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St Wulfram's Church, Grantham

St Wulfram's Church, Grantham, is the Anglican parish church of Grantham in Lincolnshire, England. The church is a Grade I listed building and has the second tallest spire in Lincolnshire after St James' Church, Louth.

Vicars

The Reverend William Glaister was the curate and later vicar of the church in 1876. His sister Elizabeth Glaister was a novelist with an interest in embroidery. She created ecclesiastical embroideries for the church.

The spire

In his book England's Thousand Best Churches, Simon Jenkins begins his description of St Wulfram's: "Here is the finest steeple in England", and in 2020 an online contest run by poet Jay Hulme named it as the finest non-cathedral English church.

The spire, at , is the sixth highest in the country (Salisbury, Norwich and Old Coventry Cathedrals' are higher), and third highest of any parish church, after the Church of St Walburge, Preston, and St James' Church, Louth. It is the second highest of any Anglican parish church in the UK, after St James', and second highest in Lincolnshire, after St James'.

In 2013 an appeal was launched to save the spire.

Music

The present organ by John Harris and John Byfield dates from 1735. It was rebuilt by George Pike England in 1809 and 1833, by Forster and Andrews between 1845 and 1868, by Norman and Beard in 1906 (producing the organ that may be heard today), by Rushworth and Dreaper in 1952, by Cousans of Lincoln in 1972, and by Phillip Wood and Sons of Huddersfield in 1993–94 when a fourth manual was added. The case designed by Sir Walter Tapper RA took eight years to complete. The old organ case now encloses the choir vestry in the north west corner of the church. The specification for the organ, regarded as one of the finest in Lincolnshire, can be found at the National Pipe Organ Register.

Organists

  • Mr Sweet 1745–1755
  • Andrew Strother 1755–1816 (jointly with Francis Sharp 1808–1816)
  • Francis Sharp 1808–1832 (jointly with Andrew Strother 1808–1816)
  • William Dixon 1832–1863–1865
  • George Dixon 1865–1886 (previously organist of St James' Church, Louth)
  • Richard Thomas Back 1886–1909–1911
  • Frank Radcliffe 1911–1914 (later organist of St Mary's Church, Nottingham)
  • Edward Brown 1914–1941
  • Stephen John Mundy 1941–1961
  • Philip Joseph Lank 1961–1983 (previously assistant organist of Peterborough Cathedral)
  • Nicholas Kerrison 1984–1988
  • John Ball 1988–1992
  • John Wilkes 1992–1996
  • Ian Major 1996–1997
  • Philip Robinson 1997–2001
  • Michael Sands 2002–2007
  • Tim Williams 2008–

Clock

The chimes were repaired and a new clock installed by Gillett and Bland of Croydon in December 1876. The costs of this work were £280 (). The clock was set going on 17 February 1877.

On 5 November 1877 the new clock was inspected by Sir Edmund Beckett, who assessed that it was one of the best turned out by Gillett and Bland.

Gallery

See also

References

Sources

  • Jenkins, Simon (1999), England's Thousand Best Churches, London, Pengin Books,
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Harris, John; The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, Penguin (1964), revised by Nicholas Antram (1989), Yale University Press.

External links