All Saints’ Church

Photo by Barnes collection
Benington Church
(Benington Community Heritage Trust has now been set up following the closure of the Church in 2001. See their website for the latest information.)
The Church of All Saints’ Benington was listed a Grade I building in January 1967and is now 600 years old, originating from the early Thirteenth Century.
All Saints’ charts the developments in ecclesiastical rural architecture through to the Fifteenth Century with a fascinating Victorian restoration conducted by James Fowler of Louth in 1873 to top it all off. It is built in coursed squared limestone rubble and ashlar, with slate and lead roofs. The church consists of a western tower, clerestoried nave, aisles, chancel and south porch.
The tower is a two stage late 14th century tower with a moulded plinth, string courses, parapet and corner buttresses, each with a crocketed ogee with beast head corbels halfway up. There is also a beast-head and fleuron corbel table. There are also two-light belfry openings with cusped transom and ogee heads to the lights, and hood moulds with human head stops. The west doorway has a moulded surround containing a quatrefoil frieze. This is flanked by ogee cusped pilasters which would have framed the door, but have been cut back when the west window was enlarged and flanked by cusped and crocketed niches. There is also a large four-light 15th century window with hollow moulded surround and panelled tracery.
Photo by Barnes collection
Bellringers 1986
Six bells are housed in the tower dating between 1686 and 1759 from 26” to 39½ “.
One of the Benington Church bells bears the following inscription:
- “The hills and vales and towns all round
Shall echo with a pleasant sound.”
Another bell bears the following:
- “To Church, the House of God, come all I pray,
To praise His name to all eternity.”
These were rung until the church closed in 2001.
A battlemented clerestory has six three-light 15th century windows with panel tracery and linked hoods. The nave is 13th century (partly rebuilt in the 19th century) and of coursed squared limestone rubble with a slate roof, to the east-end of which is an octagonal stair turret. This has a roll moulded string course and corbel table, and four lancets to the north side.
The east window has five lights and is 15th century with a deeply moulded surround and panel tracery, and is flanked by 19th century buttresses bearing a quatrefoil. The festival day of All Saints is 1st November and the east window is so devised, not being in the centre of the chancel that the sun at its rising shall shine as fully as possible into the Church on that day.
On the south side there are four 15th century three-light windows with cusped heads and panel tracery. There is also a continuously moulded 14th century priest’s door.
The south aisle has a three-light reticulated 14th century east window which was restored in the 19th century and on the south side, five two-light windows matching those on the north side. In the west end a three-light 14th century reticulated window matches that in the east end. The gabled 14th century porch is lead roofed with a moulded outer arch with fleurons, octagonal responds and a quatrefoil frieze to its base. This also has a contemporary, continuously moulder inner door.
Photo by Barnes collecton
The Nave
In the interior are six 14th century bay nave arcades with two hollow chamfered orders and octagonal piers, responds and capitals on large circular 13th century bases. In the tower is a 15th century arch with double hollow chamfered arch and octagonal responds, while the 14th century nave roof pitch is fossilised in the tower wall.
The early 13th century chancel arch has a roll and a square moulding with three collared clustered shafts and stiff leaf foliage. The 15th century nave roof has moulded principals of a queen post construction, with ached braces resting on cambered ties, which are in turn braced to posts and supported on carved corbels. These are supported by angels with shields.
In the east end of the north aisle is a four centred arched doorway to the stair turret and a cusped headed piscina. A projecting octagonal bowl on a corbel and a small trefoil headed niche is located adjacently. In the south aisle a trefoil headed piscine has a cut back bowl, while in the chancel a roll moulded cill course and lancets with shafted and roll moulded rear arches have foliate capitals. On both side walls are annular corbels and springing bays for bays of a 13th century vault, now vanished. In the south wall is located a 14th century triple sedilia with ogee arches and clustered shafts, a pointed headed piscine, and a double aumbry with roll moulded surround. In the north wall there is a segmental headed moulded tomb recess, two moulded headed openings and a further single aumbry.
Fittings include a 15th century seven bay chancel screen, the central bay being wider with double doors. Its panels are traceried with brattished segmental transoms with ogee tops and panel tracery. This also has a restored coved canopy on fine clustered shafts, while a carved and sculpted pulpit of 1864 stands to its north.
In 1534 there were three altars in the church:
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The High Altar to All Saints.
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Our Lady’s Altar at the east end of the north aisle at the entrance to the rood loft: a bracket for the figure, the Piscina and receptacle for alms, remain.
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Corpus Christi Altar at the south-east corner of the south aisle.
This is a rare dedication: the Feast of Corpus Christi was only established in the 15th Century.
Further fittings include a 14th century sandstone octagonal font, with airs of figures under crocked ogee arches to each face and angel suppers to the bowl. The pilastered stem also has figures and a caved base stood upon three octagonal steps with two kneeling stones, for priest and god-mother who represent the infant. The height of the font is 6’ 2”.
At the restoration of the Church in 1874, the organ, formerly in the gallery at the west-end of the Church, was enlarged and placed in the south aisle.
There are table tombs to the memory of Richard Cowell and his wife in the churchyard. An entry in the Parish Register tells us that Wm Porrill and Jane Pawley were married 28th May 1724. Their early bliss was short-lived: Jane was buried 3rd April 1725 and her husband 22nd October 1727. A tombstone, which is Grade II listed, with the following inscription is on the west side of the church porch:
-
Sacred to the memory of Mr Wm Porrill,
Shopkeeper of this Parish,
who died 22nd October 1727, aged 67.
Bequeathing his estate for the endowment
of a school and amply providing for the
maintenance of a schoolmaster,
two poor men and two poor women
belonging to this and the adjoining parish
of Leverton for ever, and denominating
the charity (which this perishable stone
but feebly records), Benington Bede.
Benington Church had its own rector living and working in the parish until October 1994, when it joined forces with Freiston and Butterwick and Rev Brian Grellier became the ‘priest in charge’.
BENINGTON ROLL OF HONOUR
(Names are now read out at St Andrew’s Church, Butterwick at their Remembrance Service)
R Bailey G W Bland A Bolland
J Bolland C R Crawford H Crowder
F W Crowder W Harwood G Harwood
H Harwood F Needham A C Sharp
C S Tetther R H Toynton J Thompson
J R Ward H Woods
Photo by Barnes collection
All Saints'
Sadly in September 2001 the Church held its final service and was closed until a decision regarding the future is made. Once at risk of abandonment All Saints has been given a reprieve in the form of the Benington Community Heritage Trust. The Trust has been set up and the process of registering as a charity has begun.
The trustee members are Mr Robert Bell, Mrs Kerry Francis, Mr Kevin Pinner, Mrs Irene Presgrave and Mr Martin Wright. Their objectives will be to, “preserve for the benefit of the people of Benington village and of the Nation, the historical, architectural and constructional heritage that may exist in and around Benington village in buildings (including any structure or erection, and any part of a building as so defined) of particular beauty or historical, architectural or constructional interest”
For up-to-date information please refer to the Parish Magazine (Freiston, Butterwick with Benington and Leverton) published at present bi-monthly.
Revd Andrew Higginson - 01205 760480
For articles/advertisements for the Parish Magazine please contact:
Gordon Anderson
45 Prince William Drive, Butterwick, Boston, Lincs PE22 0JG
Tel: 01205 761279 email: gordon_anderson@tiscali.co.uk
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Compiled by J W & Mrs J Barnes from local knowledge together with information taken from:
Boston Library (Benington - reference)
Freiston with Butterwick - A compilation by The Rev J R Trotter MA (1936) History and Antiquities of Boston by Pishey Thompson (1856)
(last updated December 2009)
Weblinks
Benington Parish Council is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
SHE WAS THE BENINGTON VILLAGE SEXTON
Mrs Carby (from The Standard - 9th October 1954)