Reviews of Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin, Prestwich. (Church) in Manchester (Greater Manchester).
Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin, Prestwich
Church Ln, Prestwich, Manchester M25 1AN, United Kingdom
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Information of Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin, Prestwich, Church in Manchester (Greater Manchester)
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Reviews of Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin, Prestwich
p. s.
The Church of St Mary the Virgin is on Church Lane, Prestwich, Greater Manchester, England. It is an active Anglican parish church in the deanery of Radcliffe and Prestwich, the archdeaconry of Bolton and the diocese of Manchester. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building. Pevsner refers to it as "a major church".
Prestwich is not mentioned in the Domesday Book,[4] but there is evidence of a church on the site since at least 1200. The tower was built in about 1500 by the 1st Earl of Derby, and the body of the church was rebuilt during the early part of the 16th century. In 1756 the south porch was rebuilt and the walls of the aisles were raised. The east vestry was rebuilt in 1803 and in 1860 the chancel was extended. In 1872 a new chapel, the Birch Chapel, was added to the south of the chancel and to the east of the existing south (Lever) chapel; the Lever Chapel was rebuilt two years later. In 1888–89 the Lancaster architects Paley, Austin and Paley rebuilt the north (Wilton) chapel and the chancel, and added an organ chamber and a vestry on the north side of the chancel.[5][6] The north porch dates from 1895. The north and south galleries were removed in 1959.
The church is constructed in red sandstone with stone slate roofs. Its plan consists of a five-bay nave with a clerestory, a three-bay chancel with a clerestory rising higher than that of the nave, north and south aisles, north and south porches, and a west tower. The two eastern bays of the north aisle comprise the Wilton Chapel, the work of Paley and Austin in 1872. There is some doubt as to whether it is original Paley and Austin or a rebuild of something earlier. Of this chapel Pevsner writes "the uncusped tracery is almost convincing Henry VIII but not quite." Beyond the Wilton Chapel are the organ chamber and the choir vestry. On the south of the church the Lever Chapel occupies a corresponding position to the Wilton Chapel, and to the east of this is the Birch (or Lady) Chapel. The tower is in three stages and rises to a height of 86 feet (26 m). It has a buttress at each corner, and a stair turret in the northeast corner. In the bottom stage is a doorway above which is a three-light window. In the middle stage on the west side is a two-light square-headed window. At a higher level in this stage are clock faces on the north, south and east sides. A reference in the churchwarden's accounts notes that there was a clock in the tower in 1656. The top stage contains a three-light louvred bell opening on each side, and above them a string course with gargoyles. At the top of the tower is an embattled parapet, and it is surmounted by a pyramidal roof with a weathervane. Both aisles have two cusped, tracery-less, three-light windows and above them are three three-light square-headed, mullioned windows. At the west end of the north aisle is a Decorated two-light window, and at the west end of the south aisle the window has three lights. The clerestory has a range of two-light square-headed windows on each side. The Lever chapel has two four-light windows, and in the Wilton chapel are three three-light windows. The east window of the chancel has seven lights and contains Perpendicular tracery. The south porch is dated 1756.
j. w.
A magnificent church. We were so warmly welcomed by Alan who kindly took us round the graveyard and showed us some graves with stories behind the people buried there.
Alan had found the grave of an ancestor. I cannot thank him enough.
So welcoming and it was a beautiful, sunny day.
B. R.
Didn't go in, but visited to take some photographs of the outside. Impressive monuments in the graveyard. The one to John Brooks is spectacular. What a shame that all the other less spectacular monuments that are listed are so difficult to find. All in all though, don't think I have ever been to a place with more listings in so small an area.
K. R.
The church and the start are a lovely place to visit. Unfortunately the church was shut. So I had a wander round the grave yards. If you want a bit of peace and a history lesson this is the place to go
P. S.
It's a church in the small village of Prestwich.
Prestwich is situated approx 4 miles outside the city of Manchester along the A56 highway.
St Mary's Church has a long history and some ofvthe grave stones especially clise the church are many hundreds of years old.
And outside the gates of the church is an inn called, The Church Inn, this is also a historical building, it use to be a coaching house, where horse drawn coaches would stop for the night, the horses would be fed and watered, the passengers would also be fed and wined, this happened over 200 years ago....
Prestwich and the church have an interesting history.
T. D.
Defo the graveyard tour worth doing
H. S.
It's a beautiful church and extremely well looked after, the volunteers do a truly wonderful job, I love St Mary's.
P. D.
This church has more history than you think.
C. W.
It's where I grew up as a child and attended as my school was prestwich parish