St Mary's Church, Brownsea Island

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St Mary's Church
Religion
AffiliationChurch of England
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusActive
Year consecrated1854
Location
LocationBrownsea Island, Dorset, England
Geographic coordinates50°41′22″N 1°57′41″W / 50.6895°N 1.9614°W / 50.6895; -1.9614
Architecture
Architect(s)Branchard
TypeChurch

St Mary's Church is a Church of England parish church at Brownsea Island, Dorset, England. The church was built in 1853–54 and is a Grade II* listed building.[1]

A church for Brownsea Island was built after Colonel William Petrie Waugh purchased the island in 1852 and established a pottery industry (Branksea Clay & Pottery Company) there, along with Maryland village to house his workers. With the island's new inhabitants at Brownsea Castle and Maryland, as well as existing coastguard station, Waugh had St Mary's built in 1853–54 at his sole expense. In addition to paying for its construction, he also provided the church with an annual endowment of £75, with the government providing an additional £25 due to the coastguard station. Designed by the architect Mr. Blanchard and built by Charles Wheeler, the foundation stone of the new church was laid by Sir Harry Smith, 1st Baronet on 2 July 1853. The ceremony attracted over 1,000 spectators, most of whom were brought over to the island from Poole but also Studland. Prior to the church, the Bishop of Salisbury, the Right Rev. Edward Denison, granted permission in about 1847 for the rector of Studland to use a sail loft at Brownsea Island's coastguard station for divine service on alternate Wednesdays.[2][3]

St Mary's was consecrated by the Bishop of Salisbury, the Right Rev. Walter Kerr Hamilton, on 18 October 1854. The ceremony was attended by many spectators and despite the church's 150 person capacity, 306 tickets of admission were given for the consecration.[4] The church cost £10,000 to build.[5] In 1908, a small chapel was added onto the church to hold the marble tomb effigy of Charles van Raalte, who owned the island from 1901 until his death in 1908. He was originally buried in the churchyard on 15 February, but was moved into the tomb later in the year after a faculty for the chapel was obtained and construction carried out.[6]

When Mary Bonham-Christie purchased Brownsea Island in 1927, most of the island's residents were evicted and St Mary's fell into disuse. Bonham-Christie would then ban all public access to the island after a serious wildfire occurred in 1934.[7] During World War II, the western side of Brownsea Island was used as a Starfish site, a night-time decoy intended to divert German bombers away from Poole.[8] In 1942, the church suffered bomb damage during an air raid and repair work was quickly carried out in the same year.[9] After Bonham-Christie's death, the National Trust purchased the island in 1962 and, with the exception of the castle, it was reopened to the public on 15 May 1963. The ceremony included the rehallowing of St Mary's, which once again began to hold services.[10]

St Mary's remains the parish church for Brownsea Island, as part of the benefice of Parkstone St Peter and St Osmund with Branksea St Mary. Sunday afternoon services are held each week from Easter to the end of September and the church is also open to visitors to Brownsea Island.[11][12] The church maintains a strong link with the Brownsea Island Scout camp. In 2007, to coincide with the Scouting centenary, about 40 new kneelers or hassocks were given to the church, decorated with the 21 World Scout Jamboree badges and other Scouting, Guiding and island badges.[13]

Architecture and fittings

Vicarage

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI