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3
Creating a Christian Timeline for Addingham
2
1
4
The East entrance - for people from Low Mill and the Moorside
5
W
elcome to the church and grounds
of St. Peter’s, Addingham.
An Anglo-Saxon riddle:
The south wall
was rebuilt, a
west gallery was
constructed inside,
and the tower was
added. The date
of 1757, together
with the names
of the church
The gallery
wardens, can be
seen carved in the stone above the clock. The total
cost came to £160.8s.4d.
The name Addingham derives from
the Anglo-Saxon ‘Adda ingaham’,
meaning ‘the farmstead of the
followers of Adda’.
The Christian history of this
site goes back to the 8th or 9th
centuries. Worship at that time
may have taken place around
the Anglo-Saxon cross whose
shaft survives and may be seen
in the church. It is also possible
that there was a wooden church
here, although nothing remains
of it today.
“Companions pass me from hand to hand.
Men and women are proud to lift me to their lips and worship,
To many there I become the source of
mercy and blessedness .”
In 1759 six bells were brought from the Whitechapel
bell foundry in London, at a cost of £285.1s.7d.
Some of the bells have interesting inscriptions, such
as this upon the 4th:
Much of the interior of the church dates from
the Tudor period, during the 1520s or 1530s.
This includes the chancel arch, the arcade and
the roof timbers in the nave and north aisle.
6
You will find the answer to this riddle on the
information board at the far side of the field.
The answer to the riddle on the other board is:
“Our voices with joyful sound make hills and
valleys echo round.”
The earliest stone church probably
dates from around 1155. In 1189
we have the first record of a priest
at Addingham, called simply
Anglo-Saxon
cross
‘Thomas the parson’. By then,
Addingham had become part of the estate of the
Vavasour family, who remained
patrons of the church until after the
reformation and whose crest is
to be seen carved in wood
and stone within the church.
Little of the Norman church
remains - just a few stones
which have been re-used in Vavasour
later re-buildings.
family crest
“What am I?
“A fish in the river”
These are the same bells you will hear rung today.
Local Plan
The clock was made by William
Cryer of Carleton, around
1830. It is considered
a very fine piece of
craftsmanship.
The eastern approach to St Peter’s
By the middle of the 18th century the church was
in need of repair. In 1753 plans were drawn up to
demolish the
Tudor church
and re-build in
the modern style
at a projected
cost of £1,135.
Instead, a more
modest repair
was undertaken
by local
craftsmen.
Tudor period roof timbers
We hope
that you
may have time to visit
the church
and enjoy
the special
quality
of peace
which is
the heritage
of centuries
of prayer.
From the end of the
18th and throughout
the 19th centuries
Addingham became
a thriving industrial
village. The dedications
on the windows and
memorials in the
chancel testify to the
importance of the
Cunliffe-Lister and
the Coates Thompson
families here.
The east window, 1856
Timeline for Christian worship in Addingham
AD 700
800
900
c.700 - 900:
Anglo-Saxon burial ground
& evidence of Christian worship
1000
1100
c.900-950:
Stone cross
1155:
First stone
church on site
8th -11th Century:
Viking age bone ornament (found in grounds)
867:
Archbishop of
York flees from
Danish Vikings
to reside at
Addingham
c.980:
Estate of
Addingham
taken from the
Archbishop
of York
1200
1086:
Addingham
referred to in
Domesday
Book
1300
1400
1500
1600
12th-17th Centuries: Vavasours as Lords of the Manor in Addingham
1189:
First record of a priest,
Thomas the Parson,
at Addingham
1520s-30s:
Chancel arch, arcade
& roof timbers in nave
& north aisle
1700
1800
1900
2000
1750s:
South wall rebuilt, tower added
& west gallery constructed
1689:
Quaker Meeting House
at Farfield built
1530s:
English Reformation - dissolution
of monastery at Bolton Abbey (1539)
c.12th-16th Century: Mediaeval manor house with fishponds on this site
1759:
Whitechapel
bells installed
1968:
Church hall built
1830:
Clock added to
tower of St Peter’s
1778:
Wesleyan Methodist
Chapel built (Chapel Street)
1861:
Mount Hermon
Wesleyan Reform Chapel
built (Main Street)
1927:
Roman Catholic Church
built (Bolton Road)
1990:
Anglo-Saxon burial
ground discovered
1934: Church Orchard purchased
1947:
Shaft of C10th Anglo-Saxon
cross found
1998:
Church hall
extended
2008:
Stone carvings
commissioned
to mark
Anglo-Saxon
heritage
3
Creating a Christian Timeline for Addingham
2
1
4
The West entrance - for people from the village
5
The Church Field
(known as the ‘Church Orchard’)
The field surrounding the church and burial ground
is protected as a Scheduled Ancient Monument
because of its archaeological importance.
Around the church and the Old Rectory there
is an ancient ditch, possibly of Iron Age origin.
The western embankment of the ditch is visible to
the right of the path as you enter the churchyard.
During excavations of
this ditch a Viking-age
bone ornament (dating
from the late 8th to 11th
centuries) was found.
This can be seen inside
the church.
W
elcome to the church and
grounds of St. Peter’s, Addingham.
As you enter these grounds you
tread in the footsteps of countless Christians
who, over the centuries, have come to this
church to worship God, to marry, to baptise
their children and bury their dead. Nowadays,
many walkers pass through this field on
the Dales Way.
When the church hall was extended during the
1990s an Anglo-Saxon burial ground was discovered.
The skeletal remains of about eighty people of both
sexes and all ages were found in fifty five graves.
Radio-carbon dating of the bones suggests they date
from the 8th to 10th
centuries.
Anglo-Saxon burial ground
excavated in 1989-90. The
plan shows primary and
secondary interments and
graves with no apparent
interments.
“What am I?
The carved shaft of an Anglo-Saxon
stone cross, probably 10th century,
was discovered in the churchyard in
1947. This is on display in the side
chapel of the church.
Viking-age bone ornament
Whatever brings you here and wherever
you are going, may God bless you as you
continue on your journey.
An Anglo-Saxon riddle:
The Archbishop of York appears to have had a
residence here at this time. An early historian (writing
in 1130AD) records that when the Vikings ransacked
York in 867 AD, “Bishop Wulfhere kept aloof,
residing at Addingeham in the Western part of
Yorkshire in the valley which is called Wharfedale
between Otley and the castle of Skipton.”
I am silent but my house is loud.
We travel together Sometimes I am faster than he,
But sometimes I rest while he moves on.
For as long I dwell in him I am alive,
As soon as I leave him I will die.”
6
You will find the answer to this riddle on the
information board at the far side of the field.
The answer to the riddle on the other board is:
There was a mediaeval manor house
on this site which stood near the church
on Wharfe brow. Nothing remains of Anglo-Saxon the building
stone cross
as the land it was built on was eroded by
the river, but two manorial
fishponds are still clearly
visible today. This field was
then known as ‘Hall Orchard’
or ‘Lord’s Orchard’.
Old manorial fishpond
“Chalice or Cross”
Local Plan
The church
congregation
is pleased to
be able to
share this
beautiful and peaceful place with
the village
community,
and with
walkers and
visitors from further afield.
In the early twentieth century there were plans to build
houses on the this land. In order to prevent this, the
Parochial Church Council purchased the ‘Church
Orchard’ in 1934 for the sum of £310.
One of the proposed ‘ecclesiastical purposes’ for the
land was for the building of a church hall. The first hall
was duly built in 1968, and extended in 1998.
In 2008, the church commissioned
some carved stone memorials to
mark the site of the Anglo-Saxon
burial ground, bearing words of
the Venerable Bede,“We cannot
be so wise that we will not need
to consider what shall be decided
for our souls.”
Timeline for Christian worship in Addingham
AD 700
800
900
c.700 - 900:
Anglo-Saxon burial ground
& evidence of Christian worship
1000
1100
c.900-950:
Stone cross
1155:
First stone
church on site
8th -11th Century:
Viking age bone ornament (found in grounds)
867:
Archbishop of
York flees from
Danish Vikings
to reside at
Addingham
c.980:
Estate of
Addingham
taken from the
Archbishop
of York
1200
1086:
Addingham
referred to in
Domesday
Book
1300
1400
1500
1600
12th-17th Centuries: Vavasours as Lords of the Manor in Addingham
1189:
First record of a priest,
Thomas the Parson,
at Addingham
1520s-30s:
Chancel arch, arcade
& roof timbers in nave
& north aisle
1700
1800
1900
2000
1750s:
South wall rebuilt, tower added
& west gallery constructed
1689:
Quaker Meeting House
at Farfield built
1530s:
English Reformation - dissolution
of monastery at Bolton Abbey (1539)
c.12th-16th Century: Mediaeval manor house with fishponds on this site
1759:
Whitechapel
bells installed
1968:
Church hall built
1830:
Clock added to
tower of St Peter’s
1778:
Wesleyan Methodist
Chapel built (Chapel Street)
1861:
Mount Hermon
Wesleyan Reform Chapel
built (Main Street)
1927:
Roman Catholic Church
built (Bolton Road)
1990:
Anglo-Saxon burial
ground discovered
1934: Church Orchard purchased
1947:
Shaft of C10th Anglo-Saxon
cross found
1998:
Church hall
extended
2008:
Stone carvings
commissioned
to mark
Anglo-Saxon
heritage