there until she died in 1718.

The fourth son of Mary (Stanford) and Humphrey Comberford, John Comberford (ca 1597-(ca 1666), lived in Handsworth, until he inherited Wednesbury after the death of his eldest brother, William Comberford, in 1653. After settling ‘all my lands in Wednesbury’ on trustees, he appears to have paid off the outstanding debts on the estate and sold it ca 1656 to a distant cousin, John Shelton of West Bromwich. John Comberford’s will is dated 1657, but he was still living in 1664, and died ca 1666.

A daughter of Mary (Stanford) and Humphrey Comberford, Elizabeth Comberford, also lived in Handsworth. She is named in the wills of her brothers William and Robert Comberford, and she died ca 1677.

Meanwhile, Sir Henry Gough bought Perry Hall in 1669, and it stayed with the Gough and Gough-Calthorpe family many generations.

The churchyard at Saint Mary’s Church, Handsworth, has many graves of local historical importance (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Until the Industrial Revolution, Handsworth was a large rural parish with a population widely dispersed in farms and cottages. As a Staffordshire country church placed at the convergence of several cross country tracks, Saint Mary’s became a significant place in the life of Birmingham as it developed into the largest industrial city in Britain.

James Watt (1736-1819), who lived in Handsworth, is remembered as the inventor of the steam engine. Matthew Boulton (1728-1809) applied his engineering talent in 1774 to Watt’s ideas, and Boulton and Watt became leading figures in the Industrial Revolution. William Murdoch (1754-1839), another engineer, became a partner of Boulton and Watt. He perfected gas lighting and the high-pressure steam engine. All three have monuments in the church.

James Watt was buried in the grounds of Saint Mary’s, but when the church was rebuilt and enlarged in 1820, his tomb was inside the church. A groined chapel was designed by Thomas Rickman and built over Watt’s tomb On the south side, and includes a white marble statue of Watt by Francis Legatt Chantrey.

More factories followed, and Handsworth continued to expand throughout the 19th century. This growth was further encouraged by the arrival of the railway, with stations opening at Handsworth in 1837 and Perry Barr in 1854.

From 1860 to 1873, the Revd Herbert Richard Peel, a nephew of Sir Robert Peel MP, was the Rector of Handsworth. To accommodate the growing population, Saint Mary’s was expanded in 1870, and several new churches were built in the parish, including: Saint John’s, Perry Barr (1833), Saint James’, Handsworth (1838-1840), Saint Michael’s, Handsworth (1855), Holy Trinity, Birchfield (1864), Saint Paul’s Hamstead (1892-1894), and Saint Andrew’s, Handsworth (1909).

The site of Handsworth Rectory is now the large pond in Handsworth Park (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

Handsworth Rectory was sold in 1891, was demolished in the 1890s and the site later became the large pond in Victoria Park, now Handsworth Park.

As for Perry Hall, built in 1576 by Sir Robert Stanford, the father of Mary (Stanford) Comberford, it had been abandoned as a family residence by 1919. Birmingham Corporation was having financial troubles in the 1920s, and had to choose between saving Aston Hall and nearby Perry Hall. Aston Hall was saved, Perry Hall was demolished in 1931, and the stables and the last remaining lodge were demolished in 1935. The site of the house and estate is now Perry Playing Fields is and the boating pool is part of the former moat of Perry Hall.

Saint Mary’s churchyard includes the graves of two key figures in the story of football: William McGregor, a director of Aston Villa who called the founding meeting of the Football League in 1888, and George Ramsay, whose headstone reads ‘Founder of Aston Villa’. Harry Freeman, the popular music hall performer, was buried there in 1922. But the graveyard is overgrown and it is difficult to find the graves.

Webster Booth (1902-1984), largely remembered for his singing duets with Anne Ziegler, was a member of the choir of Saint Mary’s as a child. He was seen as one of the finest tenors of his day.

Inside Saint Mary’s Church, Handsworth (Image: HandsworthParish website)

Today, Saint Mary’s is part of the Handsworth Group and describes itself as a warm and welcoming Church with a diverse and growing congregation. The worship aims to be dignified but inclusive and is of a moderate catholic flavour, using incense on the Principal Feasts.

• Sunday services are: 8 am, Holy Communion (Book of Common Prayer, 1662); 11 am, the Parish Eucharist (Common Worship, 2000), the principle service in the parish and a sung service. Morning Prayer is said every Friday at 8:30, and there is Daily Prayer following Common Worship in the Church Hall.

The churchyard lychgate on Hamstead Road in Handsworth (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2024)

24 August 2023

Saint Bartholomew and
some of the churches to
which he gives his name

Saint Bartholomew the Apostle … a statue on the west front of Lichfield Cathedral (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Patrick Comerford

The Church Calendar today celebrates Saint Bartholomew the Apostle (24 August).

Exciting Holiness recalls that it has long been assumed that Bartholomew is the same as Nathanael, ‘though it is not a certainty’.

The gospels speak of Philip bringing Nathanael to Jesus, who calls him an Israelite worthy of the name. He is also present beside the Sea of Galilee at the resurrection. Although he seems initially a somewhat cynical man, he recognises Jesus for who he is and proclaims him as Son of God and King of Israel.

Earlier this morning, in my prayer diary on this blog, my reflections drew on the story and images of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Farewell, on the northern fringes of Lichfield. But I though it might be interesting this evening to reflect on some other churches dedicated to Saint Bartholomew.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church crowns the highest point in Wednesbury, possibly the site once sacred to Woden, the Saxon god of war (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

During a recent visit to Wednesbury I also visited the parish church, Saint Bartholomew’s Church. Wednesbury Manor is just a short distance down the hilly slopes to the north-east of the church. Many members of the Comberford family were buried there in the 16th and 17th centuries, but the last remaining Comberford monuments were removed from the church soon after they were rediscovered in 1890.

Wednesbury stands on a site once sacred to the Saxon god of war Woden – as in Wednesday – and the site of an iron age fort (burgh) or hill (barrow). Wednesbury was fortified by Ethelflaed, daughter of King Alfred, in the year 916 to protect the borders of the kingdom of Mercia from Viking raiders.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church crowns the highest point in Wednesbury, possibly the site once sacred to Woden. The treasures of this ancient jewel include 15 stained glass windows crafted by Charles Eamer Kempe and a unique ‘fighting cock’ lectern.

The south porch of >Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Saint Bartholomew’s Church sits on the top of Church Hill and is seen for miles around. The church is a Grade II listed building and has been at the heart of Wednesbury for centuries. It is a large mediaeval church that was enlarged and developed by the Victorians. It retains many of its original mediaeval furnishings and fine collection of stained glass windows by Charles Eamer Kempe that I hope to return to see.

The church in Wednesbury is first mentioned in 1088, and there was a church at Wednesbury by the early 13th century, when the Plea Rolls of King John in 1210-1211 record that Master William, a royal chaplain, had been appointed to the church at Wednesbury.

The clock, tower and spire of Saint Bartholomew’s Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Saint Bartholomew’s Church stands on the site of the earlier 13th century stone-built church. The earliest parts of the fabric dating from perhaps the 13th century include a couple of windows and the lower parts of some of the walls.

However, much of the church dates from rebuilding in the late 15th or early 16th century. It has been restored and rebuilt since, and ruthless modernisation in the early and later 19th century, and again in the 20th century, have left the church looking more like a bright late Victorian church.

Both the Revd John Wesley and Francis Asbury attended Saint Bartholomew’s Church, and Wesley recalled being mobbed by the town’s anti-Methodist rioters on 20 October 1743.

The church tower was restored in 1757, when the top 16 ft were rebuilt and the ball and weathercock were replaced.

A statue of Saint Bartholomew above the south porch in Wednesbury (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Restoration work continued in 1764 and 1765 when the nave roof was repaired and a ceiling added to the nave. Unfortunately, during the work part of the parapet on the north side collapsed onto the roof and both fell onto the pews below, causing serious damage. Thankfully, the pews were empty at the time; people were seated there only an hour before during a funeral.

As the parapet on the south side was found to be in an extremely poor condition, the decision was taken to rebuild both parapets and to add a ceiling above the north aisle. As the restoration was now much larger and more expensive than previously imagined, neighbouring parishes were invited to make collections towards the cost of the work.

Part of the south transept was enclosed in 1775 and a wall added to form a vestry. The body of the church was coated with Parker’s cement in 1818. Nine years later, the church was enlarged by the addition of the north transept and an extended nave.

The pews were replaced and a new font and a new clock were presented to the church in 1856 by the Revd Isaac Clarkson (died 1860), Vicar of Wednesbury and a keen fundraiser for the church.

Restoration work continued in 1855, when the upper part of the spire was completely rebuilt and the eight bells were recast. Two new bells were also added, along with a new clock and weathercock. The spire was raised by 10 ft in 1878.

The east end of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

The architect Basil Champneys (1842-1935) was asked for suggestions on refurbishing and enlarging the church in the 1880s. His notable buildings include John Rylands Library, Manchester, Somerville College Library, Oxford, Newnham College, Cambridge, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, Mansfield College, Oxford and the Rhodes Building in Oriel College, Oxford.

His proposals for Wednesbury formed the basis of later work. This included the wholesale movement, stone by stone, of the multi-sided apse, which dated from the 15th or 16th century, some distance east to allow enlargement of the main chancel area.

During this restoration work in 1885, remains of the earlier church were found and consisted of a three-light window in a round-headed arch. The three lights date back to the 13th century but the arch could be earlier. The ancient window is at the west end of the north aisle. It is next to the doorway that gives access to the former choir vestry. This has a pointed segmental arch and is said to be from the same date as the window.

In addition, the internal galleries were removed in 1885, and the floor was lowered to its original level.

The tombs of Richard Jennyns, who died in 1521, and John Comberford, who died in 1559, were brought to light in 1890 as this restoration work continued. However, I could not find John Comberford’s tomb when I searched for it back in 1970, and it seems likely that Jennyns and Comberford were reburied after their rediscovery.

Inside Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury, facing the east end (Photograph: Parish Website)

The apse has been decorated in a unified scheme involving stone panelling, painting and gilding, bright stained glass windows, and an alabaster altarpiece with sculpture. A triptych arrangement has a central scene of Christ breaking bread with the two disciples at Emmaus, and two groups of three standing saints to the sides, including Saint Bartholomew with a flaying knife, the symbol of his martyrdom.

The front of the altar has painted and mosaic panels, with five standing figures: in the centre, Christ is flanked by two angels, with Saint Peter on one side panel, and Saint John the Evangelist on the other with a representation of the poison chalice. These figures are painted on stone, in pieces as if stained glass, with mother of pearl haloes, and the blue sky behind and the outer edgings of the figures in mosaic. The ground for the central panel is delicately painted in the Pre-Raphaelite style of Sir Edward Burne-Jones.

It all serves to emphasise the Anglo-Catholic tradition that has long been part of Saint Bartholomew’s for centuries and that, curiously, would have been amenable to the Comberford family during their time in Wednesbury.

Further restoration work took place in 1902 and 1903, when the transepts were restored. The Chapel of the Ascension was added to the south transept in 1913.

The West Door of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

The church has 15 late 19th or early 20th century windows that include stained glass by Charles Eamer Kempe (1837-1907). The Kempe windows include the ‘Woden Window.’ It depicts the coming of Christianity to Wednesbury and was a gift to the church from the people of the town in 1904. It was saved in recent years thanks to £30,000 raised by the Ibstock Cory Environmental Trust and other charitable trusts, public and private donors.

The Jacobean pulpit dates from 1611, and the church has an ancient wooden lectern and a chest from the 16th or 17th century. The woodwork and alabaster stone tracery are of a later date. Two large, grey panels record the various bequests and gifts to the church, ‘copied from decayed wood tablets dated about 1808.’

The church has about 25 or so monuments, with three from the 17th century, including a great tomb chest with carved statues and a ‘kneeler’ monument, a couple from the 18th century, one of which is a characteristic obelisk monument, and a number of 19th century plaques, showing variations on the classical tablet, and a few Gothic ones.

The most notable 17th century monument is that of Thomas Parkes, a prosperous iron founder, who died in 1602, and wife Elianor, with an unusual combination of English and Latin on one inscription. The kneeling figures in high relief of Thomas on the left and Elianor on the right are facing each other, both in profile, with a broad plaque underneath showing their children.

Thomas Parkes was the most powerful of Thomas Comberford’s tenants in Wednesbury, but their relationships were never very happy and resulted in a series of lawsuits. It is ironic, therefore, that the Parkes family monuments have survived but not those of the Comberford family.

Father Mark Danks has been the Vicar of Wednesbury since 2018. Sunday services are at 9 am and 10 am.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church in Dromcollogher, Co Limerick … built in 1824 and renovated in 1861, 1906-1909, the 1950s and the 1990s (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

In the Church of Ireland Diocese of Limerick, Dromcollogher and Broadford and are within the Rathkeale Group of Parishes, where I was the priest-in-charge in 2017-2022, although they have no parish churches; in the Roman Catholic Church, they form one parish of Dromcollogher-Broadford.

Dromcollogher is a picturesque small town or village in Co Limerick, not far from the border of North County Cork and about 12 km west of Charleville. It has a population of about 600 people.

An early mediaeval church in Dromcollogher was destroyed by war in 1302. It was rebuilt and was known as the capella Dromcolkylle in Corcomohid in 1418, when it was part of the larger parish of Corcomohide.

Dromcollogher was one of the starting points for the Irish Co-Op Movement. The first co-operative creamery was set up here in 1889 on the initiative of Count Horace Plunkett. The songwriter Percy French composed a song ‘There’s Only One Street In Dromcollogher.’

Inside Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Dromcollogher (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The protected or listed buildings in Dromcollogher include Saint Bartholomew’s, the Roman Catholic parish church built in 1824.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church was built almost 200 years ago in 1824 by Father Michael Fitzgerald, who bought the site from Robert Jones Staveley of Glenduff Castle, Co Limerick, a judge of the High Court.

Renovations were carried out in 1861 by Father Patrick Quaid, who also built a new church in neighbouring Broadford. Father Michael Byrne (PP 1902-1917) refurbished and decorated the church in the early 20th century, with improvements designed in 1906-1909 by the Limerick-based architect Brian Edward Fitzgerald Sheehy (1870-1930). The apse and many of the stained-glass windows were added at this time.

The High Altar and apse in Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Dromcollogher (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The stained-glass windows behind the altar depict (from left to right) Saint David, the Virgin Mary, the Sacred Heart, and Saint Catherine. They were donated by David and Mary O’Leary Hannigan of Kilbolane Castle, Milford, Co Cork, and other members of their family in 1906.

The stained-glass windows in the left transept depict the Sacred Heart, donated by Mrs Toomey in memory of her parents, and the Holy Child of Jerusalem, similar to the Child of Prague.

A stained-glass window of Saint Patrick in the right transept was donated in memory of Patrick Quaid Hannigan and his wife Mary. A stained-glass window of Saint Joseph was donated by Patrick O’Sullivan.

James Pearse (1839-1900), father of the 1916 leaders Patrick and William Pearse, donated the statue of the Virgin Mary to the left of the High Altar. The statue to the right is of the Sacred Heart.

A Pieta statue is in memory of John Gleeson. Other statues in the church include Saint Theresa of Lisieux, Saint Joseph, and Saint Anthony. The Stations of the Cross are in memory of Dorcas Mary Aherne.

The walls of the nave were removed and replaced with glass panels, forming light-filled, cloister like side aisles (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Further renovations were carried out in the 1950s and again in the 1990s. There was considerable debate in the 1990s about whether to build a new church or to radically upgrade the existing church.

The walls of the nave were removed and replaced with glass panels, forming light-filled, cloister like side aisles. The glass panels are the work of Kevin Kelly and the Abbey Stained Glass Studios.

The glass is engraved with both religious and secular scenes, including scenes from the life of Saint Bartholomew, the calling of Saint Nathaniel, who is identified with Saint Bartholomew, in Saint John’s Gospel (see John 1: 43-51), scenes from local history and excerpts from poetry by the local bardic poet, Daibhi O Bruadair (1625-1698), who lived in Springfield Castle, outside Dromcollogher.

The glass panels in Dromcollogher depict scenes from the life of Saint Bartholomew, including the calling of Saint Nathaniel (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

This is a cruciform-plan double-height gable-fronted parish church, aligned on a north-south axis rather than the traditional liturgical east-west axis.

The church had a three-bay nave, with a recent porch at the front, glazed side aisles at each side, three-bay transepts at the sides, and a canted, three-bay chancel at the liturgical east end (north). There are timber-frame balconies in each transept.

The once free-standing three-stage bell tower to north (liturgical east) is linked to the church and sacristy by a recent corridor.

Much of the church’s historic character remains intact, mostly through the retention of key historic features, including the stained-glass windows, decorative stone details and the bell tower. These alterations to the nave make for a light and airy interior that retains many artistic features, including the finely-crafted balconies and statues.

Father William O’Donnell, who was parish priest for 33 years and died in 1876, is the only parish priest buried inside the church. Four parish priests are buried in the church grounds: Michael Byrne; Canon James Foley; Canon John Reeves; and Archdeacon Hugh O’Connor.

A large Celtic cross in the churchyard is a memorial to the victims of a fire at a film showing on Sunday evening, 5 September 1926. William ‘Baby’ Forde had hired a room from Patrick Brennan in the centre of Dromcollogher and planned to show Cecil B DeMille’s Ten Commandments in a make-shift, timber-built cinema. But, during the showing, a reel of nitrate film caught fire from the flame of a candle. The fire spread, and 46 people died that night, with two more dying later in hospital.

The 48 people represented one-tenth of the population of Dromcollogher at the time. Many who died were children. One entire family died – a father, mother and their two children. The victims were buried in the churchyard in a communal grave marked by the Celtic cross. The tragedy, known locally as the ‘Dromcollogher Burning,’ was the worst-known fire disaster in Irish history until the Betelgeuse fire in 1979 and the Stardust disaster in 1981, in which 50 and 48 people died.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church at the junction of Clyde Road and Elgin Road in Ballsbridge, Dublin (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

I have often presided at the Eucharist, preached and spoken in Saint Bartholomew’s Church, a unique parish church in the Diocese of Dublin, with a strong liturgical and choral tradition dating back to its consecration in 1867.

This beautiful church, which stands at the junction of Clyde Road and Elgin Road in Ballsbridge, close to the US Embassy, was consecrated in 1867. Saint Bartholomew’s was designed by the well-known English architect, Thomas Henry Wyatt. It was built in the Gothic revival style, using Dublin granite and with sandstone facings. But there are also interesting features which show the influence of the Celtic Romantic Revival, which was becoming popular in the 1860s, including the stairway to the clock tower which is in the shape of an Irish round tower.

The interior of Saint Bartholomew’s ... reflects the Italian and Byzantine influences on Sir Thomas Deane during his visits to Florence, Rome and Palermo (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2010)

The unique interior decoration, dating from 1878, was designed by Sir Thomas Deane and reflects the Italian and Byzantine influences on Deane during his visits to Florence, Rome and Palermo. Many of the original features of the church remain intact to this day, including the sanctuary mosaics and the elaborate wrought-iron choir screen.

Saint Bartholomew’s has an important collection of Irish stained glass (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The stained-glass windows represent two important periods in the development of Irish stained glass. Around the High Altar, the five apse windows, including the Rose Window, date from 1868-1872 and are the oldest in the church. They are the work of Michael O’Connor, who was an important figure in the early days of the Gothic revival of stained glass in Ireland.

There are also important windows by Catherine O’Brien, who was influenced by Sarah Purser and the Arts and Crafts Movement. Her works in Saint Bartholomew’s include the Emmaus Window in the South Transept, and the four porch windows depicting Saint Patrick, Saint George, Saint Brigid and Saint Margaret.

The church also has important windows from the 1870s and 1880s by the London firm of Heaton, Butler and Bayne.

Saint Bartholomew’s has always been known for its High Anglican liturgical tradition, which is an integral part of the Anglo-Catholic tradition. In its early days, Anglo-Catholicism was conservative both theologically and politically, but in the latter part of the 19th century many Anglo-Catholics became active in radical and socialist organisations.

Saint Bartholomew’s is celebrated for its fine music too. The choir of boys and men is the only remaining all-male parish church choir in the Church of Ireland. But the girls’ choir, formed in 2003, plays an increasingly prominent role in the life of the church.

The three-manual organ was built in 1887 by Gray and Davison, but has been rebuilt since then in 1925 and 1963, and more recently by Trevor Crowe in 2002.

The first Vicar of Saint Bartholomew’s, the Revd Arthur Altham Dawson (1864-1871), resigned to work in England. He is commemorated in the Ascension window in the north transept.

His successor, Canon Richard Travers Smith (1871-1905), was the author of many theological and historical works, and the Donnellan Lecturer at Trinity College Dublin. He is remembered in a brass behind the vicar’s stall.

The Emmaus window by Catherine O’Brien in the south transept of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Ballsbridge, commemorates a former vicar, Bishop Harry Vere White (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The third vicar, Canon Harry Vere White (1905-1918), had returned to Ireland from New Zealand to work as the Irish organising secretary of the SPG. While he worked with SPG, he lived at 3 Belgrave Road, so his former dining room in Rathmines was later my office when I worked with CMS Ireland (2002-2006). He later became Treasurer and Chancellor of Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin, Archdeacon of Dublin and Dean of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, before becoming Bishop of Limerick. He is commemorated by Catherine O’Brien’s Emmaus Window in the south transept.

Canon Walter Cadden Simpson (1918-1951) was Vicar of All Souls’, Clapton Park, London, before moving to Saint Bartholomew’s. Catherine O’Brien’s mosaic of the Epiphnay over the vestry door is a memorial to him.

Robert Norman Sidney Craig (1951-1957) was once Vice-Principal of Bishops’ College, Calcutta. He later worked in the US.

Henry Homan Warner (1957-1964) was a curate of Saint Bartholomew’s before becoming Vicar.

James Maurice George Carey (1964-1972) was a noted liturgist and preacher, and the first incumbent to introduce Eucharistic vestments. Maurice later became Dean of Saint Fin Barre’s Cathedral, Cork, and returned to Dublin as Priest-in-Charge of Saint John’s, Sandymount. I got to know him well when he chaired the editorial board of Search.

John Thomas Farquhar Paterson (1972-1978) later became Dean of Saint Brigid’s Cathedral, Kildare, and then Dean of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin.

John Robert Winder Neill (1978-1985) came to Saint Bartholomew’s at a time of significant liturgical renewal. He later become Dean of Waterford, Bishop of Tuam, Killala and Achonry, Bishop of Cashel and Ossory, and then Archbishop of Dublin.

John Andrew McKay (1985-2000) had previously been one of my predecessors as Rector of Rathkeale, Askeaton, Foynes and Kilcornan (1982-1985). He later spent several years as Chaplain of Saint George’s Venice, and Christ Church, Trieste, returning to Dublin in 2005 as priest-in-charge of Saint John’s, Sandymount. He died in 2010.

His successors were the Revd William James Ritchie (2000-2004) and the Revd Michael Thompson (2004-2008). The present Vicar of Saint Bartholomew’s is the Revd Andrew McCroskery.

The curates of Saint Bartholomew’s have included: (Archdeacon) Raymond Gordon Finney Jenkins, (Archbishop) George Otto Simms, (Bishop) Roderick Norman Coote, Father Alan Bird Crawford, later a Benedictine monk of Glenstal Abbey, (Archishop) Richard Lionel Clarke, later Bishop of Meath and Kildare and Archbishop of Armagh, (Canon) Edward George Ardis, later Dean of Killala, then Rector of Donnybrook and Irishtown, and Dean’s Vicar of Cork, and Nigel Kenneth Dunne, now Dean of Saint Fin Barre's Cathedral, Cork.

Thomas Henry Wyatt, who designed Saint Bartholomew’s Church, was a member of the outstanding architectural dynasty descended from John Wyatt (1675-1742) from Thickbroom in Weeford, outside Lichfield.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Ballsbridge, was designed by Thomas Henry Wyatt, a member of the architectural dynasty descended from John Wyatt (1675-1742) from Weeford, near Lichfield (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

The Collect:

Almighty and everlasting God,
who gave to your apostle Bartholomew grace
truly to believe and to preach your word:
grant that your Church
may love that word which he believed
and may faithfully preach and receive the same;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

The Post Communion Prayer:

Almighty God,
who on the day of Pentecost
sent your Holy Spirit to the apostles
with the wind from heaven and in tongues of flame,
filling them with joy and boldness to preach the gospel:
by the power of the same Spirit
strengthen us to witness to your truth
and to draw everyone to the fire of your love;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.

26 June 2023

Saint Bartholomew’s Church,
Wednesbury, on the site of
a Saxon shrine of Woden

Saint Bartholomew’s Church crowns the highest point in Wednesbury, possibly the site once sacred to Woden, the Saxon god of war (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Patrick Comerford

In my search for Wednesbury Manor at the end of last week (22 June 2023) and for any remaining legacies of the Comberford family, I also visited Saint Bartholomew’s Church, the parish church of Wednesbury, where many members of the Comberford family were buried in the 16th and 17th centuries.

Wednesbury stands on a site once sacred to the Saxon god of war Woden – as in Wednesday – and the site of an iron age fort (burgh) or hill (barrow). Wednesbury was fortified by Ethelflaed, daughter of King Alfred, in the year 916 to protect the borders of the kingdom of Mercia from Viking raiders.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church crowns the highest point in Wednesbury, possibly the site once sacred to Woden. The treasures of this ancient jewel include 15 stained glass windows crafted by Charles Eamer Kempe and a unique ‘fighting cock’ lectern.

The south porch of >Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

At the end of a rain-soaked Thursday afternoon in late June, the church was closed, but I knew the last remaining Comberford monuments had been removed from the church soon after they had been rediscovered in 1890.

Nevertheless, it was still pleasant to walk around the church and through the churchyard that had once been closely associated with the Comberford and Beaumont families and Wednesbury Manor, just a short distance down the hilly slopes to the north-east of the church.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church sits on the top of Church Hill and is seen for miles around. The church is a Grade II listed building and has been at the heart of Wednesbury for centuries. It is a large mediaeval church that was enlarged and developed by the Victorians. It retains many of its original mediaeval furnishings and fine collection of stained glass windows by Charles Eamer Kempe that I promise myself to return to see.

The church in Wednesbury is first mentioned in 1088, and there was a church at Wednesbury by the early 13th century, when the Plea Rolls of King John in 1210-1211 record that Master William, a royal chaplain, had been appointed to the church at Wednesbury.

The clock, tower and spire of Saint Bartholomew’s Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Saint Bartholomew’s Church stands on the site of the earlier 13th century stone-built church. The earliest parts of the fabric dating from perhaps the 13th century include a couple of windows and the lower parts of some of the walls.

However, much of the church dates from rebuilding in the late 15th or early 16th century. It has been restored and rebuilt since, and ruthless modernisation in the early and later 19th century, and again in the 20th century, have left the church looking more like a bright late Victorian church.

Both the Revd John Wesley and Francis Asbury attended Saint Bartholomew’s Church, and Wesley recalled being mobbed by the town’s anti-Methodist rioters on 20 October 1743.

The church tower was restored in 1757, when the top 16 ft were rebuilt and the ball and weathercock were replaced.

A statue of Saint Bartholomew above the south porch (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Restoration work continued in 1764 and 1765 when the nave roof was repaired and a ceiling added to the nave. Unfortunately, during the work part of the parapet on the north side collapsed onto the roof and both fell onto the pews below, causing serious damage. Thankfully, the pews were empty at the time; people were seated there only an hour before during a funeral.

As the parapet on the south side was found to be in an extremely poor condition, the decision was taken to rebuild both parapets and to add a ceiling above the north aisle. As the restoration was now much larger and more expensive than previously imagined, neighbouring parishes were invited to make collections towards the cost of the work.

Part of the south transept was enclosed in 1775 and a wall added to form a vestry. The body of the church was coated with Parker’s cement in 1818. Nine years later, the church was enlarged by the addition of the north transept and an extended nave.

The pews were replaced and a new font and a new clock were presented to the church in 1856 by the Revd Isaac Clarkson (died 1860), Vicar of Wednesbury and a keen fundraiser for the church.

Restoration work continued in 1855, when the upper part of the spire was completely rebuilt and the eight bells were recast. Two new bells were also added, along with a new clock and weathercock. The spire was raised by 10 ft in 1878.

The east end of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

The architect Basil Champneys (1842-1935) was asked for suggestions on refurbishing and enlarging the church in the 1880s. His notable buildings include John Rylands Library, Manchester, Somerville College Library, Oxford, Newnham College, Cambridge, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, Mansfield College, Oxford and the Rhodes Building in Oriel College, Oxford.

His proposals for Wednesbury formed the basis of later work. This included the wholesale movement, stone by stone, of the multi-sided apse, which dated from the 15th or 16th century, some distance east to allow enlargement of the main chancel area.

During this restoration work in 1885, remains of the earlier church were found and consisted of a three-light window in a round-headed arch. The three lights date back to the 13th century but the arch could be earlier. The ancient window is at the west end of the north aisle. It is next to the doorway that gives access to the former choir vestry. This has a pointed segmental arch and is said to be from the same date as the window.

In addition, the internal galleries were removed in 1885, and the floor was lowered to its original level.

The tombs of Richard Jennyns, who died in 1521, and John Comberford, who died in 1559, were brought to light in 1890 as this restoration work continued. However, I could not find John Comberford’s tomb when I searched for it back in 1970, and it seems likely that Jennyns and Comberford were reburied after their rediscovery.

Inside Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury, facing the east end (Photograph: Parish Website)

The apse has been decorated in a unified scheme involving stone panelling, painting and gilding, bright stained glass windows, and an alabaster altarpiece with sculpture. A triptych arrangement has a central scene of Christ breaking bread with the two disciples at Emmaus, and two groups of three standing saints to the sides, including Saint Bartholomew with a flaying knife, the symbol of his martyrdom.

The front of the altar has painted and mosaic panels, with five standing figures: in the centre, Christ is flanked by two angels, with Saint Peter on one side panel, and Saint John the Evangelist on the other with a representation of the poison chalice. These figures are painted on stone, in pieces as if stained glass, with mother of pearl haloes, and the blue sky behind and the outer edgings of the figures in mosaic. The ground for the central panel is delicately painted in the Pre-Raphaelite style of Sir Edward Burne-Jones.

It all serves to emphasise the Anglo-Catholic tradition that has long been part of Saint Bartholomew’s for centuries and that, curiously, would have been amenable to the Comberford family during their time in Wednesbury.

Further restoration work took place in 1902 and 1903, when the transepts were restored. The Chapel of the Ascension was added to the south transept in 1913.

The apse has been decorated in a unified scheme (Photograph: Parish Website)

The church has 15 late 19th or early 20th century windows that include stained glass by Charles Eamer Kempe (1837-1907). The Kempe windows include the ‘Woden Window.’ It depicts the coming of Christianity to Wednesbury and was a gift to the church from the people of the town in 1904. It was saved in recent years thanks to £30,000 raised by the Ibstock Cory Environmental Trust and other charitable trusts, public and private donors.

The Jacobean pulpit dates from 1611, and the church has an ancient wooden lectern and a chest from the 16th or 17th century. The woodwork and alabaster stone tracery are of a later date. Two large, grey panels record the various bequests and gifts to the church, ‘copied from decayed wood tablets dated about 1808.’

The church has about 25 or so monuments, with three from the 17th century, including a great tomb chest with carved statues and a ‘kneeler’ monument, a couple from the 18th century, one of which is a characteristic obelisk monument, and a number of 19th century plaques, showing variations on the classical tablet, and a few Gothic ones.

The most notable 17th century monument is that of Thomas Parkes, a prosperous iron founder, who died in 1602, and wife Elianor, with an unusual combination of English and Latin on one inscription. The kneeling figures in high relief of Thomas on the left and Elianor on the right are facing each other, both in profile, with a broad plaque underneath showing their children.

Thomas Parkes was the most powerful of Thomas Comberford’s tenants in Wednesbury, but their relationships were never very happy and resulted in a series of lawsuits. It is ironic, therefore, that the Parkes family monuments have survived but not those of the Comberford family.

There is a large alabaster tomb chest at the west end of the nave of Richard Parkes, who died in 1613, with two carved figures lying on it representing Richard Parkes and his wife, and figures of their children.

The elaborately quartered coat of arms, with 20 quarterings, on the monument of Sir Francis Wortley (Photograph: Parish Website)

The plaque commemorating Sir Francis Wortley (1591-1652) seems to date from 1636. It includes an elaborately quartered coat of arms, with 20 quarterings, in a style similar to the painted coats of arms on the ceiling of the Long Gallery in the Moat House, the Comberford townhouse on Lichfield Street in Tamworth. They may be by the same artist, and the crest shows a peacock on a coronet, similar to the Comberford crest.

The Wortley family lived at Wortley in Yorkshire and they seem to have had no connections with Wednesbury other than Colonel William Comberford’s patronage of Francis Wortley. Indeed, he did not die in 1636, and was an active royalist during the English Civil War, fighting with Colonel William Comberford at Stafford. Wortley died in 1652, and asked to be buried beside his father in Saint George’s Chapel, Windsor, but there is no evidence that he was.

Below this there was once a monument to Walter Harcourt, when both monuments were located in the chancel. The date 1636 refers to Walter Harcourt, who married Mary Comberford, sister of Humphrey Comberford, who inherited Wednesbury Manor through his marriage to Dorothy Beaumont. Walter Harcourt is said to have saved Francis Wortley’s life. He gives his name to nearby Harcourt Road off Manor House Road, bordering the site of the former Comberford manor house in Wednesbury.

The church has many 18th and 19th century monuments, including the obelisk monument of the Jesson family of Walsall, an obelisk or tall pyramid commemorating Joseph Hobson (1802), and his wife Elizabeth (1817), and several examples of the work of William and Peter Hollins, members of Birmingham’s most illustrious family of monumental masons and sculptors and significant architects.

Sunday services in Saint Bartholomew’s Church are at 9 am and 10 am (Photograph: Parish Website)

A painting above the font depicts Christ’s descent from the cross. This was painted by Jean-Baptiste Jouvenet (1644–1717) – a French painter, especially of religious subjects. This painting in Wednesbury was commissioned ca 1698.

The art historian (and spy) Anthony Blunt (1907-1983) found reminiscences of Poussin, Le Sueur and the late work of Raphael in Jouvenet’s style, but with a characteristic Baroque emotionalism. During the last four years of his life, paralysis forced Jouvenet to work with his left hand. He died on 5 April 1717.

The church was Grade 2 listed in 1950.

I now realise the church is not usually open outside services and that it is important to get in touch before planning a visit. I was able to photograph the outside of the church, but the photographs inside the church are from the parish website.

The Parish of Saint Bartholomew, Wednesbury, was merged with the Parish of Saint James, Wednesbury, in October 2016 to form a new Parish of Wednesbury, with Saint Bartholomew’s as the parish church. Father Mark Danks has been the Vicar of Wednesbury since 2018. Sunday services are at 9 am and 10 am.

The West Door of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

25 June 2023

A search in the rain
for the Comberford
estates and legacy at
Wednesbury Manor

The site of Wednesbury Manor at Manor House Road, between Harcourt Road and Beaumont Road (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023; click on ohotographs for full-screen views)

Patrick Comerford

I was back in Wednesbury a few days ago for the first time in more than half a century. I had been in the West Midlands market town back in 1970, visiting Saint Bartholomew’s Church and searching for the site of Wednesbury Manor, which had belonged to the Comberford family in the 16th and 17th centuries.

When I first visited Wednesbury, it was long before the days of digital photographs, Google Map searches and the amassing of local and family history resources on websites.

I had walked around Wednesbury over half a century ago, searching for any signs of the long-disappeared manor house and any indications that the Beaumont and Comberford families had an important presence in the town.

But all I had was a few jottings, hand-sketched maps and pencilled notes. I needed to return to Wednesbury to take photographs and to make my findings available to others who share my interest in the history and legacy of the Comberford and Comerford families.

The site of Wednesbury Manor at Manor House Road … two houses and an electricity sub-station (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Little or nothing remains today to mark the site of the original manor house at Wednesbury. In William Comberford’s time, the manor house lay about 300 metres north-east of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, by Manor House Road, close to today’s primary school and Beaumont Road.

When I first visited Wednesbury in 1970, the site of the original manor house was pointed out to me as a short stretch on the south side of Manor House Road, between the corners of Harcourt Road and Beaumont Road.

I returned to Wednesbury last week to see Saint Bartholomew’s Church, and to search again for the site of the manor house, once held by the Beaumont and Comberford families. Unusually heavy rains that afternoon did not help my search and did not provide for good photographs.

Manor House Road is part of the B4200 linking Wednesbury and Darlston. Carefully measuring the distances from the church and using historical accounts and images of the old manor house, I am now satisfied that the manor house stood on the south side of Manor House Road, between its junctions with Harcourt Road and Beaumont Road. On the site, to the east of a local Catholic school, stand Nos 98 and 100 Manor House, with an electricity substation between them.

There are no reminders of this former manor house to be seen today, apart from the names of Manor House Road, Harcourt Road and Beaumont Road, remembering the names of two families who intermarried with the Comberford family, and in the names of a small number of shops on the opposite side of the street, such as the Manor Fish Bar.

Comberford Drive is a 30-minute walk further east, close to the site of the forge once operated by the Comberford family over 400 years ago.

Wednesbury Manor … the remains of the manor house seen in an old postcard in 1892

Wednesbury Manor House once stood on a site about a quarter of a mile north-east of Saint Bartholomew’s Church. The Beaumont family, who claimed French royal ancestry, inherited Wednesbury through the marriage of Joan Heronville and Sir Henry Beaumont, while the Heronville family had acquired the estate a generation earlier through the marriage of Henry Heronville and Joan Leventhorpe.

The heraldic family trees on the ceiling of the Long Gallery in the Moat House, the Comberford family’s townhouse on Lichfield Street in Tamworth, illustrate the importance William Comberford and his family attached to their descent from the Beaumont family, and how they had inherited their estates in Wednesbury. It was a boast he was eager to impress on the future Charles I when he was their guest in 1619.

The Comberford family acquired the Wednesbury estates when Humphrey Comberford (ca 1496/1498-1555) married Dorothy Beaumont. Humphrey was educated at Saint John’s College, Cambridge (BA 1525, MA 1528), with two of his brothers, Henry Comberford and Richard Comberford. He was the Master of the Guild of Saint Mary and Saint John the Baptist in Lichfield in 1530, and succeeded to his father’s Comberford estates in 1532.

Dorothy Beaumont was one of three daughters and co-heiresses, and her other two sisters had married brothers from the Babington family. By buying out the interests of the Babington family, the Comberfords arrested the possibility that the estates would be divided, and placed themselves in a position to exploit the new-found wealth in coal mining in south Staffordshire.

When Humphrey and Dorothy married, they also strengthened the links between the Comberford family and many of the prominent Catholic families in south Staffordshire. These links, and the safe passage of Catholic priests during the reign of Elizabeth I, were facilitated, in part, by the fact that the Moat House in Tamworth and the Comberford manor in Wednesbury were linked directly by the River Tame.

Beaumont Road, north of Saint Bartholomew’s Church, marks the west boundary of the site of Wednesbury Manor (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

Humphrey Comberford seems to have been happy to leave much of the management of the interests in Wednesbury Manor he had acquire by marriage in the capable hands of a younger brother, John Comberford.

Humphrey and John were brothers of both Richard Comberford of Bradley, Bursar of Saint John’s College, Cambridge, and sometimes confused with Richard Comerford, ancestor of the Comerfords of Co Kilkenny and Co Wexford; and of Canon Henry Comberford (1499-1586), Precentor of Lichfield Cathedral.

John Comberford lived in Wednesbury, and in 1543-1544, as John Cumberforthbe, gentleman, he was Treasurer of the Archbishop of Canterbury, who was then Thomas Cranmer, or Treasurer of Canterbury Palace. He married Emma or Anne Beawlott or Bellet in 1549.

John Comberford died on 25 April 1559, a day after making his will, and he was buried in Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury. Shaw and Bagnall say the figures on the tomb on the chancel floor included a man in armour, a woman in the dress of the time, and their son and four daughters. The inscription on his tomb read: ‘Of your charyte pray for the soule of Ihon Comberfort, Gentlylman, and Em hys wyffe, the which Ihon departed the XXV day Aperyl in the yere of oure God MDCIX of whose soule God have mercy.’

The tomb was missing for many years, until it was found once again in the apse during renovations in 1890. However, a search 80 years later in 1970 with the Revd CJW Ward failed to find it once more. The arms of John and Emma Comberford (the Comberford cross with five red roses, impaling the Beawlott arms) were once illustrated in the painted glass windows in Saint Bartholomew’s that were smashed during the Cromwellian era.

Humphrey Comberford died three years earlier on 23 December 1555, probably in Northamptonshire, where his large estates were centred on the Comberford Manor in Watford. Humphrey’s will was proved on 7 November 1556. He was probably buried with his wife Dorothy in Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury, where the impaled arms of Comberford and Beaumont were once part of the painted glass windows.

Humphrey Comberford’s widow Dorothy (Beaumont) died in 1565, and Wednesbury became part of the Comberford estates inherited by her eldest son, Thomas Comberford (1530-1597). Until 1564, one-third of the Manor of Wednesbury was in the hands of Sir Thomas Babington, and one-third in the hands of his brother Anthony Babington. However, in 1565 Thomas Comberford secured full possession of the whole of the Manor of Wednesbury, with its dependent estates and lands in Staffordshire and Derbyshire.

Those estates and lands included the manors of Wednesbury and Tynmore, 120 acres of land, 40 acres of wood, 10 acres of land, and 10 acres of meadow in Wirksworth and Kirk Ireton, near Matlock in Derbyshire; £10 rent in Wednesbury, Waltswoode, Finchpath and Tibinton; and a fifth-part of the Manor of Egginton in Derbyshire, half-way between Burton-upon-Trent and Derby.

A modern artistic impression of Wednesbury Manor … a painting by D Clarke now in the Sandwell Museums

Thomas Comberford’s relationships with his tenants in Wednesbury were never very happy, and there was a series of lawsuits with Thomas Parkes, the most powerful of his tenants in Wednesbury and a prosperous iron founder.

Thomas Comberford’s eldest son, William Comberford (1551-1625) of Comberford and Wednesbury, used his wealth from the Comberford family estates in Wednesbury to advance his family’s political, economic and social power in South Staffordshire.

From 1597 on, William Whorwood was William Comberford’s partner in working an iron-making smithy at Wednesbury. William leased the smithy at Wednesbury to his son-in-law, William Coleman of Cannock, in 1606, including his ‘forge with finery and chafery.’ William Comberford was trying to expand his iron-working business and to establish himself as a supplier of charcoal and as an ironmaster. In 1606, he was planning to build new water mills at or near Wednesbury Bridge.

William emphasised his descent from the Beaumont family and through them kinship with French, Scottish and English royalty in his decoration of the long gallery in the Moat House in Tamworth. It was an opulent display to mark a prominent place during the visit by James I and his son Prince Charles to Tamworth in August 1619.

The Comberfords had risen in social standing from the ranks of the local farming families to claiming a place among the gentry. If they ever entertained any hopes of receiving a title, these never materialised. But when the prince succeeded to the throne as Charles I, the monarch built on these claims to his own benefit, using William Comberford to raise loans and troops for the royalist cause during the English Civil War.

Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury … on a hill above the site of Wednesbury Manor (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)

William Comberford was appointed High Sheriff of Staffordshire at the end of 1622. In 1623, he donated the sixth of the eight musical bells in Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury, which is inscribed: ‘William Comberford, Lord of Wedgbury [sic], gave this bell, 1623.’ On the seventh is, ‘Sancta Bartholomew, ora pro nobis’ and on the tenor is inscribed: ‘I will sound and resound to thee, O Lord, to call thy people to hear thy word.’

William Comberford died in 1625. In his will, he asked to be buried in the north end of the parish church of Tamworth, where he said his father and mother were buried. He left £20 for the poor of Wednesbury and £20 for the poor of Tamworth, the income from both sums to be used to buy bread on Good Friday. A tablet in Saint Bartholomew’s Church, recording the charities of Wednesbury Parish, noted: ‘William Comberford, esq and lord of this manor, gave the use of twenty pounds by will, to be bestowed for every Good Friday on the poor, in bread, anno 1626.’

Ede points out, the ‘story of Wednesbury manor between the deaths of William Comberford senior in 1625 and its acquisition, between 1657 and 1663, by the Sheldon family, is confused and in part uncertain.’

When William Comberford, died in 1625, his grandson William Comberford was his heir at law and aged 32. William succeeded to the Comberford family estates, but did not take possession of them as the bulk of the estates, including the Moat House in Lichfield Street, Tamworth, and the Manor of Wednesbury, had been leased in trust by his grandfather William Comberford to his uncle William Comberford. William was entitled only to the reserved rents on the Comberford estates, but he appears never to have received even these from his uncle, for by 1648 these were in arrears by 23 years.

According to the local historian William Hackwood, who lived at Comberford Cottage in Bridge Street, Wednesbury, Colonel William Comberford probably sold Wednesbury Manor in 1642 to raise money for the Royalist cause.

John Comberford (ca 1597-ca 1666), of Handsworth, Staffordshire, was aged about 28 when his grandfather William Comberford died in 1625. He married Mary Singleton of Broughton Tower, Lancashire, and they had no children. He was named by his brother William as one of the executors of his will. He inherited Wednesbury after the death of William Comberford in 1653 and after settling ‘all my lands in Wednesbury’ on trustees, he appears to have paid off all the outstanding debts on the estate and sold it around 1656 to his distant cousin, John Shelton of West Bromwich.

John Comberford’s will is dated 1657, but he was still living in 1664, when he was a party to leasing Comberford and Wigginton Manor. He died within the following two years, and his will was proved in 1666.

John Shelton of West Bromwich was a Cromwellian and strict Presbyterian. He had already bought property in the Wednesbury area from John Comberford of Handsworth, and he was Sheriff of Staffordshire in 1672. By then, the fortunes of the Comberford family had declined, partly through the misfortunes of the English Civil War, and the family links with Wednesbury had come to an end.

Inside Saint Bartholomew’s Church, Wednesbury, in 1827 (Hackwood, facing p. 22)

Wednesbury Hall was sold in 1710 by Shelton’s son, John Shelton, to John Hoo of Bradley, serjeant-at-law, and it then passed to his brother, Thomas Hoo, to Thomas Hoo’s son, John Hoo, who died at the old house in Wednesbury in 1740, and to John Hoo’s sons, John Hoo (1718-1746) and Thomas Hoo, High Sheriff of Staffordshire in 1772 and who died in 1794.

Wednesbury Hall was used as a farmhouse, but it deteriorated when it was the home of the Hoo family in the early 18th century. The top storey of the old manor house was removed about 1755, and it was soon reduced to ‘a common farm[house],’ so that Shaw in 1779, in his History and Antiquities of Staffordshire, says the manor house at Wednesbury ‘has nothing remarkable about it, now being converted into a common farm.’

When Thomas Hoo, Lord of the Manors of Great Barr and Wednesbury, died a bachelor and intestate in 1791, the manors passed through the female line to his second cousin, Mary Whitby, wife of Edward Whitby. She was the only daughter of the Revd John Dolman, Rector of Aldridge, and grand-daughter of William Beady and Margaret Hoo daughter of John Hoo of Bradley, and to her first cousin once removed, Elizabeth Maria Foley Hodgetts, wife of the Hon Edward Foley (1747-1808), daughter of John Hodgetts (d. 1783) and grand-daughter of John Hodgetts of Shutt End, Kingswinford, and his wife, Mary Hoo.

These two women were ‘the present ladies of the manor’ at the end of the 18th century. Wednesbury then passed to Sir Joseph Scott (1752-1828), when he married Margaret Whitby, the only daughter of Edward and Mary Whitby and one of the two Hoo heiresses.

A local vicar, the Revd John Wylde, contested this succession and produced a will dated 1777 naming himself as the chief beneficiary. When the case was heard at Stafford Assizes in 1792, a papermaker proved beyond doubt that the will produced by Wylde was a fake and was on paper made after Thomas Hoo’s death.

Sir Joseph Scott inherited Wednesbury Hall and was made a baronet in 1806. He was still in possession of Wednesbury Hall in 1820, and died on 17 June 1828. His son, Sir Edward Dolman Scott (1793-1851), was MP for Lichfield.

The extent of Wednesbury Manor imposed and the present street plan of Wednesbury

The coal-mining interests of the Comberford and Parkes families passed in the 17th century to the daughters of Richard Parkes of Old Park. In 1727, Sarah married Sampson Lloyd, a leading Quaker whose descendants gave their name to Lloyds Bank. Sarah’s sister married Thomas Pemberton, whose descendants also married into the Lloyd family.

By 1834, Wednesbury Hall was in the possession of Sir Horace St Paul (1775-1840), a baronet and a count of the Holy Roman Empire, and the house was described as ‘a venerable brick mansion.’ Wednesbury Hall was inherited by his son, Sir Horace St Paul (1812-1891) in 1840. However, by the time Bagnall published his History of Wednesbury in 1854, the manor house had been converted into a farmhouse, ‘retaining nothing of its former magnificence.’

Wednesbury Manor House remained a farmhouse until the late 19th century. FW Hackwood, who saw the house in its later years, described it in his book Wednesbury Ancient and Modern: ‘small red bricks, heavy sandstone mullioned windows, very plain but somewhat high. Its open entrance porch had a seat on each side.’

Wednesbury Hall was later known as Mason’s Hall, and the manor house was in slum conditions by the mid-19th century. It was only the size of a cottage when it was photographed in 1894, and it was completely demolished at the beginning of the 20th century.

The archaeologist Paul Belford in a paper has described archaeological excavations in 2004-2008 at Wednesbury Forge, north-east of Wednesbury and in the Tame Valley, and how they encountered extensive remains of timber and masonry structures and other features. The historical and archaeological evidence revealed a sophisticated ironworking complex in existence by ca 1600, and this was continually adapted and redeveloped until the site closed in 2005.

Comberford Drive in Wednesbury is close to the site of the former forge, once owned by the Comberford family. It is almost two miles east of the site of the former Manor House and Saint Bartholomew’s Church, squeezed between the banks of the River Tame and the sidings of the railway line and the busy M6. The nearest landmark is Bescot Stadium, the home ground of Walsall Football Club and Aston Villa Women.

Comberford Drive in Wednesbury is close to the site of the former forge, once owned by the Comberford family (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)