At the sign of the Barking lion...

St Mary, Wortham

At the sign of the Barking lion...

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Wortham

Wortham S(anc)t(u)s Th(omas)e S(anc)ta A(ve) M(aria) R(egina) flintwork in the blocked north doorway

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          You could easily visit the village of Wortham without seeing this church. The parish contains five settlements scattered around Suffolk's biggest common, and the large village which takes the parish name is on the busy Bury to Diss road. St Mary by contrast is on its own, a mile or so to the north on an ancient backroad that runs between Palgrave and Redgrave. Between the church and the village stretches the ancient common, gorse-covered now that it is undergrazed, bleak and mysterious in winter, verdant in summer. It's a strange place.

Wortham church has the biggest round tower in England, fully ten metres across. Round towers are an East Anglian speciality, apart from a handful in the Ouse valley in Sussex, and are a source of some wild speculation. The Saxon origins of some of the towers have encouraged people to suggest that they were fortifications, and only had churches added to them when the Normans came. However, almost all East Anglia's round towers post-date the Norman invasion. Indeed, some appear to have been built as late as the early 14th Century, and many of them are not as old as the churches against which they stand. Bramfield's is the only round tower in Suffolk that is separate from its church building, suggesting that they were always ecclesial in character. The most outlandish explanation is that they are the linings of ancient wells, left exposed as the land receded. This is pure nonsense, of course, but charming in its way. They were all probably built as church towers, and may have been intended as lookout towers as well, for why not? But it is hard to look at the mighty bulk of Wortham tower and not think that it might have had some kind of defensive purpose as well.

I fondly remember being here once on a lovely day in early summer around the turn of the century I should think. I had cycled the four miles from Palgrave along the narrow lane in a shimmering heat. There were no cars about, not a person to be seen. A big golden hare sat watchfully in the verge, hauling himself back into the hedgerow as I approached. Off to my right, a line of low hills was punctuated by church towers, one of them round and only a few fields away, but they were all on the far side of the Waveney in Norfolk.

The setting is lovely, a large, rising churchyard set in the fields with just a few big old houses and a farm for company. Although you can't go inside the tower, you can see the inside of it from the west. It probably dates from the early 12th Century. It is open to the sky now after the roof collapsed in the 1780s, but you can make out where the internal floors were, and what looks like it might have been a fireplace.The perky little bellcote was added at the end of the 18th Century.

St Mary's tower is so striking that it it might distract from what is otherwise a harmonious late medieval East Anglian church with aisles and a clerestory,. It seems to be the work of one long building campaign from the late 14th to the late 15th Century. There are flushwork letters and symbols in the clerestory including four monograms reading S(anc)t(u)s Th(omas)e S(anc)ta A(ve) M(aria) R(egina) ('St Thomas, Hail Mary Holy Queen'). There was a lot of small-scale work done right at the end of the 19th Century by Albert Bartrum, who was not only a builder but the churchwarden here. You see the most memorable part of his idiosyncratic restoration when you step inside to the wide and well-kept interior which, perhaps thanks to his efforts, doesn't feel particularly rustic. We could be in the middle of a small town.

The wide range of bench ends appear to be the work of Albert Bartrum himself, and were supposedly inspired by verses of the 104th Psalm, although perhaps it was a loose inspiration. As well as various figures going about their business, the bench ends include a walrus, a tortoise and an owl, a dragon and what appears to be a Viking longship. A bench in the south aisle has blacksmiths tools carved on it, perhaps to remember someone who once regularly sat there.

a little girl prays labourer praying in the evening a labourer goes forth to his work in the morning
wise old owl walrus Vikings

Most of the other furnishings were renewed as part of a series of vigorous restorations during the second half of the 19th Century, mostly under the eyes of one of Suffolk's most notable ministers, Richard Cobbold. He was rector here for more than fifty years, and he oversaw the turnaround in the Church of England that transformed St Mary from a preaching hall to a sacramental house of God. He is more familiar to historians as the author of the notes that became Biography of a Victorian Village, probably the best single account of Suffolk in the 19th Century. Incomprehensibly it is now out of print, although easy enough to obtain second-hand. Because of it, we know more about Wortham in the 19th Century than perhaps any other Suffolk parish. He also wrote the novel The History of Margaret Catchpole, a bestseller in its day, a stirring adventure of smuggling on the Suffolk coast. The novel is remembered by a blue plaque on St Margaret's Green in Ipswich on the house where the real Margaret lived as a servant to Richard Cobbold's mother Elizabeth, and elsewhere in Ipswich in the name of the pub beside the grounds of the former Cobbold family home in Cliff Lane. Richard Cobbold himself is remembered by a modest memorial on the chancel wall here, that's all.

The font in which he baptised several generations of his parishioners is a fat late 14th Century one, with grand traceried gables on the panels. There is a carved Charles II royal arms, unusual but almost identical to those in the church of the neighbouring parish of Mellis, so presumably by the same carpenter. Some fragments of 15th Century glass have been gathered together into a rectangular lozenge. More recent arrivals include two glass schemes, one of the 1980s of medallions depicting the four seasons, the work of King & Son of Norwich, and then Deborah Lowe's local scenes of 2013 celebrating the diocesan centenary.

Not far from this churchyard along the road to Redgrave sits a modest memorial in the corner of a field. It remembers events of the early 1930s, when non-churchgoing landowners fought for the right not to pay tithes to the church for its upkeep. Roland and Doreen Rash of Wortham Manor Farm campaigned against what was seen as a gross injustice by many farmers in this area, some of whom were non-conformists but were still expected to pay. Doreen Rash was better known as the novelist Doreen Wallace, a hardy fighter who documented the events of the time in her book The Tithe War. The Rashes were supported in their struggle by the blackshirts of the British Union of Fascists, who defended the Rash's farm against attempts by bailiffs recruited from the north of England to sequester their produce, in an incident which became known as the Siege of Wortham. Hard to imagine now. Roland Rash's brothers Arnold and Ralph, who fell at Passchendaele and on the Somme, are remembered by a window in the south aisle of the church.

     

Simon Knott, December 2020

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look east looking west
font medieval fragments royal arms
four seasons: summer Diocesan Centenary window: Diocesan Arms and Friends of Wortham Church (Deborah Lowe, 2013) four seasons: autumn
Diocesan Centenary window: tractor and horse-drawn plough (Deborah Lowe, 2013) Diocesan Centenary window: St Edmundsbury Cathedral (Deborah Lowe, 2013) Diocesan Centenary window: Wortham School (Deborah Lowe, 2013)
Arnold William Rash Rash Memorial Window: '...fell at the Battle of Passchendaele' and '...fell at the Battle of the Somme' Author of Margaret Catchpole and other Suffolk Tales

Doreen Wallace's Wortham Manor Tithe Memorial

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