St Mary, Flixton |
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As the Waveney twists eastwards, the rolling, tree-shrouded bluffs on either side hide narrow lanes and secrets. St Mary sits on one such bluff above its village, but there are few distant views of it and so it comes as something of a surprise when you climb the path up into the churchyard, because the tower of this important 19th Century church is quite unlike any other in East Anglia. The architect was Anthony Salvin, a flamboyant character, who seems to have based the design of the tower here on the Rhenish helm tower of the church at Sompting in Sussex. Salvin was working here in the 1850s, and earlier in the decade there had been a major restoration at Sompting, which had featured heavily in the architectural press. Perhaps it could be said that Sompting was in the contemporary zeitgeist. Salvin's work here was at the behest of the Adairs of Flixton Hall. Their predecessors were the Tasburgh family, wealthy Norwich merchants who arrived in the parish in the middle of the 15th Century. The Tasburghs were recusant Catholics after the Reformation, but placed their memorials in the parish church in the usual fashion and probably kept an eye on its upkeep. They are said to have retained a small community of Benedictine monks. Charles II, visiting Flixton Hall, which they built in the ruins of the priory, is reported to have said that "these popish dogs have a beautiful kennel". The Tasburgh line died out in the early 18th Century, and Flixton Hall and the South Elmham estates associated with it came into the hands of the Adairs. Flixton is the most northerly of the South Elmham villages, overlooking the Waveney. An 1818 sketch of Flixton church by Isaac Johnson shows it to have been a fairly typical church for this part of Suffolk, square-towered, aisleless and with a ruined chancel. The tower fell in the 1830s, and at the time of the 1851 Census of Religious Worship there were sittings for 200 people, eighty of which were free of pew rents, which is to say that it was not a big church. At the time of the census the population of Flixton was 210, and George Sandby the vicar claimed that average attendance on a Sunday was 100, which seems very high for this part of Suffolk but it was probably because Flixton was effectively an estate village for Flixton Hall. Sanby, who was also rector of South Elmham All saints, noted in his return that there were very few dissenters (ie: non-conformists), all but one family occasionally attended church. It was soon after this that the Adairs began the dramatic reconstruction of Flixton church. Salvin rebuilt the nave in an East Anglian Perpendicular style and, it would seem, added a chancel. He also added a north aisle to match the nave and the helmed faux-Saxon tower. There was further building work in the late 1880s when a vaulted chapel was added at the west end of the aisle, and the earlier chancel was entirely rebuilt in a heavy-handed and rather gloomy Norman manner. The startlingly pointed south porch leads into the inner door, and then down into the nave. As you would expect with those great Perpendicular windows, you step into a building only a little less light than outside, but you look east to a chancel shrouded in Romanesque darkness. The most memorable feature of the interior is in the vaulted chapel at the west end of the aisle. This is the memorial to Lady Theodosia Adair, who died in 1871. She had married Sir Robert Shafto Adair, an Irish-born Liberal politician, in 1836. Adair was the 2nd Baronet, and two years after hs wife's death he was created Baron Waveney. However, the title fell into disuse when he died because he and his wife had no children. The Adairs owned estates in both Ballymena, County Antrim and here in the South Elmhams, and Adair was often busy with philanthropic building works on the Irish estate, but he was also MP for Cambridge, which brought him more often to Flixton, and thus his plans to rebuild the church here. When his wife died he had her effigy made by John Bell, a Norfolk sculptor who was best known for 'The Babes in the Wood', now in Norwich Castle Museum. The chapel was built in 1889 to house it by John's brother Hugh, who had inherited the baronetcy as 3rd Baronet. It is a remarkably successful combination of vaulted Gothic and late Victorian sentiment, strangely moving. The light and
simplicity of Lady Waveney's memorial is a contrast to
the dark, mysterious neo-Norman of the chancel, with its
marble floor and roundels of heavily coloured glass set
in the main lancets of the east wall, as if this was the
side chapel of a French cathedral. Mortlock says that
they are by William Willement, and as they were produced
in 1857 they must have been made for the earlier chancel
that this one replaced, their shape suggesting that it
too was in a Norman style. The glass depicting saints and
patriachs in the lancets of the south and north walls is
by Burlison & Grylls in 1897, fresher and lighter and
the chancel's finishing touch, although they do little to
alleviate the darkness. The chancel is home to a number
of Adair and Tasburgh memorials. Simon Knott, March 2022 Follow these journeys as they happen at Last Of England Twitter. |
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