Parish churches in English villages often strike visitors as
being far too big for the community that they serve. One forgets that at one
time attendance at church on Sundays was compulsory, and also that rural
populations were, in many places, much larger than they are now due to the
highly labour-intensive nature of agriculture in the days before tractors and
combine harvesters.
The Church of St John the Evangelist at Oxborough, Norfolk,
provides an excellent illustration of how a church can shrink in size and yet
be perfectly adequate for modern needs. However, the shrinkage was not caused
by any wish of the villagers or its clergy.
St John’s Church was built during the 14th
century in the Perpendicular style, using stone and flint. It must have been an
impressive structure in its heyday, with a nave and chancel of comparable
length, and a magnificent stone tower and spire that rivalled that of Norwich
Cathedral in its dimensions.
Oxborough has long been the home of the Bedingfield family,
who built Oxburgh Hall in the late 15th century. This splendid
moated manor is a place that is well worth a visit. The first occupant of the
Hall, Sir Edmund Bedingfield, directed in his will that a chapel be built at
the side of the nave of St John’s Church to contain his tomb. He died in 1496
and the chancery chapel was built in 1500 and enhanced by later Bedingfields.
The church spire was struck by lightning in 1877 and rebuilt
in 1879. However, the new structure was not strong enough to contain a peal of
six bells and, on a windy morning in April 1948 it collapsed for a second time,
but it fell in such a way that it brought down the entire roof of the nave.
A decision was made not to rebuild the church as it had been
but to preserve what could be saved and – in effect – create a village church
that was more suited to the needs of the mid-20th century.
The chancel was largely undamaged, so a new flint wall was
built to enclose the chancel, which now forms a perfectly adequate parish church
in its own right. Fortunately, the Bedingfield Chapel was also spared from the
collapse, as were the terracotta monuments that it contains. The Chapel is now
entered from the roofless nave.
The church opened in its new configuration eight years after
the collapse, with one of the offending bells finding a use as the sanctus bell
above the new entrance.
Although Oxborough Church looks very strange today, being a
half-ruin without a tower, it is one that has an unusual tale to tell, and it
is a story of resurgence from disaster in which the local community can take
justifiable pride.
© John Welford
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