Church of All Saints, Little Shelford
Church of All Saints | |
---|---|
File:All Saints Church Little Shelford.JPG | |
52°08′39″N 0°07′22″E / 52.1442°N 0.1227°E | |
Location | Church Street, Little Shelford, Cambridgeshire, CB22 5HG |
Country | England |
Denomination | Church of England |
Churchmanship | Evangelical |
Website | www |
History | |
Status | Active |
Dedication | All Saints |
Architecture | |
Functional status | Parish Church |
Heritage designation | Grade II* listed |
Designated | 31 August 1962 |
Administration | |
Diocese | Ely |
Archdeaconry | Cambridge |
Deanery | Granta |
Parish | Little Shelford |
Clergy | |
Rector | Simon Scott |
Asst Curate(s) | Christopher Henderson |
The Church of All Saints is a Church of England parish church in Little Shelford, Cambridgeshire. The church is a Grade II* listed building, and dates from the 12th century.[1]
History
The stalls have on them the Arms of the de Freville family, Lords of the Manor here, whose 15th-century chapel (up three stairs) has some fine stone ornament on its piscina and on a canopy over the figure of a saint, with fragments of old glass in its windows. Some of the de Frevilles who died before their chapel was built appear in the chancel in stone and brass. Sir John de Freville, an alabaster tomb effigy with an inscription in Norman French, is here from the beginning of the 14th century, and from the end of it, in brass, are Robert de Freville and Claricia, with a greyhound and two dogs at their feet as they clasp hands, their son Thomas de Freville holding his wife's hand near them in a monumental brass of 1405. A 15th-century rector, John Cate, has another fine brass portrait.
Present day
On 31 August 1962, the church was designated a Grade II* listed building.[1] In 1996, the church was planted from St Andrew the Great, Cambridge.[2] All Saints is within the Conservative Evangelical tradition of the Church of England, and it has passed resolutions to reject the ordination of women.[3]
Rectors
File:Information icon4.svg |
- 1324: John de Barenton
- 1380: Walter Knight
- 1393: Robert Cook
- 1408: Thomas Patele
- 1408: William Wynbyle
- 1445: John Catte
- 1473: Richard Roche
- 1473: Geoffrey Burrell
- 1494: Thomas Wardell
- 1530: Thomas Hinde
- 1540: Richard Swinbourne
- 1557: John Dale
- 1559: George Fuller
- 1580: John Scarfield
- 1591: Nicholas Richmond
- 1596: Roger Lunn
- 1623: George Wellbourne
- 1627: John Heath
- 1641: George Wigmore
- 1668: William Wells
- 1676: Richard Manninge
- 1709: Roger Gillingham
- 1756: Jeremy Pemberton
- 1758: Thomas Hirst
- 1791: Samuel Ingle
- 1795: John Swaine
- 1802: Martin Hogg
- 1806: Henry Finch
- 1849: William Law
- 1852: James Law
- 1893: Edwin Carr
- 1931: Edward Berwick
- 1950: Edward Sibson
- 1963: William Butler
- 1969: Eric Hague
- 1977: Stephen Taylor
- 1997: Christopher Ash
- 2005: Simon Scott
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS". historicengland.org.uk/listing. Historic England. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
- ↑ "The Rev Mark Ashton: Cambridge vicar". The Times. 13 May 2010. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
As numbers continued to grow, in 1993 the church switched its site from the Round (after 850 years there) to St Andrew the Great — a much larger, previously somewhat derelict city centre church building. [...] Keen to enable further growth and to serve the wider church, in 1996 Ashton oversaw the move of a senior Bible teacher and 40 adults and their children to join a small evangelical church in the nearby village of Little Shelford.
- ↑ "Christmas 2016 Newsletter" (PDF). bishopofmaidstone.org. December 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
External links
File:Commons-logo.svg Media related to Church of All Saints, Little Shelford at Wikimedia Commons