Talk:Warwickshire Towns and Villages W

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Wappenbury

WA - Wappenbury, St John the Baptist 2.jpg



Warwick

  • All Saints - further photos (submitted by Michael):


WA - Warwick, All Saints 2.JPG
WA - Warwick, All Saints 3.JPG



WA - Warwick, Castle Hill Baptist 1.JPG
WA - Warwick, Castle Hill Baptist 2.JPG


  • Warwick Cemetery has two chapels, neither of which is still in use. Further photos (submitted by Michael):


WA - Warwick, cemetery chapel 1.JPG
WA - Warwick, cemetery chapel 2.JPG
WA - Warwick, cemetery chapel 3.JPG
WA - Warwick, cemetery chapel 4.JPG


WA - Warwick, cemetery chapel 5.JPG
WA - Warwick, cemetery chapel 6.JPG



WA - Warwick, Chapel of St James the Great (Lord Leycester Hospital) 1.JPG
WA - Warwick, Chapel of St James the Great (Lord Leycester Hospital) 2.JPG



WA - Warwick, Friends Meeting House.JPG



WA - Warwick, LDS 2.JPG



WA - Warwick, New Life Church 2.JPG



WA - Warwick, Northgate Methodist 2.JPG
WA - Warwick, Northgate Methodist 3.JPG


  • St Mary - further photos (submitted by Michael):


WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG


WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG


WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG


WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG
WA - Warwick, St Mary 01.JPG



WA - Warwick 1.JPG
WA - Warwick 2.JPG


  • St Paul - further photos (submitted by Michael):


WA - Warwick 1.JPG
WA - Warwick 2.JPG



WA - Warwick 1.JPG
WA - Warwick 2.JPG



WA - Warwick 1.JPG
WA - Warwick 2.JPG


Sir Fulke Greville, the first Lord Brooke, authorised the building of this small chapel in the early 1600s. It may be on the site of another chapel founded as long ago as 1119.

Until the start of the 20th century, the families of the Earls of Warwick would have come here to worship. The servants also used this as their church. They would have to stand behind the screen, in the sight of God, but out of the sight of their masters and mistresses.

Behind the altar, the stained glass is mainly mediaeval and was a gift from the Earl of Exeter in 1759.

Above the richly carved oak bench is one of the finest examples of wood carving in the Castle. It shows the Amazons, a legendary tribe of women warriors, fighting the Greeks. Dated 1740, this Flemish masterpiece was carved by Simon Cognoulles.

The organ was made in Leamington Spa in 1860 by William Downes White. Local skills also went into the pews, altar and the lectern which were carved by Warwick craftsmen.

The colourful decoration of the ceiling only reappeared in 1995 during a restoration programme to correct damp in the chapel walls. Careful removal of layers of whitewash revealed the series of painted heraldic shields of the Greville family that, according to visitors' journals, were probably installed in the 1740s. When and why they were deliberately hidden we do not know.

(Information from Warwick Castle guidebook)

  • Some views of Warwick churches from the ramparts of Warwick Castle (submitted by Michael):



St Mary:

WA - Warwick 1.JPG
WA - Warwick 2.JPG



St Nicholas:

WA - Warwick 4.JPG


Weston under Wetherley

  • St Michael - further photo (submitted by Michael):
WA - Weston under Wetherley, St Michael 2.jpg


Withybrook

  • All Saints - further photos (submitted by Michael):
WA - Withybrook, All Saints 01.jpg
WA - Withybrook, All Saints 03.jpg
WA - Withybrook, All Saints 04.jpg
WA - Withybrook, All Saints 05.jpg