The cost of building the Church was funded from a bequest from Miss Frances Wakeham who died on 14th March 1893. Miss Wakeham left £4,500 towards the building of a second Church in the Parish of Bocking. Work began on 8th June 1896 and the nave, chancel and vestries being the completed first parts were consecrated by the Bishop of St. Alban’s (the Rt. Revd Dr. John Wogan Festing) on 18th June 1897.
Originally St. Peter’s was conceived as a single building to seat 300 people. However, it was felt that due to a possible increase in population, the Church needed the facility to be converted to seat 600. The early finances of the Church were such that the Church was often in debt and so no money could be raised to finance the building of a larger Church. To this day the Church has not been finished and just consists of the nave, chancel and vestries. The side aisles which were part of the original plan have never been completed.
The Church is built of yellow brick. The roof is surmounted by a belfry which was never finished. It has two bells which, silent for many years after being struck by lightning, have recently been rehung and are now in regular use. The visitor enters the Church by the south door and proceeds via a central aisle flanked each side with pews and five pointed arches. Above the small arches are five small windows (known as the clerestory windows). These windows are inscribed with the letters F and W (the initials of Miss Frances Wakeham).
ST PETER, St Peter’s Road. 1897 by Micklethwaire (GR). Competent and sensitive.
Never heard of this church but I see it has a service about the time I'm usually in Braintree on Fridays as I'm still visiting churches in the area. Although I won't be around for the service, hopefully I'll be able to get in before it starts.
ReplyDeleteGood luck!
DeleteThanks. I will post on here tomorrow if I was able to get in. I should be able to as it advertises a service at 1. It depends how soon before the service the church opens.
DeleteAs intended, I visited St. Peter's today. I was warmly welcomed by those who were coming for the 1 p.m. Mass, including the parish priest. They were happy to let me photograph the building, one of them even asked me if I liked what I saw. The interior is one long building with only a screen to divide nave and chancel. There are arcades on either side of the nave which seems to suggest that aisles were intended, but were never built.There are 2 stained glass windows, one in the West which is a modern window, and a Kempe window at the East end which depicts scenes mostly from Our Lord's Passion and Resurrection. There is a carved relief of St. Peter and a statue of Our Lady of Walsingham (the church is, thankfully, Anglo-Catholic). In the chancel there is a sedilia.
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