History of St Helens Church Building
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The
Early Church at Trowell
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Trowell Church is a Grade 2 star listed building which has been on the site for many hundreds of years, in fact the first recorded reference to it may be found in the annals of York Minster, where it states that "An application was made by the Lord of the Manor in Trowell, for a Church to be established, at the request of the people." Trowell was then probably a Saxon settlement. |
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| Permission was granted in 801, which means that a Church may have been on this site for nearly 1200 years. Traces of the Saxon church are reputed to have been found under the present chancel. The next reference to the church is in the Domesday Book which quotes "Here is a priest and half a church and six acres of meadow". This was valued in the Confessor's time (1046) at 100 shillings; but in the Conqueror's time when the Domesday Book was written (1080) at 20 shillings. | ||
| NOTE: The reference to "a priest and half a church" means that it was shared with another parish; in the case of Trowell, this was Cossall and the Rectors of Trowell received half the tythes of Cossall, this continued until they were commuted in 1787. |
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Chancel The lancet windows, filled-in priest's door, and a filled in archway which was to an earlier side chapel can be seen in these pictures. |
| The piscina, credence, and sedilia also date from this earlier period. A piscina is a small niche which was used to hold a bowl of water where the priest washed his hands during a service of communion (also called mass). The credence shelf is another small niche with a shelf on which were placed the bread and wine used during the communion. The sedilia are a group of three seats on the south wall of the sanctury in which the clergy would sit during high mass. The church was originally Roman Catholic like all of the other churches in England but became Protestant when Henry VIII separated from the Pope and became head of the Church of England. The windows in the south wall are of Perpendicular insertion. back to top | ![]() |
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Until 1890 the east window contained painted glass, which was replaced with a stained glass window by Kemp. This window is dedicated in memory of the Revd Robert John Hodgkinson 1888-90. A reredos was erected three feet from the east wall to allow the priest to have room to robe up. A new altar table, altar rail, new oak choir seats and chancel screen were introduced and the chancel floor raised at the 1890 restoration. In the Robert Thoroton Histories, it is stated that the chancel had contained monuments which had been mutilated during the Puritan period, but by early in the 19th century they had been removed. |
| When William Stretton of Lenton visited St. Helen's in 1818, he describes the east window - of five lights in two storeys which had been beautifully ornamented with painted glass of a superior kind, fragments of which still remain, a label to a mutilated figure is inscribed 'EDW T REX'. He describes the chancel floor as being bad, and the Priest's door was still in place. |
| Nave The nave and side aisles were added in the 14th century, these were built in Trowell sandstone; the arcade of three arches each side of the nave are also of this date. The walls were raised in the 15th century and three two-light clerestory windows inserted each side. The square headed windows on the outer walls of the aisles are of interest since they are only to be found in parts of Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. back to top |
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The pulpit only dates back to the 1891 restoration and replaced "a quaint old wooden pulpit bearing the date 1667". The memorial window at the east end of the north aisle is in memory of the men of Trowell who died in the 1939 - 45 war and the stained glass window on the east side of the south aisle is in memory of the son of a Rector of Trowell, the Revd E. J. R. Nichols, who was killed in the Great War 1914 - 1918. Font |
| Porch The 14th century porch retains the stone vault supported by four arch ribs on either side, but restoration work during the last 150 years has taken away most of its ancient characteristics. back to top |
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Tower & Bells From 1480 to 1792 there were only three bells in the tower, but in 1792 six bells were cast by Taylors of Loughborough and fitted. In 1931 the bells were re-cast, again by Taylors. The bells range in size from 2'1" to 3'0" (63 - 91.5cm) in diameter and 3.64 to 9.25cwts (185 - 470kg). Each bell carries an inscription which was reproduced when the bells were re-cast. The top of the tower, which is reached by a steep spiral staircase, gives fantastic views of the area on a fine day. |
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| Clock In 1927 the old Nottingham Exchange clock was placed in the tower at the expense of Mr. S. P. Derbyshire as a memorial to his grandparents who had lived in the house immediately to the east of the church. (The old Rectory House of the First Mediety). The clock was hand-wound until the early 1970's when an electric motor was fitted. |
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Organ The organ was presented by the late Mr William Smith (founder of the local firm of corn millers) in 1900. The organ was originally worked by hand, a person behind the organ in the ringing chamber operated a lever to pump the bellows. back to top |
| Restoration From time to time the church has been extensively restored. In 1835 at the expense of Lord Middleton, all the old painted glass which contained fragments of the Brinsley and Strelley coat of arms was taken out; all tracery and mullions were cut out of the nave and aisle windows, and the walls were thickly plastered. This covered up The Commandments, Lord's Prayer and Creed, painted in 1777 by Samuel Pinkney, then Churchwarden. The flat oak roof was lathed and plastered. |
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| Further restoration work in 1890, involved new roofs for both chancel and nave, the plaster was removed from the nave, the windows restored and oak pews were fitted in the nave. A choir vestry was formed in the lower part of the tower beneath a ringing chamber which was raised some nine feet above the vestry floor. Restoration re-commenced in 1956, this work consisted of replacing some of the outside face of the nave and the tower walls with Derbyshire gritstone. This work will need to continue until all the Trowell sandstone has been covered. |
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Toilet Extension After lengthy negotiations with English Heritage, the Southwell Diocese Advisory Committee and Broxtowe Borough Council Planning Department, permission was obtained in 1999 to build a small extension to the Church building. The plans included a porch like structure on the north side to house a toilet facility and provision of a tea-bar in the north-west corner. |
Tea Bar
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War Memorial The new War Memorial was dedicated at Trowell Church during the Remembrance Day morning service on 13th November 2011. It had been erected as a result of popular demand, with notable support from Councillor Ken Rigby and the Borough and Parish Councils. |
| Monuments Various other plaques and brasses recording burials in the church are located on the walls and floor. One commemorating the Reverend Tristram Exley who died in 1792 and who is buried in the chancel, is hidden behind the altar. Trowell Benefice In 1259 the Brinsley family applied for a dispensation to hold an additional "Benefice with cure of souls". From then on Trowell Church came under two Patrons and two Rectors. The two halves were called the First Mediety and the Second Mediety. The Crown remained patron of the First Mediety and the Brinsley family were patrons of the Second Mediety. (In some records the name Brinsley is spelt Brunnesley). |
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| The Brinsley family held the patronage of the Second Mediety
until it was purchased by the Hacker family in 1602. The First Mediety
remained with the Willoughby family until 1724 when Lord Middleton became
Patron. Lord Middleton then became Patron of the whole church in 1787,
when the two halves were re-united back to top |
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| Aerial
View taken in 1926 |
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| The Parish Registers do not begin until 1570 but it is obvious that some leaves must be missing as the statement on the flyleaf quotes 1558. The Register is of parchment and on the flyleaf is written:
Nicholas Hallam, Thomas Slacke Rectors The date 1598 would be that in which the present register was transcribed from the original paper book. |
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List of Rectors of Trowell 1241 - today or back to the top

















