|
|
|
|
Home Page
|
|
The History of Battersea Parish Church |
|
![]() Rreconstruction of a typical ninth century Anglo-Saxon Church |
Battersea first comes to the attention of written history in 693 AD, when a charter describing the landmarks of Battersea (or "Badrices Ege" as it was then) was drawn up by King Aethelred of Mercia. You will find a reproduction of that charter and a translation of this earliest description of Battersea on the Local History of Battersea Page. There was probably an Anglo-Saxon church on site by 800 AD, but because its foundations were destroyed when the current church was built, we have no idea what it looked like. The depiction of a typical Anglo-Saxon Church opposite gives some idea of its probable appearance, a small and simple two-roomed building, much like the church which can still be seen in the village of Escomb in Country Durham. In any event, by the the time of the Domesday Book in 1086 AD, the village of Battersea was certainly well-established.
|
|
The entry for Battersea (by then "Patricesy") records that the village itself contained in "45 villagers and 16 smallholders with 14 ploughs and eight slaves, seven mills and woodland enough to pasture fifty pigs". The village priest, Gilbert, owned 3 hides of land (90-120 acres). It also states that King William gave the manor of Battersea to Westminster Abbey in exchange for the land on which Windsor Castle was later built. The church may well then have been called St Peter's, after the dedication of Westminster Abbey itself. The Abbey used the income that they collected from Battersea to pay the costs of its infirmary (hospital for sick monks), and in return the Abbey was responsible for the upkeep and worship life of the parish. In 1297, for example, the Abbey paid five shillings and four pence to build a jetty next to the Church. Records also suggest that all the monks of the Abbey came to Battersea once a year on an 'annual outing'. Under the Abbey's ownership perpetual vicars were first appointed to Battersea. Prior to that, the parish would most probably have been served by a rota of monks travelling upriver from the Abbey. The first vicar of Battersea whose name is known to us is Robert, who was instituted in 1263. Since then the succession is unbroken, and the current vicar is the 61st person to hold the office.
|
|
|
Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1540 severed the connection between Battersea and Westminster Abbey, and the patronage reverted to the crown. It passed through a number of aristocratic hands, until 1625 when Sir Oliver St John became the lord of the manor, the first of many St Johns to do so. They remained the patrons of the parish and lords of the manor until 1763 when the rights were bought by Earl Spencer. Charles Earl Spencer, the brother the late Diana, Princess of Wales, remains its patron today. The fact that parishes keep registers and records at all is due to royal command of Henry VIII, given through his vicar General Thomas Cromwell in 1538, and St Mary's is fortunate in having an almost complete series of records. You can read some of these on the Brief Book Page. From these registers it is clear that through the sixteenth and seventh centuries, Battersea became an increasingly fashionable area. It was considered a desirable country retreat from the turmoil of London, and after the building of the first Battersea Bridge in 1766, many rich City merchants established their country houses here. The population of Battersea was expanding and out-growing the existing church. So, when in 1771 the vestry was called upon to consider "the ruinous condition of the church", they agreed unanimously to pull it down and build a new church "for not less than £4,000". |
|
|
This brief history is fittingly concluded by noticing that when the architect Joseph Dixon died in 1787, the vestry decided that he should be buried in the crypt of his church, "without fee". In recognition of it beauty and architectural significance English Heritage graded St Mary's as a Grade I listed building in 19??. It is the only Grade I listed church in the Borough of Wandsworth. |
|