Showing posts with label Deanshanger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deanshanger. Show all posts

08 June 2025

Saint Guthlac’s Church
in Passenham remains
an example of the survival
of ‘the beauty of holiness’

Saint Guthlac’s Church in Passenham, across the Great Ouse River from Stony Stratford (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Patrick Comerford

There was an open day with cream teas last weekend, at Saint Guthlac’s Church, the parish church in the tiny Northamptonshire hamlet of Passenham, across the Great Ouse River from Stony Stratford.

Charlotte and I walked across the river and through the fields on Bank Holiday Monday to Saint Guthlac’s Church, which is lovingly maintained by local parishioners. It’s a short walk, yet Passenham is in the Diocese of Peterborough while Stony Stratford is in the Diocese of Oxford.

After Holy Trinity Church, a new and larger church, was built in neighbouring Deanshanger in 1853, Saint Guthlac’s was left in slow decline, falling into disuse and dilapidation and facing imminent closure. But the church in Passenham was saved fortuitously by the discovery in the 1950s of the wall paintings in the chancel that date back to the 1620s and that had been covered in a layer of whitewash in the 18th century.

Saint Guthlac’s Church in Passenham has choir stalls that date from 1628, with contemporary misericords (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

These wall paintings were restored by Ann Ballantyne and E Clive Rouse, and over a ten-year programme of restoration an entire scheme of church decoration, furniture, paining and carving emerged. This was all of such exceptionally quality that the church was given a Grade I listing.

The elaborate decorations in Saint Guthlac’s Church 400 years has puzzled church historians ever sense they came to light in the middle of the last century. The panels on the east wall on each side of the High Altar depict the death, anointing and burial of Christ, with separate images of Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus.

Other wall paintings in the chancel depict four Biblical figures – Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and David – on the north wall, and the four evangelists on the south side, Matthew, Mark, Luke and John – although Saint Mark was hidden at an early date by a memorial erected to Robert Banastre after he died in 1649.

The memorial erected to Robert Banastre after he died in 1649 hides Saint Mark in the the arrangement of the four evangelists on the south chancel wall in Saint Guthlac’s Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

As well as these elaborate paintings, Saint Guthlac’s has choir stalls that date from 1628, with contemporary misericords in the form of a mask, arms upheld by angels, an ox, a male head with ass’s ears, a goat, head, a winged cherub’s head, a lion, a cat’s head, a lamb, a female head and a griffin. Each stall has the name of one of the 12 apostles, and above them is decoration reflecting the classical style of Inigo Jones, with painted shallow niches, fluted pilasters and a strapwork frieze.

The gallery at the west end of the church is supported by a carved frieze that may once have been part a chancel screen that was moved to the other end of the church in the 18th century.

These works combine to create an example of early 17th century High Church decoration in line with the High Church principles of William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury (1633-1645).

The gallery at the west end ofSaint Guthlac’s Church is supported by a carved frieze that may once have been part a chancel screen (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Sir Robert Banastre was a city man and a rising star in the court of James I and his son Charles I. He was comptroller to James l and became Clerk Victualler to Charles l, responsible for food and drink at the royal court. He was also member of the Court of the Green Cloth and was responsible for the collection of Ship Money in the county.

He accumulated lands in Passenham from the early 17th century, and leased land in the adjacent royal forest. He bought Passenham Manor in 1624, reflecting his growing status at court. By 1640, Banastre was wealthy enough to pay for the new chancel roof of Towcester Church. In Passenham, his coat of arms appears on his tomb and also on the exterior wall of the church behind his tomb.

Since the wall paintings were restored by Ann Ballantyne and E Clive Rouse, and the church decorations were refurbished, many church historians have discussed the significance of this elaborate scheme at a time when the Puritans were about the take power in England in the years immediately before the execution of Charles I.

There is no evidence that Banastre ever went on the ‘Grand Tour’ of Europe, still less that he ever saw the work of Palladio in Italy. But there are suggestions that his interior scheme at Passenham was influenced by the refurbishment of the Chapel Royal in Greenwich by Inigo Jones in 1623-1625, at a time when Banastre was a courtier. But hints of other influences have been identified in the chapel of Lincoln College Oxford and Lincoln’s Inn Chapel in London.

The figure of Nicodemus beside the Altar Saint Guthlac’s Church is a representation of faith concealed and gives rise to suspicions that Robert Banastre was a secret recusant or had Catholic sympathies (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

In his study of Saint Guthlac’s, Robin Goodfellow says the Italianate characteristics of the scheme of decoration and the portrayal of Christ himself, with strong connotations of the Pieta, suggest Catholic influence.

While popular Elizabethan portrayed Joseph of Arimathea as the person who first brought Christianity to England, Goodfellow suggests the presence of Nicodemus beside the Altar is a representation of faith concealed, and it has given rise to suspicions that Banastre was a secret recusant or had Catholic sympathies. Indeed, local traditions suggests that he ‘held the faith his father loved.’

Banastre came from a traditional Catholic family, and his father, Lawrence Banastre, had been committed to the Tower of London in 1572 following the arrest and execution of his patron, Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk, for his part in a plot to replace Queen Elizabeth with Mary Queen of Scots.

Despite Lawrence Banastre’s subsequent release, his family remained under suspicion, at least until his death in 1588.

During Robert Banastre’s decoration of Saint Guthlac’s Church, 22-year-old John Hall as rector in 1632. Hall was a recent graduate of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, when William Laud was the Chancellor of Oxford University, and remained at Passenham for over 20 years.

The altar in Saint Guthlac’s Church, Passenham (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Saint Guthlac’s Church was part of Banastre’s church-building in the Diocese of Peterborough, and of a wider construction programme in Passenham that included a rectory, a large barn and a manor house.

Banastre began this work in Passenham at the time of his wedding in 1620, and he completed it after Charles I ascended the throne 400 years ago in 1625. He died in 1649, and his monument in Saint Guthlac’s usurps the place of Saint Mark among the four evangelists on the south wall of the chancel. But the wall paintings survived both the iconoclasm of the Puritans during the Cromwellian era and the Protestant reordering of the church in the 18th century, albeit under layers of whitewash that had the effect of protecting and preserving the paintings for the next 180 years.

There is no surviving evidence of Sir Robert Banastre’s personal piety or artistic sophistication; perhaps he was motivated merely by a desire to impress the king; perhaps he was inspired by both the Catholic faith of father’s family and the religious and strongly royalist sympathies of his wife Margaret Hopton.

Whatever his motivation and inspiration were, Robin Goodfellow sees the decoration of Saint Guthlac’s as an example of the survival of ‘the beauty of holiness’ in action, and in it a unique record of and monument to English Christianity before, during and after the civil wars in the mid-17th century.

Climbing the steps in the tower of Saint Guthlac’s Church in Passenham (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Further Reading:

Robin Goodfellow, ‘Robert Banastre and the Beautification of Passenham Church’, Ecclesiology Today (issue 63, December 2024).

Robin Goodfellow, Robert Banastre and the Beautification of Passenham Church (privately published 2024, 24 pp).

22 March 2025

Deanshanger has a long history of
monastic and church houses, but
Holy Trinity Church dates from 1853

The War Memorial in Deanshanger and the east end of Holy Trinity Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Patrick Comerford

On my way back to Stony Stratford from Towcester earlier this week, I stopped off in the village of Deanshanger to see Holy Trinity Church on Wicken Road. Deanshanger in West Northamptonshire is 8 km (5 miles) north-west of Milton Keynes and a short two-mile walk west of Stony Stratford.

Deanshanger is off the A422 road from Stony Stratford and Old Stratford to Buckingham, which once ran through the village. The original population centre of the parish was in the hamlet of Passenham. However, from the late 18th century the coming of the Grand Union Canal to the east made Deanshanger an agricultural industrial centre and it grew quickly.

This growth increasedwith the arrival of the London and Birmingham Railway in the 19th century, passing through nearby Wolverton, Bletchley and Roade. Today, Deanshanger and the neighbouring village of Puxley have a total population of about 4,000 people.

Dove House is cross-shaped and is said locally to stand on the site of a monastery visited by Thomas Becket (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Deanshanger used to be called Daneshanger, meaning a clearing in the woods where the Danes lived. A manor at Deanshanger is mentioned in 1299. This does not necessarily establish the existence of a manorial building, but a house existed in the 14th century on the site of Dove House, and may have been once called ‘Duffus’ or Food Hall.

It is said locally that house was a monastery and was visited by Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury (1162-1170), during a dispute with Henry II. He also stayed at Dagnall Farm, half a mile outside the village on of the Wicken Road, then called Dragon’s Hold. Legend says an underground tunnel connected both buildings.

Although he was disguised as a peasant during his stay, he was recognised by a farm labourer who pleaded with the fleeing archbishop to perform a miracle producing clean water. It is one of 703 miracles said to have led to his canonisation.

Mediaeval Deanshanger had no parish church of its own and was part of Passenham Parish (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Mediaeval Deanshanger had no parish church of its own, but much of the land there was owned in the Middle Ages by the Knights Hospitaller and the Benedictines of Snelshall Priory, near Tattenhoe.

The Preceptory of the Knights Hospitaller at Dingley had lands in Passenham and Deanshanger from the end of the 12th century. Snelshall Priory, near Tattenhoe, was granted lands and rents in Passenham, Deanshanger and Wicken in the mid-13th century.

Edward II granted the manor of Deanshanger to John de Haustede and his heirs in 1307, along with part of the wood in Whittlewood and all the lands, rents and fees in Wick Dive, Wick Hamon, Passenham, Stony Stratford, Furtho, Puxley and Whitfield.

After Snelshall Priory was dissolved during the Tudor Reformation, the priory estate was granted in 1540 to John Josselyn and Anne his wife.

When Queen Mary tried to re-establish the Hospitallers in 1558, the order’s possessions in Passenham and the rent from the Church House in Deanshanger were held by Roger Palmer. The premises were part of the sale of the Manor of Deanshanger to Henry Best and Robert Holland in 1599.

Much of the land in Deanshanger eventually passed to Robert Lord Spencer, who already owned the former Snelshall lands in Deanshanger and the adjoining Manor of Wicken. Dovehouse Farm is the former capital messuage of the Manor of Deanshanger.

Sir Ralph Winwood, principal secretary to King James I, bought the manor and may have replaced the earlier manor house with the present cruciform building known as Dove House.

Deanshanger House ... Snelshall Priory and the Knights Hospitaller at Dingley had manorial interests in Deanshanger (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

The Manor of Deanshanger was bought by William Carpenter in 1617. However, over the years, its ‘Manor’ status was forgotten and in his will Carpenter described it as a ‘farmhouse’. The manor passed to the Palmer family in the 17th century, and through them to the Whalley family. They sold it to the Gurney family, and it was later bought by the Kendall family and then in 1877 by Lord Penrhyn.

The Manor Farm House is a 17th century house, re-fronted and remodelled in the 18th and 19th centuries. By 1878, it was called Deanshanger House and some years later it became known as Manor House.

The main industry in the village from the 1820s was an iron foundry and later an iron oxide works, making pigment for paint. The works closed in 1999 and were demolished. The amenities in Deanshanger today include a village hall and community centre, a post office, a pub (the Bee Hive), a sports and social club and a Conservative club. The parish council has offices in a former school and Baptist chapel that was renovated in 2008.

The first school in Deanshanger opened in 1833 in a former Baptist chapel. A new village school opened in 1858 for children up to the age of 13, and a secondary school opened in 1958. Deanshanger School was later renamed Kingsbrook School. When it merged with former Roade school in 2011, it was renamed the Elizabeth Woodville School. The school grounds include the site of a Roman villa that has not yet been excavated.

Holy Trinity Church, Deanshanger, was designed by Benjamin Ferrey and built in 1853-1854 as a ‘Chapel of Ease’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

The village includes Holy Trinity Church, the Church of England parish church and a Methodist chapel and once had two Baptist chapels.

Holy Trinity Church, Deanshanger, is part of the Benefice of Passenham with Old Stratford and Deanshanger, in the Diocese of Peterborough and Towcester Deanery. The foundation stone was laid on 28 April 1853 and the building was consecrated on 9 November 1854.

Holy Trinity Church was designed by the London architect Benjamin Ferrey (1810-1880), who worked mainly in the Gothic Revival. Ferrey studied architecture in London under Augustus Charles Pugin (1762-1832), alongside Pugin’s son, Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812-1852).

The total cost was nearly £2,500, considerably more than the £1,777 originally estimate. Over half the cost, almost £1,500, was given by the Revd Charles Perceval, the rector of the neighbouring parish of Calverton, Buckinghamshire.

Holy Trinity Church, Deanshanger, was described at the time as ‘an excellent, though inexpensive, example of the small village church’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

The church was built in the Early English style with seating for 400 people. It was described at the time as ‘an excellent, though inexpensive, example of the small village church.’ It has a chancel, vestry, nave, north aisle and south porch. The three-bay chancel has a triple lancet east window.

Other features in the church include lancet windows, two-light windows with tracery, a double-chamfered door in the north-east with a hood mould, a double-chamfered south door with a hood mould, a gabled timber porch, a circular six-foiled window in the west gable and a bell-cote in the west gable, with three arches for bells.

Holy Trinity Church began with had a High Church tradition: incense was used at services, and the church had a Lady Altar and Stations of the Cross.

The organ was moved from the chancel in 1897 and placed in the vestry, and an arch was let into the wall between the chancel and the vestry. A new pulpit, designed by the Stony Stratford architect Edward Swinfen Harris, and seats were added to fill the gap in the chancel.

The stained glass east window was installed in 1906 to commemorate the golden jubilee of the opening of the church. Holy Trinity Church once had three bells, with a team of ringers.

Initially, Holy Trinity Church was as a ‘Chapel of Ease’. Until 1854, people in Deanshanger had to walk to Saint Guthlac’s Church, Passenham, to go to church. Baptisms, weddings and funerals continued to take places in Saint Guthlac’s Church, Passenham, until the 1940s and as a chapel of ease Holy Trinity was not licensed for baptisms until 1922 or to solemnise weddings until 1949.

The Revd George Marie Capell (1870-1915) is, to date, the longest serving Rector, and George Ostler was the organist for 40 years alongside him.

Holy Trinity Church has been a Grade II listed building since 1988, and there are Commonwealth War Graves and war memorials in the churchyard.

The gabled timber south porch has a double-chamfered door with a hood mould (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)

Today, the Revd James Pennington is the Rector of Passenham with Old Stratford and Deanshanger. The church labels itself HTD, perhaps in imitation of Holy Trinity Brompton, which is known as HTB. It says it is ‘a lively and growing village church where you’ll find a warm welcome and a congregation doing its best to follow a biblical pattern of contemporary worship.’

Sunday services at Holy Trinity Church at 11 am are: Holy Communion (first, third and fifth Sundays); Morning Worship (second Sundays); and Family Service (fourth Sunday). Refreshments are served from 10:30.

There is a more traditional service of Holy Communion in Saint Guthlac’s Church, Passenham, on the second and fourth Sundays.

The village of Old Stratford has no church, but an evening service is held at 6:30 pm on the first and third Sundays in the Memorial Hall, Old Stratford, led by the team from Holy Trinity Church, Deanshanger, and Saint Guthlac’s Church, Passenham.

Evening services are being held twice a month in the Memorial Hall, Old Stratford (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2025)