The Churches Conservation Trust

Harry Stammers in Wiltshire by Sasha Ward

St Mary’s Church, Whaddon, Witshire. Left: Entrance porch. Right: Inside, facing east.

Here we are in Whaddon Church on a stormy day beside the River Avon in Wiltshire (above). The church is down a windy dead end road - I’d seen the Harry Stammers window there only from the outside because it was, as churches so frequently are, locked. This time, I made an appointment and took along some friends to chat with the key holder and take photos of me taking photos of the window that we all admired so much (below).

Whaddon: Window by Harry Stammers 1950.

The subject matter is from Matthew chapter 13 verses 24 & 25: ‘The kingdom of heaven is like a man who sowed good seed in his field. But while everyone was sleeping, his enemy came & sowed weeds among the wheat, and went away’. In the window the good sower and his enemy have the same posture and are placed on similar backgrounds but with dramatically different colour combinations that emphasise the contrast of day and night, light and dark. There are areas of loose brushwork that contrast with sharply painted plants and the familiar Stammers style cartouches for the lettering (below). The window is dedicated to the memory of George Merrett a local lay preacher who walked across the fields every Sunday, on the day we were there the fields were flooded and the windy road almost impassable.

Detail of the Whaddon window with Harry Stammer’s mark.

In Holt, only a mile across the river but quite a long way round by road, is another Harry Stammers window. Again I’d made an appointment and again the key holder was surprised that we were more interested in the Stammers window than the other ones - in both churches they are by Horwood from about 1880. This is an early Stammers work, with the figures and cartouches suspended on a standard background of white glass quarries and no maker’s mark to be seen. There are few indications here of how his later style would develop, and had already started developing by the time he was commissioned to make the Whaddon window four years later.

United Reformed Church, Holt, Wiltshire. Window by Harry Stammers in the south aisle 1946.

The Holt window is dedicated to St Cecilia, and in memory of another much loved local character, Daisy M. Tucker, who was choirmistress and also organiser of the local sewing bee - hence the bees (below left) or so the much repeated story goes.

Details from the Holt window.

St Mary, Wilton, Wiltshire. Harry Stammers window 1952 and detail with his mark.

The other Stammers window I know of in Wiltshire is in St Mary’s Church in Wilton (near Salisbury) and now in the care of The Churches Conservation Trust. In this window, although St Edith and St Monica are also floating on those clear background quarries, the composition fills more of the space and the style of the figures, particularly in the sections below them, is veering away from the naturalistic. Here is the same contrast between light and dark and the monochrome figures that you find in the Whaddon window and that he used so much in his later work.

Wilton. Left: St Monica. Right: scene below with monochrome figures.

St Peter’s Church, Over Wallop, Hampshire. Left: Detail of St Michael in left hand panel. Right: Window by Harry Stammers 1956, on the wall is the flag of The Glider Pilot Regiment.

Four years later Stammers made a window for St Peter’s Church in Over Wallop, just over the Wiltshire border into Hampshire. It tells the sad story of three members of the same family, Joan Mary Grece, Group Captain C.M.M. Grece and her uncle H.D. Harman who were killed flying together in 1954. The picture of their plane (below) gives this window a 1950s ‘Festival of Britain’ feel, and like much of his work from this period the window design is crisp and graphic.

I’ve always wondered if the practice of using white glass backgrounds that was so common in this period of stained glass and that lets in too much light was done for cost cutting reasons. I say this because that was why I started using so much clear glass myself, especially when I was a student. The Whaddon window, so small and so satisfying in its all over composition, rather reinforces my suspicions.

Detail of the Over Wallop window.

Stained Glass Portraits by Sasha Ward

The interior of St. Peter’s Church, Wallingford, Oxfordshire.

The interior of St. Peter’s Church, Wallingford, Oxfordshire.

After more than a year of locked churches, most of them are opening up. The best doors are those that are fixed open, allowing a glimpse inside. Passing by St Peter’s in Wallingford I recognised the east window and went in to have a look. It’s a Morris & Co window from 1918 and shows Jesus’ charge to Peter (below left) and although I’d never seen one exactly like this before it’s the stripy sky and the colour combination that identified the makers to me. As is usual for a church looked after by the Churches Conservation Trust there is nothing ugly in the interior, the other windows are filled with pale coloured glass in an interesting and symbolic pattern (below right) that is suitable for the beautiful Georgian interior.

St Peter, Wallingford. East window and one of the windows in the nave.

St Peter, Wallingford. East window and one of the windows in the nave.

St Mary, Newnham Murren, Oxfordshire. East window and as viewed through horseshoe shaped squint.

St Mary, Newnham Murren, Oxfordshire. East window and as viewed through horseshoe shaped squint.

I went to find the next church, across the River Thames and hidden away along a footpath through fields. This is a small flint building with Norman origins also looked after by the Churches Conservation Trust. It is lit only by the light through the windows and the patches of bright colour in the stained glass really stand out - the 1849 restoration of the church provided these and removed much else. The patterned windows especially (example below right) provide just the right balance of colour and interest, with some yellow flour de lys wandering into the grid of floral ornamentation from a different composition, one of the joys of the patchwork nature of stained glass.

St Mary, Newnham Murren. West window and back of squint.

St Mary, Newnham Murren. West window and back of squint.

St Nicholas, North Bradley, Wiltshire. South and North nave windows by James Powell and Sons, 1929 & 1892.

St Nicholas, North Bradley, Wiltshire. South and North nave windows by James Powell and Sons, 1929 & 1892.

The next day and another open church, this time in the other direction from home at North Bradley in West Wiltshire. Here all the windows I like are by Powells with, in my opinion, a decline in quality of design from the earliest to the latest (above left) which is installed in the south aisle and was not easy to see in the blazing June sunshine.

There is a gorgeous pair of windows in the south wall of the sanctuary, made by Powells and designed by the painter T.R. Lamont. They show his two wives who died ten years apart, an unusual thing to see in a church and I’ve no idea why they are there. Mary is playing the organ and Bessie is holding a sketchbook in front of a background with a blue trellis, apples and daffodils. The borders, colour combinations and inscriptions are all lovely and Mary and Bessie look like two real (albeit rather similar and rather decorative) people. This chance discovery - just the sort of thing I was hoping for on my return to church visiting - has reminded me of what a great thing a stained glass portrait can be.

St Nicholas, North Bradley. Window designed by T.R. Lamont and made by Powells in 1881.

St Nicholas, North Bradley. Window designed by T.R. Lamont and made by Powells in 1881.

The two wives of T.R. Lamont, Mary and Bessie.

The two wives of T.R. Lamont, Mary and Bessie.

The Joy of Visiting Unlit Churches by Sasha Ward

North wall of St Peter Everleigh. Built in 1813 in the Gothic style and on an iron frame, with monument to Francis Dugdale Astley Esq. founder and donor of this church.

North wall of St Peter Everleigh. Built in 1813 in the Gothic style and on an iron frame, with monument to Francis Dugdale Astley Esq. founder and donor of this church.

My trips to churches in the past few years have been generally unplanned, I stop if I pass one that looks as if it may be open and has an easy place to park outside. I had noticed that some of the loveliest, most uncluttered ones I visited were in the care of The Churches Conservation Trust whose website is up to date with current visitor opening times - no need to book!! - so we set off to see a couple of CCT churches near us in Wiltshire.

St Peter Everleigh. Left: East window, Right: South wall of the nave.

St Peter Everleigh. Left: East window, Right: South wall of the nave.

The interior of Everleigh church contains nothing ugly apart from those unevenly spaced wall lights on the north wall (top photo). There are wall monuments from the previous church in the village between tall windows with orange borders and a greenish glow from the trees pressing against them outside.

The glass in the east window by W.T. Cleobury is full of beautifully painted detail. I particularly like the mother and child panel (below left), the gaze and the hands of the shepherds point at them from one side and the three kings from the other. The best hand painting I have noticed from a stained glass firm I had never heard of, which is a perfect example of the surprises you get when you use your eyes rather than a guide book.

Everleigh, details of the east window by W.T. Cleobury 1873.

Everleigh, details of the east window by W.T. Cleobury 1873.

St Mary, Chute Forest. Left: entrance porch, Right: west window by Jones and Willis 1921.

St Mary, Chute Forest. Left: entrance porch, Right: west window by Jones and Willis 1921.

St Mary, Chute Forest, is tucked away in an overgrown churchyard, again with nothing ugly inside or out. It was designed by J.L. Pearson and built in 1875 of brick and flint. The interior, with no electric lighting that we could find, had a perfectly Victorian atmosphere and perfect conditions for stained glass viewing on a drizzly day. The WWI memorial west window is moody, nicely painted and eccentrically repaired at bottom left with gold coloured glass (above right).

Chute Forest, Left: carved reredos in front of east window by Clayton and Bell, Right: window detail.

The east window is a lovely one, made by Clayton and Bell in 1875. The background to all the little scenes showing the life of Christ is covered in a web of sgraffito flowers which looks great against the familiar patterns of brick, tile and architectural ornament. You can find the same patterns and shapes in the church itself - the example below shows a lantern in the top of the left hand window and, in front of one of the deep window recesses, a lantern that reflects the colours of the stained glass.

Chite Forest, Left: top of the left hand window, Right: lantern with stained glass reflection.

Chite Forest, Left: top of the left hand window, Right: lantern with stained glass reflection.