Churches Built before 1800
1. The church of St. BARTHOLOMEW, Birmingham, was built in 1749, as a chapel of ease to
St. Martin's. The site was given by a Birmingham
ironmaster, John Jennens, whose wife gave £1,000
towards the building of the church, the rest of the
sum required being raised by subscription. (fn. 1) The
chapel became a perpetual curacy, the Rector of St.
Martin's exercising the right of presentation. (fn. 2) In
1847 St. Bartholomew's became a parish church, a
parish being assigned out of St. Martin's parish. (fn. 3)
The living became a vicarage in 1868, the patronage
remaining in the hands of the Rector of St. Martin's
until 1905, when it was transferred to the bishop. (fn. 4)
The incumbent's income was said to be £100 in
1781, (fn. 5) and £300 in 1915. (fn. 6) In 1937 the church was
closed, and in 1939 the benefice was united with that
of Bishop Ryder's church to form a new united
benefice. The parish was split into four parts which
were added to the parishes of St. Philip, St. Gabriel,
which had been formed out of St. Bartholomew's in
1869, St. Martin and Bishop Ryder. (fn. 7)
When St. Bartholomew's was built it stood on the
eastern edge of the town, on land that had been
arable in 1731, (fn. 8) but houses soon grew up around
it. (fn. 9) A map of 1810 shows the church in the middle
of a well populated area. (fn. 10) The canal, however, and
later the railway and goods yards, were near the
church, and dwellings gave place to warehouses.
The church was able to supply the needs of the
small parish which at its greatest was only about
100 acres: unlike most neighbouring parishes, St.
Bartholomew's had no mission room or chapel. An
organ placed in the church in 1806 (fn. 11) seems to have
been frequently used early in the 19th century for
musical performances. (fn. 12)
The church, in Masshouse Lane, was built of
brick with stone dressings in the Classical style, a
plain rectangle in plan. William and David Hiorne
were probably the architects. (fn. 13) It was considered
noteworthy that the chancel lay a little north of due
east. (fn. 14)
The church had gabled ends, with an ornamental
urn at each angle of the plain parapet. There were
three pedimented doors at the west end; above the
larger one in the centre was a small clock-tower
surmounted by a cupola and weather-vane. (fn. 15) The
church accommodated 800. It was restored in
1893, (fn. 16) and demolished, except for a fragment of
the east end and east window, by 1943. (fn. 17) By 1961
it had entirely disappeared and the site was occupied
by a car park. The silver communion service, which
in 1956 was in the custody of the diocesan authorities, was given to the church in 1774. (fn. 18) The registers,
now at St. Gabriel's, date from the year of the
formation of the parish.
2. The church of St. BARTHOLOMEW,
Edgbaston, also known as Edgbaston parish church,
was originally a chapel of Harborne. The first
mention of Edgbaston church was in 1279, when
Henry de Ganio resigned to the Bishop of Coventry
and Lichfield the parish church of Harborne with
its chapel of Edgbaston. (fn. 19) It may be assumed that
Edgbaston church was built not long before 1279,
for it was not mentioned in earlier disputes about
Harborne church. (fn. 20) Between 1260 and 1279 a grant
of land in Edgbaston to Harborne church refers to
Harborne as the mother church. (fn. 21) In further disputes about Harborne church in 1281, Edgbaston
church was again mentioned as a dependent
chapel. (fn. 22) In 1284 Henry de Edgbaston claimed the
advowson of Edgbaston church from the Dean and
Chapter of Lichfield, the appropriators of Harborne
church, but in the same year he quitclaimed it to
them for £20. (fn. 23) Edgbaston church remained the
property of the dean and chapter; they were leasing
it to the lords of the manor in 1590, c. 1650, 1822,
and 1856. (fn. 24) The commutation of the rectorial tithes
was confirmed in 1852 for £131 12s. 6d. (fn. 25)
Since the churches of Edgbaston and Harborne
were in the same relationship to the Dean and
Chapter of Lichfield, the original status of Edgbaston as a chapelry of Harborne ceased to have any
meaning, although Edgbaston church was referred
to as a chapel in 1535. (fn. 26) It was in fact described as
the parish church in 1658. (fn. 27) The incumbent was
called both vicar and perpetual curate until the end
of the 18th century, (fn. 28) but since then the incumbent
has been styled vicar. The advowson belonged to
the dean and chapter until about 1725, when it was
granted to Sir Richard Gough, lord of Edgbaston
manor, in consideration of his repairing the church
and endowing the living; (fn. 29) the advowson has
descended with the manor since then. (fn. 30) In the 16th
and 17th centuries the dean and chapter appear to
have leased the advowson with the rectory to the
lords of the manor. (fn. 31) The benefice was taxed at 20s.
in 1341, and was valued at 53s. 4d. in 1535. (fn. 32) About
1650 the minister was receiving £15 a year out of
the tithes. (fn. 33) About 1725 the benefice was endowed
with £200 by Sir Richard Gough and received a
further £200 from Queen Anne's Bounty. (fn. 34) By this
time the incumbents may have been receiving part
of the tithes themselves, for in 1821 vicarial tithes
in Edgbaston were commuted for a corn rent. (fn. 35) In
1953 the net annual income of the benefice was
£894. (fn. 36) There were said to be 20 a. glebe in
1908. (fn. 37)
During the Civil War Edgbaston church was
partly burnt and partly pulled down, and for several
years services were held in a building known as the
Church House. (fn. 38) In 1658 it was estimated that it
would cost £800 to rebuild the church, a sum too
large for the inhabitants of Edgbaston to raise by
themselves, and they obtained permission to collect
funds in Warwickshire, Staffordshire, Cheshire,
Worcestershire, Northamptonshire, and Herefordshire. It was stated at the time that some of the
inhabitants of Birmingham had been in the habit of
attending Edgbaston church. (fn. 39) Sir Richard Gough's
residence at Edgbaston materially benefited the
church there: apart from endowing the benefice, he
put the church into a good state of repair. (fn. 40) Plans
of the church of 1721 show the arrangement of
seating before and after changes in the interior:
after 1721 all the seats in the church were appropriated. (fn. 41) In the 19th century there was a series of
rebuildings and enlargements, presumably to meet
the needs of the growing population. These took
place in 1810, 1845, 1856, 1885, and 1889 (see
below). In the same period several new churches
were built in the parish: St. George's in 1838, St.
James's in 1852, and St. Augustine's in 1868.
Parishes were assigned out of Edgbaston to the first
two in 1852, to the third in 1889. St. Mary and St.
Ambrose's church, which later was consecrated and
became a parish church in 1903, originated as a
mission of Edgbaston church in 1885. (fn. 42) The
mission church of St. Monica, Harrison Rd., was
built and first licensed for public worship in 1891,
and was enlarged in 1899. (fn. 43) Other places in the
parish licensed for public worship in 1960 were St.
Francis's Hall, in the University (since 1939),
Queen Elizabeth Hospital (since 1950), the memorial chapel at King Edward's School (since
1953), and the Blue Coat School chapel (since
1957). (fn. 44)
The church of St. Bartholomew, (fn. 45) in Church
Road, consists of a chancel with north and south
chapels, nave, north aisle and porch, two south
aisles with a west porch, and a west tower. Only the
lower part of the tower and the north and west
walls of the north aisle and nave are ancient. The
original nave, half the width of the present (1956)
nave and north aisle together, may date from the
14th century but no details remain by which it can
be dated. The north aisle is reputed to have been
built late in the 15th century by Richard Middlemore, lord of the manor, and the west tower about
1500 by his wife Margaret. It is probable that in the
rebuilding between 1658 and 1684 after the partial
destruction of the church during the Civil War some
of the old material was used and the church built
to the same plan as before. The nave and north
aisle seem to have been of equal breadth, separated
by an arcade and each with a high-pitched gabled
roof. In 1810 the arcade was removed (fn. 46) and the
roofs replaced by a single low-pitched roof spanning
both nave and aisle. About 1845 this was replaced
by a similar roof about 6 feet higher, to allow for
galleries. In 1856 a south aisle was added. In 1885
the chancel and chapels were built, an arcade
was built on the north side of the nave making
the nave about three times as wide as the north
aisle, a clerestory was raised, and new roofs
were constructed. In 1889 a second south aisle was
built. (fn. 47)
The 19th-century chancel has perpendicular
windows and its arches are in the 14th-century
style. The nave has modern north and south arcades
of five 15-foot bays with slender composite piers and
depressed four-centred arches. The clerestory has
tall two-light windows, plain parapets, and a lowpitched roof. The north aisle has four north
windows each of two cinquefoiled lights and tracery
in a two-centred head with hood-mould. Probably
some of the red jambstones are of the 15th century,
or are 17th-century reparations, but most are
modern. The north doorway of red sandstone has
moulded jambs and a two-centred head, probably
of the 15th century. Above it on the outside is a
raised stone tablet with an oval-framed panel
inscribed with three 7's: the most likely explanation
of these is that they are a 17th-century imitation or
restoration of an earlier letter M for Middlemore.
The wall is of ancient squared ashlar, with patchings, and has a chamfered plinth. At the angles are
old diagonal buttresses. At the springing level of the
window-heads is a 17th-century string-course. The
west wall has ancient courses in its lower part, the
upper being of 19th-century masonry, and there is
a vertical seam between nave and aisle. High up in
the nave wall is a blocked four-centred window,
probably for the former gallery. The westernmost
of the five bays of the outer south aisle has been
reduced in width in recent times so that it is only a
few feet wide. Both aisles have high-pitched gabled
roofs.
The west tower (internally about 10 ft. east-west
by 8½ ft.) is of two stages divided by a 17th-century
moulded string-course, and has a plain plinth of
two offsets. The lower courses of the walls are of
ancient yellow sandstone with wide jointing. Above,
the ashlar is fine-jointed and yellower, probably of
the late 17th century. At the west angles are
diagonal buttresses reaching to just above the 17thcentury string-course, which passes round them. In
the south-west angle is a stair-vice. The archway
towards the nave is considerably south of the
present nave's axis: it is of two orders, the outer
hollow-moulded, the inner rounded with a wide
fillet to the reveal; at the imposts are mouldings of
c. 1500. Above the archway are the marks of the
three former roofs of the nave. The west window is
of three lights and intersecting tracery in a twocentred head. The jambs of two hollow orders are
ancient, the mullions and tracery modern. The
window is out of centre with the wall from outside
because of the stair-vice. Below it is a four-centred
doorway of modern stonework. The north and
south sides each have a small square-headed window
above the string-course, the southern one blocked.
The bell-chamber windows are each of two pointed
lights and a plain spandrel in a two-centred head.
The parapet is embattled and has a string-course of
the same contour as that below; above the angles are
crocketted pinnacles, the finials missing.
The font and furniture are modern. In the west
porch of the south aisle is a 17th-century secular
chest with incised line ornament on the front, and
one lock. There are many funeral monuments in the
church. In the north aisle are monuments to
members of the family which held the manor,
including Sir Richard Gough (d. 1728), Sir Henry
Gough with his son and wife Barbara (Calthorpe),
Sir Henry Gough-Calthorpe, Lord Calthorpe (d.
1798), and Frances (Carpenter) his widow (d. 1827).
At the west end of the south aisle is a floor-slab set
upright, to Henry Porter (d. 1710) and Sarah his
widow (d. 1724). In the outer south aisle are monuments to William Withering, M.D., F.R.S. (d.
1799), the discoverer of digitalis and a founder of
the Birmingham General Hospital; and to Gabriel
Jean Marie de Lys, M.D. (d. 1831), founder of the
Deaf and Dumb Institute, both monuments being
by Peter Hollins, sculptor.
In 1552 there were 3 bells, 2 'sacring bells', and a
handbell. Four bells were cast by Matthew Bagley
in 1685, and the number was raised to five in 1781
and to six in 1898. (fn. 48) All six bells were recast in
1927, when two new bells were added. The plate
includes a paten and flagon of 1746, and another
paten of 1750.
The registers begin in 1635/6 with a volume
containing baptisms, burials, and marriages. (fn. 49)
3. The church of ST. JAMES THE LESS,
Ashted, was founded in 1789, when Dr. John Ash's
house was converted into a chapel after his
departure from Birmingham. (fn. 50) The chapel was
opened for divine service in 1791, (fn. 51) and was
consecrated in 1810. (fn. 52) It was originally a proprietary
chapel owned by a Mr. Brooks, (fn. 53) and later by a
Dr. Crofts, and in 1810 it was vested in four trustees
for 60 years. (fn. 54) The incumbent was styled a perpetual
curate, but there was no endowment and all
expenses, including the support of the minister,
were met by the seatholders. (fn. 55) In 1853 a parish was
formed out of Aston; (fn. 56) in 1859 began a series of
grants by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners to endow
the living, (fn. 57) which became a vicarage in 1868. (fn. 58) In
1881 the patronage was transferred to the Aston
Trustees, and the living was further endowed with
£40 out of the revenues of Aston. (fn. 59) The net annual
income of the vicarage in 1953 was £397. (fn. 60)
Until 1830 it seems that none of the seats in the
church was free. In that year the seating arrangements were altered so as to provide 150 free seats
for the poorer inhabitants of the heavily populated
hamlet of Ashted. Enlargement of the church in
1835 made another 850 free seats available. (fn. 61)
Towards the end of the century efforts were made
to improve the proportion of the number of seats
in Anglican churches to the number of inhabitants:
a mission room to hold 100 was built in 1882, (fn. 62) and
in 1889 a mission room was opened in Dollman
Street (later known as St. John's Mission) in a
building designed to serve as the transept of a
possible subsequent church. (fn. 63) This mission has
been licensed for public worship since 1908. (fn. 64)
Another mission, in Lawley Street, later known as
St. Peter's, was opened in 1896 and licensed from
1908 until the Second World War. (fn. 65)
The church of St. James, in Barrack Street and
Great Brook Street, was a converted 18th-century
house, a plain rectangular building of brick, with a
semi-circular projection on one side surmounted by
a turret with cupola. It was lengthened by about
half its original length in 1835, (fn. 66) and was restored
in 1887–9. (fn. 67) It was seriously damaged during the
Second World War, (fn. 68) and was demolished c. 1956.
The registers begin in 1810. (fn. 69)
4. The church of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST,
Deritend, was originally founded in the second half
of the 14th century. In 1381 an agreement was made
by which the parishioners of Aston who lived in
Deritend and Bordesley were permitted to appoint
at their own charges a chaplain to celebrate divine
services for them in the recently-built chapel of
St. John the Baptist. The reasons for this agreement
were the distance of Deritend and Bordesley from
the parish church and the flooding of the river in
winter. The chaplain could perform baptisms and
churchings, and in emergencies could hear confessions and celebrate mass. The inhabitants of
Deritend and Bordesley were to attend Aston
church at Easter, Christmas, and the feasts of All
Saints, St. Peter and St. Paul (the dedication of
Aston church), and the Purification; tithes, both
great and small, were to be paid as before to Aston.
This agreement was ratified by the bishop in the
same year. (fn. 70) In 1383 William Geffon and others
received licence to alienate in mortmain lands in
Aston parish not held in chief to the value of 10
marks yearly to a chaplain to celebrate divine service
daily in the chapel. (fn. 71)
In the first half of the 16th century there were
two priests at Deritend, one of them employed as a
schoolmaster, who were each paid £5 a year by the
guild of Deritend. (fn. 72) In 1547 the endowment of the
chapel seems to have been regarded as a chantry, (fn. 73)
and in 1549 all the property of 'the late chantry or
guild of Deritend' was sold by the Crown, except
for the chapel itself, which survived. (fn. 74) For a few
years in the 1660s after his ejection from St.
Martin's the Presbyterian Samuel Wills preached at
Deritend chapel. (fn. 75) In 1677 the chapel was endowed
by Humphrey Lowe of Coventry with land in
Rowley Regis (Staffs.) worth £35 a year for the
maintenance of a chaplain; (fn. 76) the annual income of
the chaplain was said to be £80 in 1781. (fn. 77) The
inhabitants continued to elect their own chaplain
until 1890, when a parish was formed out of Aston
and the patronage of the chapel was transferred by
Act of Parliament to the bishop, the Vicar of Aston,
and three trustees, the benefice becoming a vicarage. (fn. 78) In 1939 the parish and benefice were united
with those of St. Basil, Deritend, forming the new
benefice of St. John and St. Basil. The site of St
John's was sold to the city authorities, (fn. 79) and c. 1943
the building was being used as a store; (fn. 80) it had been
demolished by 1961. A mission room in Darwin
Street was licensed for public worship by the bishop
from 1916 to 1926. (fn. 81)
The church stood on the south side of Deritend
High Street. The 14th-century building is shown in
early-18th-century views of Birmingham: (fn. 82) it was
small and rectangular, with a steeply-pitched roof
and a two-light east window, and over the west end
was a square bell-turret with a pyramidal roof and
weather-vane. It was replaced in 1735 by a rectangular brick building with tall round-headed
windows and a tower of two stages surmounted by
a balustrade with urns at the angles. (fn. 83) The church
contained a memorial bust of John Rogers (d.
1555), the first of the 'Marian martyrs', who was a
native of Deritend. (fn. 84) The church was restored
between 1881 and 1891, and had 800 sittings. (fn. 85)
There were 8 bells cast in 1776 by Robert Wells of
Aldbourne (Wilts.), (fn. 86) and these were in 1956 at
Bishop Latimer Memorial Church, Birmingham.
The registers, which at the same date were at St.
Basil's, begin in 1699 for baptisms, 1700 for
marriages, and 1791 for burials.
5. The church of ST. MARGARET, Ward End,
was originally built in or shortly before 1517 by
Thomas Bond, a merchant of Coventry and lord of
Ward End manor. In 1516 an agreement was made
between Bond and the Vicar of Aston, in whose
parish Ward End lay, that because of the distance
to the parish church and the frequency of floods the
inhabitants of Ward End should have their own
chapel and a chaplain who should receive all the
oblations of the chapel and the tithes arising from
Ward End Park and Irish Meadow, in return for
which Bond would pay 6s. 8d. a year to the Vicar of
Aston. (fn. 87) In 1730 the chapel was in ruins, as it had
been for a long time, (fn. 88) but was being repaired by a
Mr. Blackham, an ironmonger of Birmingham. (fn. 89) It
is not certain whether Blackham fulfilled this work:
in the early 19th century the chapel was again in
ruins and was being used as a barn. (fn. 90) In 1833 an
appeal was launched for the rebuilding of the
chapel; it was said that the inhabitants wished it
rebuilt, and that most of them did not attend any
place of worship. The appeal was successful and
the new church was dedicated in 1834 and consecrated in 1841. A perpetual curacy was endowed,
to which the Vicar of Aston presented. (fn. 91) In 1870
the parish of St. Margaret, Ward End, was created
out of St. Peter and St. Paul's, Aston, and the
benefice became a titular vicarage, the patronage of
which was transferred to the Aston Trustees in
1877. (fn. 92)
The needs of the expanding population of the
district were met in the early 20th century by the
establishment of missions. A mission room in
Blakeland Street, was licensed for public worship
from 1909 to 1924, and a church room in Sladefield
Street from 1925 to the Second World War. (fn. 93) St.
Paul's mission room in Bordesley Green was
licensed in 1912 and was consecrated in 1929 (see
no. 109). In 1935 Christ Church, Ward End, was
consecrated as a chapel of ease to St. Margaret's.
Parts of St. Margaret's parish were taken to form
St. Paul's, Bordesley Green (1928), and part of St.
Mary and St. John's, Shaw Hill (1929).
The church, dedicated to the Holy Trinity, St.
Mary the Virgin and St. Margaret, stands in a
graveyard at the junction of St. Margaret's Road
and Church Walk. It is a small building by Rickman
in the Gothic style, of brick with stone dressings,
painted on the inside and rendered on the outside to
simulate ashlar. It comprises chancel, nave and
western tower, once apparently embattled and with
pinnacles but now having only a simple parapet.
The church was restored externally and refitted
internally in 1929. (fn. 94) It contains a memorial bust of
William Hutton (d. 1815) by Peter Hollins. There
are two bells, one of 1714 which came from the
Royal Hospital, Greenwich, and may have been
presented or bequeathed to the church by William
Hutton, the other of 1834. There are also two small
bells on which the clock strikes the quarters. (fn. 95)
6. During the rebuilding of the church of
ST. MARTIN, Birmingham, in the 19th century
evidence was found of a 12th-century building on
the site. (fn. 96) There is no mention of a church or a
priest at Birmingham in Domesday Book, and the
earliest mention of a church was in 1263. (fn. 97)
The benefice has always been a rectory. In 1291
the church was valued at £5, (fn. 98) and in 1341 the
glebe, lesser tithes and oblations were said to be
worth 40s. (fn. 99) In 1535 the rectory was valued at
£19 3s. 6d., besides 12s. 6d. for procurations and
synodals. (fn. 1) The value of the living increased with
the development of the town in the 17th and 18th
centuries. (fn. 2) Private Acts of 1773 and 1825 enabled
the rector to lease his glebe, and to sell the parsonage
house and grant building leases. (fn. 3) By the middle of
the 19th century the income had risen to over
£1,000, and between 1893 and 1897 Parliament
authorized the vesting of the rectory's lands in
trustees for the benefit of incumbents and other
clergy in the ancient parish of St. Martin. (fn. 4) The
incumbent of St. Martin's is entitled Rector of
Birmingham.
From at least 1263, when Maud, widow of William
de Birmingham, claimed ⅓ of the advowson in
dower, (fn. 5) until 1720, the right of presentation seems
to have descended with the manor of Birmingham. (fn. 6)
Edward Littleton presented in 1536 by the grant of
Edward Birmingham. (fn. 7) In 1544, when the advowson
along with the manor was in the hands of the
Crown, the Princess Elizabeth presented. (fn. 8) Samuel
Marrow granted the right of next presentation to
Thomas Smith, who presented Luke Smith in
1578. (fn. 9) Luke Smith died in 1646, and his widow
Mary claimed next presentation, but Samuel Wills,
presented by Edward Marrow's guardian, Lord Say
and Sele, was instituted. (fn. 10) Wills, a leader of the
Birmingham Presbyterians, was deprived of the
living in 1660 or 1661, (fn. 11) and Josiah Slader, who
claimed to have been presented by Mary Smith,
was instituted in 1661 on the presentation of the
Crown, vice Luke Smith deceased. (fn. 12) The Presbyterians successfully challenged the validity of
Slader's orders, and in 1663 John Riland was presented by Samuel Marrow's grandmother, Lady
Lucy Grantham, and Samuel Marrow. (fn. 13)
In 1720 the advowson passed from the coheirs of
Samuel Marrow to Edward Smith, clerk. (fn. 14) A John
Smith presented in 1723, 1728 and 1732, and was
said to be patron in 1763. (fn. 15) William Tennant presented in 1771; he was named as patron in 1772 and
1822. (fn. 16) In 1829 the advowson was said to be held
by the 'executors of the late T. Hawke'; (fn. 17) by 1830
Thomas and Elizabeth Walker had purchased the
advowson and vested it in trustees. (fn. 18) By 1952 the
trustees of St. Martin's held in addition the advowsons of eight other churches in Birmingham. (fn. 19)
Luke Smith, rector from 1578 to 1646, was a
pluralist who seems to have resided little in Birmingham, and in the thirties and early forties the
cure was served by Francis Roberts, a Presbyterian. (fn. 20) Smith's successor Samuel Wills, after
being deprived of the benefice of St. Martin's, was
licensed to preach as a Presbyterian. (fn. 21) In 1663 the
adherents of Josiah Slader rioted in the church after
his rival, Riland, had been instituted, but their
behaviour had a personal, not a religious, motive. (fn. 22)
However strong the inclination of the inhabitants
toward nonconformity, seats in St. Martin's were in
great demand in the 18th and early 19th centuries. (fn. 23)
Dr. J. C. Miller, rector from 1846 to 1866, was a
well-known evangelical divine with a high reputation
in local affairs. (fn. 24)
The parish of St. Philip, to which a further
portion was added in 1900, was formed out of that
of St. Martin in 1708. In 1830 the ancient parish
of St. Martin was divided into two distinct and
separate parishes, St. Martin's and St. George's.
St. Martin's was again divided in 1834, into St.
Martin's, St. Thomas's, and All Saints'. Since then
parishes or parts of parishes have been assigned out
of St. Martin's to the churches of Bishop Ryder
(1841), St. Mary (1841), St. Paul (1841), St. Luke
(1843), St. Mark (1843), St. Jude (1845), St.
Bartholomew (1847), St. John, Ladywood (1854),
St. Barnabas (1861), Christ Church (1865), and St.
Gabriel (1869). Small parts of St. Martin's parish
were later added to the parishes of St. Jude (1885),
St. Philip (1900) and St. Paul (1900). In 1939 part
of the parish of St. Bartholomew was reunited with
St. Martin's.
A mission hall in Dean Street was licensed for
public worship from 1908 to 1926. A mission church
at 32, Newhall Street, was mentioned in 1858. (fn. 25)
In 1330 Walter de Clodeshale received licence to
alienate lands and rent in Birmingham for the
maintenance of a chaplain to celebrate mass daily
at the altar of St. Mary in the church of St.
Martin. (fn. 26) In 1347 Walter's son Richard received
licence to alienate further lands and rents in Birmingham for the maintenance of a chaplain in a
second chantry. (fn. 27) The right of presentation to both
chantries seems to have remained in the Clodeshale
family until 1428, although Roger Burgilon and his
wife presented in 1383 and 1384, and the bishop
presented by lapse in 1349 and 1360. (fn. 28) William de
Birmingham presented to one of the chantries in
1402, but in a lawsuit in 1404 Richard de Clodeshale, Walter's great-grandson, regained the right of
presentation from William de Birmingham. (fn. 29)
Richard de Clodeshale died in 1428, and his
daughter and heir married Robert Arden, of Park
Hall, in Castle Bromwich, (fn. 30) with which manor the
advowson of the chantries descended until both
chantries were dissolved in 1545. (fn. 31) In 1535 the first
chantry was said to be worth £5 1s., and the second
£5. (fn. 32) Most of the property of the two chantries, in
Birmingham, Saltley, and Little Bromwich, was
sold by the Crown between 1549 and 1553. (fn. 33)
In 1392 John Coleshill, John Goldsmith, and
William atte Slowe received licence to alienate lands
and rent in Birmingham and Edgbaston to found a
guild in honour of the Holy Cross and a chantry in
St. Martin's church. (fn. 34) Ten years previously these
three founders, together with Thomas Sheldon, had
received licence to alienate lands and rents to the
annual value of 20 marks for the founding of a
chantry in St. Martin's, (fn. 35) but that licence had never
taken effect. (fn. 36) The purpose of the guild seems to
have been to a large extent religious, and the priests
supported by the guild may have assisted the Rector
of St. Martin's in his pastoral duties in the thickly
populated parish. The chantry itself appears to have
had no permanent endowment of its own, the
priests who served it being paid out of the general
income of the guild. In 1545, out of a total income
of £31 2s. 10d., the guild paid £16 to three priests
and £3 13s. to an organist; (fn. 37) and in 1547, out of an
income of £32 12s. 5d., £20 6s. 8d. were paid 'in
stipend of priests and other ministers of the
church'. (fn. 38)
It was recorded in 1781 that a Mrs. Jennens had
given £10 a year to pay for a lecture in St. Martin's
on the second and third Thursday of every month. (fn. 39)
This endowment was not mentioned by the Charity
Commissioners in their report of 1829. (fn. 40)
The parish church of St. Martin stands in the
Bull Ring, at the centre of the site of the medieval
village and in the area which, until the reconstruction of this part of the city in the 1960s, was largely
occupied by the markets. It consists of a chancel
with north organ chamber and south chapel, nave,
north and south transepts and aisles, south porch,
and, at the west end of the north aisle, a tower with
a spire rising to 200 ft. (fn. 41) Only the interior of the
lower part of the tower is ancient, the remainder of
the church having been rebuilt in 1873–5. The
earliest fabric to have been found in the building
was of the 12th century, but nothing can be conjectured of the form of the 12th-century church.
This church was replaced at the end of the 13th
century by a building of the local sandstone. In the
17th century the church consisted of a chancel with
a crypt beneath, a clerestoried nave, north and south
aisles, and a north-west tower with spire. By 1690
the fabric was considerably decayed, and the whole
building with the exception of the spire was encased
in brick, the medieval character of the building
being hidden behind an exterior presenting such
features as tall round-headed windows to the aisles
and clerestory, a balustrade above the aisles, and a
small pedimented south porch. (fn. 42) The alterations of
1690 did not alter the plan of the 13th-century
church or destroy much of its fabric. The north
aisle was extended eastwards as far as the east end
of the chancel in the early 18th century, and a lowbuilt vestry was added on the south side of the
chancel c. 1760. In 1781 the spire was rebuilt, and at
about the same time the aisles were re-roofed by the
extension of the nave roof to make a single lowpitched roof over the nave and both aisles. This
alteration was presumably made in order to allow
room for the galleries which extended in a horseshoe shape over the aisles and the west end of the
nave and was accompanied by the division of the
tall windows of 1690 to make two tiers of roundheaded windows to each of the aisles. (fn. 43) The tower
and spire were restored in 1853. (fn. 44)
In 1873, under the direction of J. A. Chatwin,
the whole building with the exception of the tower
and spire was carefully demolished and rebuilt in
the style of the early 14th century. A red-brown
stone from Codsall was used for the interior, a grey
stone from Grimshill and Derbyshire for the
exterior, and the open hammer-beam roof was tiled
externally. The plan of the new church roughly
followed that of the medieval building, with transepts added, and with a chapel south of the chancel
and an organ-chamber north of it. Among the
features of the medieval church uncovered during
the rebuilding were two crypts (below the eastern
end of the chancel and the south aisle), a painted
doom over the chancel arch, and other wallpaintings thought to depict episodes in the life of
St. Martin. The church was re-opened in 1875. (fn. 45)
The lower part of the tower is of old red sandstone
inside with some modern repairs. Plain two-centred
arches open into the nave and north aisle, and may
have a few ancient stones. In the west wall is a
pointed doorway and in the north-west angle a
splayed doorway to the stair-vice. Higher up are
north and west traceried windows of three lights:
the wide internal splays of these may be original and
perhaps also their rear-arches of three chamfered
orders. The tower is of two stages, the upper one
containing the bell-chamber. In the north wall of
the lower stage there is an open-air pulpit, and
above the north and west windows there are niches
with figures of St. Martin and St. George.
The church was damaged by bombing during the
Second World War. The west window of the nave
was destroyed, the west doorway and the roof-tiles
were damaged, and the doors were blown off their
hinges.
Richard Kilcuppe, by will dated 1610, left
certain property in trust from which, under the
terms of a deed of 1612, 13s. 4d. were to be paid
annually to the churchwardens of St. Martin's for
the repair of the church. This sum was still being
received in 1829, when it was carried by the
churchwardens to their general account. The
charity was administered as part of Lench's Trust. (fn. 46)
All the furniture and fittings in the present church
are modern. There are four ancient tombs, conjecturally assigned to members of the de Birmingham
family. These were in the south aisle in Dugdale's
time, in the chancel in Hutton's. In 1846 they were
rediscovered, were restored, and were placed in the
chancel. Other monuments include a tablet in the
south chapel to John Riland (d. 1672), Archdeacon
of Coventry and Rector of St. Martin's, and another
in the south transept to William Colmore (d. 1607)
and other members of his family. Also in the south
transept is a memorial to William Thompson (d.
1799), first president of the Wesleyan Methodist
Conference after the death of John Wesley. (fn. 47) One
of the stained-glass windows in the south transept
was glazed by William Morris from a design by
Sir Edward Burne-Jones. (fn. 48)
There were four bells in 1552, together with a
clock and chime. Six bells were put up in 1682. In
1751 there were eight, but in that year St. Philip's
increased its number of bells from six to ten. The
churchwardens of St. Martin's, not to be outdone,
increased their bells from eight to twelve. In 1910
there were seven bells cast in 1758 by Lester and
Pack of London (two of them recast in 1870), two
of 1769, and one each of 1771, 1772 and 1790. (fn. 49)
These were all recast in 1928. In 1829 the churchwardens were receiving £8 a year from a bell-rope
charity administered as part of Lench's Trust, and
this sum was carried to their general account. The
sum was the rent from a croft near Five Ways,
known as Bell-rope Croft, which was mentioned in
the accounts of Lench's Trust for 1668–9. (fn. 50)
The communion plate amounted in 1708 to 52 oz.,
and this may have included or have been the
communion service given to the church in 1630 by
Richard Dukesayle. It was evidently considered in
1708 that 52 oz. was shamefully little for a town of
Birmingham's size, and the amount was increased,
by voluntary subscription, to 275 oz.: 2 flagons, 2
cups, 2 covers and 2 patens, worth £80 16s. 6d. (fn. 51)
In 1955 none of the plate was older than the late
18th century, and most of it was of the late 19th
century.
The registers of marriages and burials begin in
1554, those of baptisms in 1555. (fn. 52) There are also
registers of the baptisms and burials at St. Paul's
and St. Mary's chapels in the period 1774–1812.
7. The church of ST. MARY, Birmingham, was
built in 1774, (fn. 53) under an Act of 1772, as a chapel of
ease to St. Martin's. The site was given by Dorothy
Weaman, Mary Weaman (to whose forename the
dedication alluded) and the trustees of Lench's
Trust. The cost of building was raised by subscription, and Mary Weaman gave £1,000 towards it. (fn. 54)
A perpetual curacy was established, in the patronage
of Mary Weaman and, after her death, of trustees. (fn. 55)
A parish, formed out of St. Martin's, was assigned
to St. Mary's in 1841. (fn. 56) The benefice became a
vicarage in 1868. (fn. 57) The income of the incumbent
was said to be worth £200 a year in 1781, (fn. 58) and £360
in 1896. (fn. 59) Under an Act of 1925 the church was
closed pending demolition, and the benefice and
parish were united to those of Bishop Ryder's
church. (fn. 60)
The first incumbent was John Riland, who was
assisted by a curate, Edward Burn. In 1786 John
Wesley attended at St. Mary's and heard 'an
admirable sermon' from the curate, (fn. 61) though it is
not certain whether this meant Riland or Burn. (fn. 62)
Burn, who was incumbent of St. Mary's from 1790
until 1837, was certainly in sympathy with Wesley's
views. (fn. 63) Burn was succeeded by J. C. Barrett, a
well-known evangelical preacher who drew large
congregations to St. Mary's until his death in 1881. (fn. 64)
From the middle of the 19th century the vicar was
assisted by a curate. (fn. 65) St. Mary's was a small
parish, about a quarter of a mile square, in the
gun-making quarter of the town. (fn. 66) When the church
was built it stood in open ground on the north edge
of the town, but was soon built around. A number
of dwellings were removed when the General
Hospital was rebuilt (1894–7) (fn. 67) in Steelhouse Lane
in St. Mary's parish. A mission hall in Whittall
Street was licensed for public worship from 1888 to
1907, and the chapel of the General Hospital from
1921 (it was licensed in the parish of Bishop Ryder
from 1925). (fn. 68)
The church, in Whittall Street, was an octagonal
brick building with a small tower and spire, in the
Classical style, standing in a large churchyard. The
octagonal form was considered ideal for preaching
and the church could accommodate nearly 1,700
people. (fn. 69) The design, by Joseph Pickford, (fn. 70) was
thought by Hutton to show 'too little steeple and
too much roof'. (fn. 71) The tower was of three stages,
the first round, the second octagonal with Doric
columns at each angle, and the third, from which
rose a slender spire, octagonal with a clockface
and pediment on each alternate side. (fn. 72) The tower
and spire were rebuilt in 1866 to a very similar
design, with pilasters instead of columns and
a balustrade on the second stage. (fn. 73) The first
registers of baptisms (1774–1812) and of burials
(1779–1812) are kept at St. Martin's church. The
register of marriages begins in 1842. The 18thcentury silver communion service is now at St.
Mary's, Pype Hayes, except for the two flagons
which are at the Birmingham Assay Office. (fn. 74)
8. The church of ST. MARY, Handsworth, was
in existence by 1200 when a priest serving the
church of Handsworth is mentioned, (fn. 75) and in 1228
there was a rector, who presented a vicar, reserving
to himself a pension of 2 marks of silver. There is
no later reference to a vicarage, and William
Wyrley, the vicar presented in 1228, was apparently
rector at his death c. 1247. (fn. 76) In the 13th century
Handsworth church owed a pension of 2 marks to
Harborne church: this may have been due to some
dependent relationship at an earlier date. (fn. 77) The
church was valued at £14 in 1291. (fn. 78) In 1341 the
rector held one carucate of land worth 30s. a year,
a piece of meadow and a fishpond both worth 10s.
The tithes of corn were valued at 20s. and those of
the mill at ½ mark, and the rector received 10s. in
offerings. (fn. 79) In 1535 his net income was estimated at
£13 19s. 2d. (fn. 80) The tithes were commuted in 1839
for £1,391 6s. 6d. a year payable to the rector, (fn. 81) and
in 1887 there were 82 a. glebe. (fn. 82) The net value of
the benefice was £1,221 in 1953. (fn. 83)
The advowson was claimed by Pain de Parles in
right of his wife from Thomas of Lichfield and
Simon the Treasurer in 1199 and 1200 respectively.
In 1200 the priest serving the church was said to
have been appointed by the Hospitallers, whose
charter was produced. (fn. 84) Their prior acknowledged
a moiety of the advowson to be the right of William
de Parles in 1210, and the Prior of Lenton (Notts.),
who later held the other moiety, said that it had
been acquired from the Prior of the Hospitallers in
King John's reign. (fn. 85) In 1228 John de Parles and the
Prior of Lenton were patrons, (fn. 86) and in 1230 a claim
of the Prior of Sandwell (Staffs.) to a share in the
advowson was dropped. (fn. 87) This claim may have been
prompted by the fact that Sandwell owned land in
Handsworth by the gift of Gervase Paynel. (fn. 88) The
division of the advowson seems to have led to suits
at nearly every vacancy in the 13th century. (fn. 89) In
1280, as a result of long disputes which had involved
the advowson of Handsworth as early as 1270,
Lenton gave up its share to the Dean and Chapter
of Lichfield. (fn. 90) In 1346 they received licence to
alienate it to Richard de Stafford. (fn. 91) By 1358 John
Botetourt, to whom the other half had descended
with the manor of Handsworth (fn. 92) held the whole
advowson, (fn. 93) and it thereafter descended with the
manor until c. 1530–44, when it was apparently
bought from one of the St. Leger family by Sir
William Smyth. By 1544–7 it was held by his
nephew William Smyth who was also rector, and it
may have passed directly from uncle to nephew,
though Nicholas Ardern claimed to have bought it
from Sir William Fitzwilliam, later 1st Earl of
Southampton, and to have granted it himself to the
younger William Smyth. (fn. 94) Richard Huddlestone
held it in right of his wife Margery at his death in
1557, when it was divided between his daughters
and heirs, Anne, wife of John Bowes, and Lucy,
wife of John Brooke. (fn. 95) Lucy's son Robert (fn. 96) sold his
moiety to Robert Stanford (Stamford) in 1584, (fn. 97)
and when Stanford died in 1607 he was said to have
held the whole advowson. (fn. 98) It then apparently
descended with the manor of Handsworth until
1679, (fn. 99) but this descent was later challenged, and
Walter Aston and Sir Edward Littleton presented in
1636. (fn. 1) By the second half of the 17th century there
was evidently some confusion about the ownership
of the advowson. In 1679 Richard Best sold the
advowson to Joseph Ainge, Rector of Handsworth
1661–91, (fn. 2) but in 1692 Edward Birch, trustee for
Humphrey Wyrley, presented on the grounds that
Robert Stanford's son Edward had granted the
next presentation to Humphrey Wyrley's grandfather. (fn. 3) In 1696 it seems to have been assumed that
the advowson belonged to Joseph Ainge's heir, and
in 1712 Joseph's son Samuel Ainge claimed the
whole advowson on the grounds that his father had
bought two thirds of it from Best and the remaining
third from Walter Astley who had acquired that
third from the Bowes family. (fn. 4) At that time Thomas
Oakes, Rector of Handsworth 1692–1731, claimed
that he had acquired one quarter of the advowson,
giving him the right to present the next rector, from
Richard Drakeford, who had bought it from
Christopher and Mary Hevingham, the latter being
the heir of Richard Huddlestone's daughter, Lucy. (fn. 5)
This claim, improbable as it may seem, was apparently upheld, for when Oakes died in 1731 his widow
presented their son John. John Oakes remained
rector until his death in 1767, (fn. 6) when John Wyrley
Birch, lord of Handsworth manor, presented. From
then the advowson descended with the manor to
Wyrley Birch, (fn. 7) who sold it between 1830 (fn. 8) and 1834,
when it was held by Sir Robert Peel. (fn. 9) By 1848 it
was held by Sir Robert's brother John, Dean of
Worcester. On his death in 1875 (fn. 10) it passed to
W. Randall, Rector of Handsworth 1873–91, who
conveyed it in 1891 or 1892 to the Bishop of Lichfield. (fn. 11) In 1905 the Bishop of Birmingham became
patron. (fn. 12)
From the beginning of the 19th century there is
evidence of considerable activity in the affairs of the
church. In 1800 it was decided that the quality of
the music in the services should be improved; in the
following years there were plans for building a
vestry, enlarging the churchyard, improving the
precincts, and building an organ. In 1819 it was
decided that the church should be enlarged to meet
the needs of the growing population of the parish,
250 of the extra seats provided to be free. The
extension of the church was completed by 1821. (fn. 13)
Shortly after there began the building of new
churches in Handsworth parish: the first was St.
John's, Perry Barr, consecrated in 1833, and it was
followed by St. James's, Handsworth, erected 1838–
40, St. Michael's, Handsworth, consecrated in 1855,
and Holy Trinity, Birchfield, consecrated in 1864.
Altogether 11 consecrated churches have been built
in the ancient parish of Handsworth in the 19th and
20th centuries. (fn. 14) Modern ecclesiastical parishes
formed directly out of Handsworth are those of St.
James, Handsworth (1854), St. Michael, Handsworth (1861), St. John, Perry Barr (1862), and Holy
Trinity, Birchfield (1865), and parts of the parishes
of St. Paul, Hamstead (1894), and St. Andrew,
Handsworth (1914). St. Paul's, Hamstead, consecrated in 1892, originated as a mission church of
Handsworth church in 1886, and St. Andrew's,
Handsworth, consecrated in 1914, originated as the
mission church of the Good Shepherd in 1894. St.
Mary's Mission in Hutton Road was licensed from
1910 until the Second World War, and the Cherry
Orchard Church Hall has been licensed as a mission
since 1947. (fn. 15)
The parish church of St. Mary, in Hamstead
Road, consists of a chancel, north and south chapels,
nave, north transept and two north aisles, south
aisle with a south tower east of it, and a south
porch. (fn. 16) The lower part of the south tower is of the
late 12th or early 13th century, the upper part
having been added or rebuilt in the 15th century.
The north chapel has some remains of early-16thcentury work and a re-set 14th-century piscina. A
plan of the church made two years before the
alterations of 1820 shows that it then consisted of
chancel, nave, north and south aisles and tower. (fn. 17)
The north aisle ran the length of nave and chancel,
forming a chapel at its east end; it was separated
from them by four arches, the eastern pier being
clustered and the two western hexagonal. During
the alterations, which were entrusted to William
Hollins, the north aisle was largely rebuilt, the
arcade being replaced by one of five bays, and a
broad north transept with a projection of two bays,
separated from the north aisle by an arcade of three
bays, was added. In the north-east angle so formed
a vestry was built, the south chapel, known as the
Watt chapel, was added and the arrangement of the
pews was changed. (fn. 18) In 1876–80 the 14th-century
south aisle was rebuilt and lengthened, the two
south windows being replaced by four, and the
arcade of two bays by one of four. The nave and
existing north aisle were extended west, the chancel
was extended east, an arch was built between the
north chapel and north aisle, the north transept was
made narrower, and an outer north aisle was built.
The chancel has an east window of five lights, and
north-east and south-east windows of two, all with
intersecting tracery. An arcade of two bays opens to
the north chapel, and an early-19th-century arch to
the south chapel. East of this arch are a piscina and
two sedilia. The chancel arch, of modern red sandstone, has triple shafts on corbels, and the roof has
a barrel-vaulted ceiling. The north chapel has an
early-16th-century east window of 3 cinquefoiled
elliptical-headed lights under a square head with
external label, all in red sandstone and partly
restored. The north window is similar. At the west
end of the north wall is a four-centred doorway
entered from an early-18th-century porch, which
was once the vestry. The head of an early-14thcentury piscina with a trefoiled pointed head and
hood-mould has been reset east of the arcade. The
east wall is of roughly squared large red masonry,
mostly restored in the upper part, and has an embattled gabled head. The north wall is of restored
smooth ashlar. The south chapel, designed in the
Gothic style to contain a memorial to James Watt,
has no altar; it has a three-light traceried east window and a vaulted ceiling. The nave has a modern
north arcade of six bays, and another to the outer
north aisle, with grouped piers and pointed heads.
The south arcade is of four bays, the easternmost
wider than the others because of the position of the
tower. The east wall of the aisle is formed by the
west wall of the tower and is built of old red sandstone ashlar; it has an offset about 10 ft. up, above
this a blocked small round-headed window with
rebated jambs, and above this again a moulded
string-course: both appear to be of the late 12th
century.
The tower is built of pinkish grey ashlar and is of
two main stages. The lower half of the lower stage
has original shallow square buttresses, and above
them are later diagonal buttresses up to the stringcourse at the foot of the bell-chamber. The lower
main stage has moulded string-courses dividing it
into three short stages. On the east side is a semioctagonal projecting stair-vice right up to the
parapet. The south window is a 14th-century
insertion of two trefoiled lights and tracery in a twocentred head (restored later) with the old hoodmould and head-stops. The jambs are of three chamfered orders. A light above has a modern trefoiled
head, but the jambs above may be ancient and retooled.
Above this the masonry generally is yellower.
Upper south and west windows are of two squareheaded lights. The bell-chamber has 15th-century
windows of two trefoiled lights and a quatrefoil in a
four-centred head, with casement moulded jambs.
In the east wall, north of the stair-vice is a
square-headed window, and south of it a small
four-centred light. The parapet is embattled, with
returned copings to the merlons, and above the
angles are crocketted pinnacles. The string-course
has carved lions' masks, and at the angles are
gargoyles.
The north chapel has a late-17th-century communion table. The font has a 3 ft. octagonal bowl
that may be ancient; it has grooves at both top and
bottom edges. Among the monuments in the
church (fn. 19) are an altar tomb with 16th-century
effigies of William Wyrley (d. 1561) and his wife
Elizabeth (Cave), in the west bay of the north
arcade; a 16th-century effigy said to be of Sir
William Stanford (d. 1558) on an open-sided tombchest containing a cadaver in a shroud, at the east
end of the south aisle; a mural monument with
marble bust of Matthew Boulton (d. 1809), in the
chancel; a large marble statue by Chantrey of James
Watt (d. 1819) seated on a chair, in the south
chapel; a bust, also by Chantrey, of William Murdock
(d. 1839); and a mural tablet on the east wall of the
north chapel to John Fulnetby, B.D. (d. 1636),
Archdeacon of Stafford, Canon of Lichfield and
Rector of Handsworth. In the floor, north of the
altar, are 10 or 11 pieces of gravestone, reset at
random, which once bore the incised effigy of a man
in 17th-century armour, and there are some remains
of the inscription, including 'Joh. Harm . . .
Esquier'. In 1701 there were four bells, which were
recast by Joseph Smith of Edgbaston in that year,
when two more bells were added. A further two
bells were added in 1890, and all eight were recast
in 1955. (fn. 20) The plate is modern.
The registers of baptisms, burials and marriages
begin in 1558, but there are gaps for several periods
in the 17th century. (fn. 21)
9. The church of ST. PAUL, Birmingham, was
built between 1777 and 1779 (fn. 22) as a chapel of ease
to St. Martin's under an Act of 1772. The site was
given by Charles Colmore, who also gave £1,000
towards the cost of building, the rest of which was
raised by subscription. (fn. 23) There seems to have been
a perpetual curacy in existence from 1778, when a
curate was presented by the trustees appointed
under the Act of 1772. (fn. 24) From 1779 Charles Colmore alone seems to have acted as patron. (fn. 25) In 1817
Rann Kennedy, who had been curate since 1797,
became incumbent, the congregation having purchased for him the next presentation. (fn. 26) In 1848 the
patron was George B. P. Latimer, who presented
himself to the living. (fn. 27) In 1868 S. S. Lloyd was
named as patron, but by 1869 the patronage had
passed to the trustees of St. Martin's church. (fn. 28) The
annual net value of the living was said to be over
£200 in 1778 (fn. 29) and £622 in 1953. (fn. 30) In 1841 a parish
formed out of St. Martin's was assigned to the
church, (fn. 31) and a further part of St. Martin's was
added to the parish in 1900. (fn. 32) The living became a
vicarage in 1868. (fn. 33) In 1947 the parishes and benefices of St. Paul, Birmingham, and St. Mark, Birmingham, were joined to form the parish and united
benefice of St. Paul and St. Mark.
A map of 1810 shows buildings all around St.
Paul's church. (fn. 34) By the middle of the 19th century
the population of the parish was about 11,000, (fn. 35)
and it had become the centre of the jewellers'
quarter of the town. (fn. 36) For over 50 years Rann
Kennedy (1772–1851), second master of King
Edward's School, and a poet of note in his day, was
associated with the parish. (fn. 37) He was described as
'one of the most able and popular preachers in
Birmingham'. (fn. 38) The chapel of St. Michael and All
Angels, Birmingham, in Warstone Lane, though
consecrated in the 1840s was regarded as a mission
chapel of St. Paul's between 1917 and 1926. (fn. 39)
Cathedral House, at 71, Newhall Street, was
licensed as a mission room from 1909 to 1920. (fn. 40)
The church of St. Paul, in St. Paul's Square,
stands in the middle of its churchyard. It is a
Classical building designed by Roger Eykyn in a
style much influenced by the work of James Gibbs. (fn. 41)
It consists of a rectangular nave with aisles and
galleries, a square apse for the altar and a west
tower with entrance lobbies to the north and south of
it. (fn. 42) Internally the Venetian east window has its lights
divided by Ionic shafts and flanked by square Ionic
pilasters. The glass in the east window, executed by
Francis Eginton in 1791 after a painting by Benjamin West, P.R.A., is one of the best surviving
examples of 18th-century painted glass. (fn. 43) Above
the side lights is an entablature and above this are
oval wall-panels containing urns, a cornice crossing
above the whole. Externally the square mullions
have moulded caps and bases, and the whole is set
in a round-headed recess. The nave arcades of five
bays have round arches of square section carried on
Ionic columns which change below the gallery level
to panelled square piers with moulded caps and
bases. The aisles have two ranges of windows, the
lower, below the galleries, with segmental heads,
the upper with half-round heads; all have rusticated
quoins and voussoirs externally. There is also a
west gallery. There are doorways at each end of the
aisles, north and south doorways to the west lobbies,
and a doorway in the west wall of the tower, all with
pediments above them. The nave has an elliptical
barrel-vaulted ceiling of plaster and the aisles have
half-round vaults, groined to the arcades and
windows. The sloping plastered soffits of the
galleries are also partly groined to the lower windows. Externally the walls are of white ashlar, now
blackened with grime, with projecting rusticated
quoins. All round is a great bracketed cornice, and
above the east and west ends are pediments, the
western with an attic stage above it to take the
tower. The tower was originally of one low story,
square, with a round window in each side and
pyramidal roof. (fn. 44) The tower had been designed to
support a spire, but for want of money this was not
erected until 1823. (fn. 45) The existing tower, designed
by Francis Goodwin, (fn. 46) has above the west pediment
and attic a cruciform stage, the cardinal faces of
which contain tall round-headed windows and the
diagonal faces of which are recessed and fronted by
Corinthian columns. These support a cornice, above
which is an octagonal bell-chamber, with a balustrade
and square-headed lights. The short spire with
three ranges of spire-lights is surmounted by a ball
and weather-vane. The furniture of the church
includes a communion rail with turned balusters,
high pews with fielded panels and doors, and pews
set in coved recesses in the west wall of the nave
under the gallery. The organ was originally over
the west gallery which has a little of the organ's
casing still incorporated in its front. A new organ
was built in 1838; it was moved to the east bay of
the north aisle about 1927. (fn. 47) The font under the
gallery is of marble and polished granite and has a
stem with a white Ionic capital. There are several
19th-century monuments in the south aisle to
members of the Hollins family, including a portrait
bust of William Hollins, architect (d. 1843), by his
son Peter Hollins; there is also a monument to the
artist Joseph Barber (d. 1811). (fn. 48) There are 825
sittings in the church, but earlier estimates of
accommodation are considerably higher. (fn. 49) Bomb
damage in 1940 and 1941, which chipped some of
the masonry and smashed window glazing, has since
been repaired.
The register of baptisms and burials (the first
register is kept at St. Martin's church) dates from
1779, that of marriages from 1841.
10. The advowson of the ancient parish church of
ST. PETER, Harborne, originally belonged to the
lords of the manor who gave it to the abbey of
Halesowen, but by 1279 the church had been
appropriated to the Dean and Chapter of Lichfield.
The process by which this happened is obscure, and
the result seems to have been caused chiefly by the
coincidence that one of the rectors was also a canon
of Lichfield.
In the early 13th century the advowson belonged
to Warin FitzGerold (d. 1217 or 1218) (fn. 50) as an
appurtenance of the manor. (fn. 51) Warin's daughter
Margaret de Redvers (d. 1252) (fn. 52) gave the advowson
to the abbey of Halesowen probably after 1226. (fn. 53)
In 1238 the Abbot of Halesowen brought an assize
of darrein presentment against the Bishop of
Coventry; it was respited at first to allow for the
attendance of William de Kilkenny whose prebend
was said to be involved. (fn. 54) The abbot must have lost
his case since he afterwards renounced all his claim
in the advowson to the bishop. (fn. 55) It is not clear why
the bishop had ever presented to the church or how
William de Kilkenny was connected with Harborne:
he may have held the prebend of Gaia Minor and
claimed, like others after him, that Harborne was
part of it, but this on the whole seems less likely
than that he was simply Rector of Harborne. He was
a pluralist and certainly non-resident and his
benefice might have been referred to loosely as a
prebend on this occasion. At any rate, the next
vacancy at Harborne coincided with the elevation of
William de Kilkenny to the episcopate in 1255. (fn. 56)
Between then and 1257 the king, as guardian of
Margaret de Redver's grandson, Baldwin, Earl of
Devon, recovered the presentation from the bishop
by another assize of darrein presentment. (fn. 57) Margaret's grant to Halesowen was apparently forgotten
and the abbot's rights were ignored, but in 1260 he
came forward once more and claimed the advowson
from Baldwin. The abbot said that it had originally
belonged to the manor, and had been granted to the
abbey by Margaret. Baldwin's defence was that the
church was not in any case vacant, but was held by
Henry de Ganio, a Roman whom the bishop had
presented by provision of the pope. The abbot
replied that Henry had forfeited the church by
marriage. (fn. 58) Although this last plea apparently failed,
Baldwin nevertheless remitted all his claim to the
abbey in the following year. (fn. 59)
Henry de Ganio continued to be troublesome. A
papal mandate of 1274 ordered the Prior of Coventry
to restore to the unnamed prebend of Henry de
Ganio the tithes and other property which he had
leased to others: (fn. 60) no explanation is given of the
choice of the prior for the duty. This prebend is
identified in the 14th-century Lichfield chapter
register as Harborne, and Harborne had also been
named in the same source as a prebend of Lichfield
in 1255. (fn. 61) Henry was probably prebendary of Gaia
Minor, (fn. 62) and his successor as prebendary there
claimed that Harborne belonged to that prebend:
neither seems to have claimed that it constituted a
prebend itself. (fn. 63) Possibly this identification arose
from the coincidence that Henry was both preben
dary of Gaia Minor and Rector of Harborne. The
naming of Harborne as a prebend in 1255 may have
resulted from a similar confusion in the case of
William de Kilkenny who was, among other things,
Archdeacon of Coventry; (fn. 64) or from an earlier and
perhaps similar connexion with Gaia Minor, which
stands before Harborne in the list of prebends. (fn. 65)
The final stage was reached in 1279 when a dispute over Harborne church between Henry and the
Dean and Chapter of Lichfield was ended by
arbitration. Henry was adjudged to have lost
whatever right he had ever had in the church,
together with its dependent chapel of Edgbaston;
the church was to remain appropriated to the
common fund of the chapter. (fn. 66) It seems possible
that confusion between Henry's different positions,
combined with his various defections, perhaps
including marriage, had converted the whole
question of the ownership of the church into a
disciplinary dispute between him and the chapter
of which he was a member. This view of the case is
made more likely by the dispute which had gone on
concurrently between the dean and chapter and the
Abbot of Halesowen, who may have resented the
chapter's assumption of authority over Harborne.
This dispute, which also concerned other matters,
had ended in 1278 with a fine by which the abbey
remitted all its right in the advowson to the dean
and chapter. (fn. 67) From now on the church remained
appropriated to the dean and chapter: a final claim
was made unsuccessfully in 1281 by Rayner of
Florence, prebendary of Gaia Minor, that Harborne
belonged to his prebend. Rayner renounced his suit
in 1283 on perusal of the chapter's documentary
evidence that they had secured the church canonically to their common use. (fn. 68)
The dean and chapter retained the advowson of
the church until 1884, when it passed to the Bishop
of Lichfield. (fn. 69) It was transferred to the Bishop of
Birmingham on the foundation of the diocese. (fn. 70)
Harborne church was not mentioned until the
early 13th century. (fn. 71) Edgbaston was originally a
chapel of Harborne, but by the end of the Middle
Ages it was in fact independent, though it was still
called a curacy. (fn. 72) In the 13th century Handsworth
church owed a pension of 2 marks to Harborne, (fn. 73)
which may also reflect some earlier dependent
relationship.
Harborne church was not mentioned in the
Taxatio, perhaps because the vicarage, if any, was
below the value of 6 marks. A vicarage had been
ordained by 1359, (fn. 74) but it was evidently of low value,
since the vicarage was not mentioned in 1535, when
the appropriated church, together with the tithes of
Smethwick, was valued at £3 4s. (fn. 75) The tithes were
commuted by 1848 for £268 a year payable to the
dean and chapter, and £520 to the vicar. (fn. 76)
Land next to the 'Chirchebrugge' in Edgbaston
was granted to the mother church of Harborne in
the 13th century. Halesowen Abbey granted part of
the waste of Smethwick to the church in 1278,
possibly at a stage in the dispute about the advowson. 'Holouwemedue' was quitclaimed to the Dean
and Chapter of Lichfield in 1293. It was already in
their possession and was inclosed in their park,
which presumably appertained to the church since
there is no reason to believe that they held any
property in Harborne except the church. (fn. 77) In 1887
there were 23½ a. of glebe. (fn. 78)
In 1638 the Vicar of Harborne was Thomas
Bayly, a staunch supporter of the royalist cause who
later, having become a Roman Catholic, achieved
some fame as a controversial writer. (fn. 79) In the early
19th century there was no resident clergyman.
James Thomas Law, Chancellor of Lichfield
diocese, became vicar in 1825: he was actively
interested in Birmingham affairs, but he lived
generally at Lichfield and the vicar's parochial tasks
seem to have been performed by two curates. (fn. 80)
Law was succeeded as vicar by a cousin of the same
name who, having been converted to the Roman
Catholic faith, was in turn succeeded by the greatly
respected John Garbett. (fn. 81) The part of the ancient
parish of Harborne which is now in Birmingham
was never subjected to the same degree of overpopulation as the part which is now Smethwick;
Smethwick became separated ecclesiastically from
Harborne in 1842. (fn. 82) Church extension in Harborne
was less intense than in nearly all the other parishes
now in Birmingham. The parish church, after being
enlarged in 1827, held 260 free sittings. (fn. 83) A chapel
at Smethwick had been founded in 1732, and to this
a parish was assigned in 1842. (fn. 84) A parish was
assigned out of Harborne to the new church of St.
John the Baptist, Harborne, in 1859. The church
of St. Faith and St. Laurence which originated as a
mission church of Harborne in 1906, became a
parish church in 1933, the new parish being created
partly out of Harborne parish. A room in Park Road,
called St. Paul's mission room from 1906, was
licensed for public worship from 1892 to 1926. (fn. 85)
The parish church of St. Peter, Old Church
Road, consists of an apsidal chancel, nave, north
and south transepts and aisles, south porch, and a
west tower which is the only ancient feature, dating
mainly from the 15th century, but probably on an
earlier base. (fn. 86) It is 11 ft. north to south inside by 9 ft.
deep and is built of red sandstone in three stages
with moulded string-courses. Only the south side
has the semblance of a plinth, and the lower stringcourse appears only in the north and south walls.
The outer walls are 5 ft. 2 in. thick, but the east wall
with the archway is much thinner. At the west
angles are diagonal buttresses of three stages; up to
the top of the second stage these have plinths of two
splayed offsets, and on the upper part of the outer
face of the north-west buttress is a carved corbel for
an image. In the south-west angle is a stair-vice
with a south doorway having old jambs and modern
segmental-pointed head, and upper loop lights.
The archway towards the nave, a little north of
the nave's axis, is two-centred and of two hollowchamfered orders, the outer continuous on the east
face, the inner carried on semi-octagonal responds
with moulded capitals and bases. In the west wall
is a doorway with double-ogee moulded jambs and
four-centred head and above it a window of three
cinquefoiled lights and vertical tracery in a fourcentred head, partly restored. In the south wall is a
late-14th-century window of two cinquefoiled lights
and a quatrefoil in a two-centred head; the hoodmould had been cut away. This window is of a
brighter red stone than the walling. In the north
wall outside is a shallow niche with a trefoiled ogee
head of the 14th century. Its jamb-stones course
with those of the walling and it may have been
originally a small window. The second stage has a
small rectangular south window, and just below the
upper string-course are clock faces. The bell
chamber windows are of two plain pointed lights
with plain spandrels in two-centred heads: the
jambs are of two chamfered orders. The embattled
parapet has returned copings to the merlons: it has
been partly restored.
The remainder of the church, much enlarged
in the 18th century, enlarged in 1827, and rebuilt
by Y. Thomason in 1867, has walls of squared
rag-faced red sandstone and slated roofs. Each
of the three sides of the apse of the chancel has a
two-light traceried window of late-14th-century
style. The nave has archways into the transepts
(which are fitted with galleries) and arcades of
four bays of late-13th-century style. The side and
west windows are of two lights with tracery, and the
south doorway, near the west end, has a small
porch.
There are several mural monuments to members
of the Green and Price families dating from 1771
and later. In the tower are two old painted boards
recording charities of the Revd. William Jephcote,
minister, 1715, and Mrs. Elizabeth Ball of Castle
Bromwich, 1765. In the churchyard is the grave of
the painter David Cox (d. 1859).
The registers of baptisms, burials and marriages
begin in 1538, and have gaps for the years 1648–52,
1683 and 1699. (fn. 87)
11. The ancient parish church of ST. PETER
AND ST. PAUL, Aston, may be assumed to have
existed since the time of Domesday or earlier, for
Domesday Book mentions a priest at Aston. (fn. 88) The
early history of the rectory and advowson of the
church is a little obscure. In a charter of 1187
Gervase Paynel, lord of Aston manor, confirmed
various grants, including that of the church of
Aston with its dependent chapels and its appurtenances to the priory of Tickford (Bucks.), also known
as the priory of Newport Pagnell. (fn. 89) The grant of
Aston church, with the chapels of Yardley, Castle
Bromwich and Water Orton, was apparently made
by Gervase himself in a charter of c. 1165. (fn. 90) This
grant was confirmed by Gervase's nephew Ralph de
Somery between 1194 and 1220. The appropriation
of the church to the priory was made by Richard
Peche, Bishop of Coventry 1161–82, and confirmed
by Hubert Walter and in 1224 by Stephen Langton. (fn. 91) It appears, therefore, that Tickford Priory
was seised of the rectory of Aston and of the
advowson of Aston church and its chapels by the
end of the 12th century. In 1220, however, in a
dispute about the advowson of Yardley chapel, it
was decided that as Thomas de Erdington, lord of
Aston manor, had made the last two presentations,
one in time of peace and one in time of war, in right
of his patronage of Aston church, Thomas's son
Giles should have seisin of the advowson, which he
then remitted to the Prior of Tickford. (fn. 92) It is
possible that Thomas de Erdington had been
presenting to Yardley chapel in the early years of
the 13th century in ignorance or despite of earlier
grants.
The Prior of Tickford seems to have regarded his
title to the advowson of Aston as uncertain even
after the settlement of 1220 and Langton's confirmation of the appropriation in 1224, for in 1230 he
brought an action apparently to confirm his right.
The jury, however, found that the charter produced
by the prior, alleged to have been granted by
Thomas de Erdington, was forged, and that Giles
de Erdington therefore recovered the advowson. (fn. 93)
This he conveyed to the Prior of Tickford a few
months later for the consideration that he should
receive spiritual benefits. (fn. 94)
The monks of Tickford were not undisturbed in
their enjoyment of the rectory for the next hundred
years. At some time before 1254 William de
Kilkenny, a royal official who later became Bishop
of Ely, became Rector of Aston. (fn. 95) Presumably he
was presented by Tickford Priory: perhaps Tickford, like Tewkesbury, was ordered to find him a
valuable benefice. (fn. 96) During Kilkenny's incumbency,
a vicarage was ordained, and a pension of 20 marks
out of the rectory was assigned to the Dean and
Chapter of Lichfield. (fn. 97) Early in the 14th century the
nuns of Catesby (Northants.) claimed and apparently collected ⅓ of the tithes belonging to Aston
church, perhaps on the grounds of the grant to
them in 1279 of the advowson of Yardley. The
Prior of Tickford had recovered these tithes by 1331,
when he received a grant to retain them in mortmain. (fn. 98)
In 1291 the rectory was said to be worth 40 marks,
in addition to the pension of 20 marks paid to the
Dean and Chapter of Lichfield. (fn. 99) In 1341 the
rectory was taxed at £40. (fn. 1) The property of Tickford
Priory in Aston came to be regarded as a rectorial
manor, the history of which is given elsewhere. (fn. 2)
A vicarage was ordained in 1254 by Roger de
Weseham, Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, and an
amendment to this ordination was made c. 1260. (fn. 3)
From then until 1524 the advowson of the vicarage
belonged to Tickford Priory; in the second half of
the 14th century the temporalities of the priory
were in the king's hand, and the Crown presented.
In 1525 the advowson was granted to Cardinal
College at Oxford, and in 1532 to Henry VIII's
College. (fn. 4) In 1552 and 1561 Ambrose Cave, who had
married Sir Thomas Holte's widow, presented in
right of his wife's dowry. (fn. 5) From about that time
until 1818 the advowson descended with the manor
of Aston. (fn. 6) Soon afterwards George Peake (Vicar of
Aston 1823–30) became patron, and on his death in
1830 the advowson passed to another George Peake,
Vicar of Aston 1852–79. (fn. 7) By 1859 the advowson
had been transferred to trustees, known as the
Aston Trustees. (fn. 8) In 1960 the Aston Trustees held,
in addition, the advowsons of nine other churches
in the ancient parish of Aston. (fn. 9) In 1291 the vicarage
of Aston was valued at £5 a year. (fn. 10) The value in
1535, including the chapel of Castle Bromwich
which was worth 14s. a year, was £21 4s. 8d.,
besides a pension of 3s. paid to the Dean and
Chapter of Lichfield, a sum of 3s. 8d. for procurations and synodals, and 4d. for the rent of a garden. (fn. 11)
The net annual income of the benefice in 1953 was
£1,273. (fn. 12)
In 1449 a licence was granted to Sir Thomas
Erdington, lord of Erdington manor, to found a
chantry of one chaplain to celebrate divine service at
the altar of St. Mary the Virgin in the south aisle of
Aston church. (fn. 13) The chantry was commonly called
Erdington's chantry. (fn. 14) In 1495 it was named as the
chantry of St. Mary Magdalen. (fn. 15) The advowson of
the chantry apparently descended with the manor
of Erdington until its suppression. (fn. 16) In 1449 the
chantry was licensed to hold lands to the value of
6 marks a year. (fn. 17) In 1535 the chantry was worth
£17 19s. a year, besides 16s. paid out in rents and
3s. 4d. given in alms for the soul of the founder. (fn. 18)
An annuity of 40s. to be charged on the possessions
of the chantry was granted in 1545 by Robert
Shelmerdyne, the chantry priest, to John Throckmorton of the Middle Temple, London, 'for his
good counsel'. This annuity continued to be paid
after the suppression of the chantry. (fn. 19) In 1548 the
chantry, with the house and priest's mansion in
Aston and various tenements in Erdington, Witton,
Handsworth, and Melton Mowbray (Leics.), was
granted to Richard Palladye and Francis Foxhall.
The same property was granted in the following
year to Thomas Hawkins (or Fisher). (fn. 20)
Early in the 13th century Thomas de Erdington
had a private chapel in his manor-house at Erdington. After a dispute between Thomas and the
Rector of Aston, it was agreed that the rector should
receive the tithes of Aston mill; that the chaplain
should swear to make over the offerings and
oblations to the mother church; and that Thomas
and his wife should attend Aston church on feast
days, except that of the dedication of the chapel,
and on the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul should
offer two wax candles weighing three pounds. (fn. 21) In
1309 Henry de Erdington sent John le Hulle of
'Lemynton' to the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield
to be ordained sub-deacon and upwards, guaranteeing 60s. a year for John to celebrate at his chapel in
Erdington. (fn. 22)
Licences were granted for oratories in Aston
parish to Richard de Clodeshale in 1360 and the
Vicar of Aston in 1370. (fn. 23)
The parish of Aston in the early Middle Ages
covered a wide, dispersed area, and contained a
number of scattered hamlets. The most notable
events in the history of the parish as an ecclesiastical
unit are connected with the breaking up of the
parish into a number of smaller units. The parish
church lay on the western boundary of the parish:
the hamlets within the parish were up to six miles
distant from the parish church, and it is conceivable
that some had chapels of their own from very early
in their history. In the middle of the 12th century
there were said to be chapels dependent on Aston
church at Yardley, Castle Bromwich and Water
Orton. (fn. 24) Yardley seems to have become independent
of Aston by about the end of the 13th century,
although the priors of Tickford, as appropriators of
Aston church, continued to claim their rights over
Yardley. (fn. 25) The church at Castle Bromwich did not
attain the status of a parish church until 1878, but
it may in fact have been largely independent from
some time earlier. (fn. 26) The chapel at Water Orton,
apparently refounded c. 1345, became an ecclesiastical parish in 1871. (fn. 27) Other chapels built in Aston
parish before the 19th century were St. John's,
Deritend, founded 1381, St. Margaret's, Ward End
(also called Little Bromwich), founded c. 1516, and
St. James's, Ashted, founded 1789. (fn. 28) With the
growth of population in Aston parish from the
second half of the 19th century the need for new
churches there became urgent. (fn. 29) Between 1823 and
1952 another 31 churches were built and consecrated within the ancient parish of Aston and
within the modern city boundary. (fn. 30) The following
ecclesiastical parishes were formed directly out of
Aston parish: St. Matthew, Duddeston (1842), St.
Andrew, Bordesley (1846), St. Saviour, Saltley (1848),
St. Silas, Lozells (1854), St. Barnabas, Erdington
(1858), Holy Trinity, Bordesley (1864), Christ
Church, Sparkbrook (1867), St. Basil, Deritend
(1886), St. James, Aston (1906); and parts of St.
Mary, Aston Brook (1864), All Souls, Witton (1926),
and All Saints, Gravelly Hill (1929). A large number
of mission rooms and mission churches were used
at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th
century. The following were licensed by the bishop
as missions of Aston parish church for public
worship: St. James's church room, Tower Rd.
(1878–92); St. James's church, Frederick Rd. (see
no. 76); Holy Trinity mission church, Lichfield
Rd. (since 1896); Dyson Hall mission church, Park
Rd. (since 1897); All Saints Mission, Witton (1908–
40); Ellen Knox Memorial Hall, Tower Rd. (since
1908); St. Peter's Mission, Deykin Avenue (1908–
52); Alfred St. Mission (1908–22); Vicarage Rd.
Mission (1908–20); Catherine St. Mission (1908–
20); St. Martin's mission church, Perry Common
(since 1927). (fn. 31)
The parish church, which stands close to Aston
Hall at the junction of Witton Lane and Park Road,
is a stone building consisting of a chancel with
north organ chamber and south chapel, nave, north
and south aisles, porch and west tower with a tall
spire. (fn. 32) Only the tower is ancient, dating from the
15th century. The spire was rebuilt in 1776. (fn. 33) The
rest of the church was thoroughly rebuilt between
1879 and 1890. (fn. 34) The south aisle and porch were
again rebuilt in 1908. (fn. 35) The view of c. 1820 in the
Aylesford Collection is from the south-east and
shows the chancel with an east window of c. 1300 of
three lights and intersecting tracery, and with three
south windows. The nave had a low-pitched roof,
and the blocked head of a former chancel arch
showed above the low-pitched chancel roof. The
south aisle had three south lancet windows and an
18th- or early-19th-century east window, above
which was the blocked pointed head of the earlier
east window. The mullions of the aisle and clerestory windows had been removed in 1790 when the
roof and interior of the church had been restored. (fn. 36)
It was observed about 1860 that a course of red
sandstone in the north wall of the church may have
belonged to a church of the Norman period. (fn. 37)
The present chancel and nave are undivided
structurally. The chancel has a three-sided apse
with traceried windows, and north and south
arcades of two bays lavishly carved. In the apse are
marble sedilia and wall-lining. The nave has arcades
of seven bays with alternate round and octagonal
piers, and a tall clerestory with traceried windows.
The roof is of hammerbeam type. A pointed archway opens into the tower. In the south aisle is a
reset ogee-headed niche, presumably a 14th-century
piscina. The west tower is of four stages, divided by
moulded string-courses, and with a moulded plinth.
At the angles are square buttresses reaching to just
above the third stage. The walls are of dark greybrown ashlar. In the south-east angle is a stair-vice
projecting to the south. In the west wall is a pointed
doorway with moulded jambs and head with a hoodmould. The west window, above the string-course,
is of three cinquefoiled lights, the middle ogeeheaded, the others elliptical-headed, with vertical
tracery in a main head with hood-mould; below the
transom the lights have cinquefoiled elliptical heads.
In the north and south sides are similar windows
but with lower sills, the string-course dropping
below the sills. The lights, which have been restored,
have plain uncusped heads. The bell-chamber
windows are unusually treated with a series of tall
and narrow lights in two tiers with trefoiled fourcentre heads set deeply recessed in chamfered
segmental-headed outer orders. There are six in the
east and west walls, five in the north and four in the
south. On each side two of the lights are piercings,
the others are blanks. They are presumably original
as the masonry is ancient. The embattled parapet
and the angle pinnacles are modern. Above the
tower is a tall octagonal spire with four windows of
two four-centred lights at the base, and four ranges
of spire-lights, each of one light and with a carved
finial. At the apex is a ball and weather-cock.
Most of the furniture is modern. At the west end
of the nave are four late-15th-century choir stalls
with moulded cappings and moulded shaped elbows
to the divisions, carved with human heads. The
seats, originally hinged, are fixed. The backs retain
some of the foiling to the panels. There are also the
front desks with foiled standards and poppy-heads
(some damaged) and fronts panelled with four
trefoiled bays and tracery.
The church contains many monuments. (fn. 38) The
most notable are: an effigy of a knight c. 1360,
possibly Ralph Arden, and, on the same altar tomb,
the effigy of a lady c. 1490, possibly Elizabeth, wife
of Robert Arden; an effigy of a knight, probably Sir
William Harcourt (d. 1482 or later); effigies of
Thomas de Erdington (d. 1434) and his wife Anne;
effigies of William Holte (d. 1514) and his wife Joan;
effigies of Sir Edward Devereux (d. 1622) and his
wife Katherine; a mutilated effigy of a knight of
c. 1435; and a mural monument depicting the
kneeling figures of Edward Holte (d. 1592) and his
wife Dorothy. Among other monuments are those
to Henry Charles, servant to Robert and Charles
Holte (d. 1700), John son of William Legard, Vicar
of Tardebigg (Worcs.) (d. 1722), Josiah Foster,
Vicar of Aston (d. 1727), and Mary wife of William
Lloyd (d. 1689).
There are 900 sittings in the church. There were
said to be five bells in 1552 and 1760. A peal of ten
bells, five of 1775–6 and five of 1814, (fn. 39) was recast in
1935, when two new bells were added. (fn. 40) The plate
is modern. The register of burials dates from 1544,
of marriages from 1561, and of baptisms from 1563,
but they are imperfect.
12. The church of ST. PHILIP, Birmingham,
which is now the cathedral church, was built
between 1711 and 1725 under an Act of 1708, and
consecrated in 1715. The site was given by Robert
Phillips, to whose name the dedication alludes. (fn. 41)
There appears to have been some difficulty at first
in raising funds to build the new church. The town
petitioned the Crown that they might use windfall
or dotard trees in Whittlewood Forest (Northants.),
Needwood Forest (Staffs.) or elsewhere to sell for
the purpose; (fn. 42) later they sought the help of Lord
Digby and Lord Dartmouth, and in 1725 George I
gave £600 towards the completion of the church. (fn. 43)
In the same year William Inge wrote to the Speaker
of the House of Commons of his efforts to encourage
the building of the new church. (fn. 44) The Act of 1708
provided for the formation of a parish of St. Philip,
to be taken out of St. Martin's, and for the endowment of a rectory, to which was attached the prebend
of Sawley (Derb.) in Lichfield Cathedral. (fn. 45) The
net annual income of the rectory was £289 13s. 4d.
in 1781, (fn. 46) and £1,762 in 1953. (fn. 47) The advowson
belonged to the Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry
until 1836, when it was transferred to the Bishop of
Worcester. (fn. 48) It was again transferred in 1905, to the
Bishop of Birmingham. (fn. 49) The area of the parish has
undergone several changes since 1708: part of the
parish of St. Jude, Birmingham, was assigned out
of St. Philip's in 1845; the parish of St. Peter,
Birmingham (see below, no. 114), and part of the
parish of Christ Church, Birmingham, were formed
out of St. Philip's in 1847 and 1865, and were again
merged with St. Philip's in 1899 and 1897 respectively; part of what had been Christ Church parish
was transferred to St. Barnabas's, Birmingham, in
1901; and parts of St. Martin's and St. Bartholomew's, Birmingham, were added to St. Philip's in
1900 and 1939 respectively. (fn. 50) St. Philip's has been
the cathedral church of the diocese of Birmingham
since the foundation of the diocese in 1905, (fn. 51) and
the Rector of St. Philip's is also the provost of the
diocese. (fn. 52)
St. Philip's has not shared the worst difficulties
encountered by nearly all the other new churches in
central Birmingham. The parish has always been a
comparatively small one, and despite the fact that
during the 18th century and most of the 19th the
church was largely filled with appropriated pews
accommodation was more nearly adequate there
than elsewhere. The benefice was well endowed,
allowing the rector to pay an additional curate. The
Hon. Grantham Yorke, who became rector in 1844
and was well known for his work for education in
Birmingham, attempted on several occasions to run
mission services, but each time his efforts met with
initial success and subsequent indifference. (fn. 53) Later
in the century the church seems to have suffered
from the change that was overcoming the centre of
the city. In the sixties an effort had to be made to
clear the churchyard of dumped rubbish and the
tombstones of fly-bills. (fn. 54) Unlike most of the other
central churches, St. Philip's did not need to
establish licensed mission rooms at the end of the
19th century. The only places in the parish licensed
for public worship have been the Birmingham and
Midland Eye Hospital (since 1909) and the Townsend Club in Church Street (since 1948). (fn. 55)
The cathedral church of St. Philip stands in the
middle of its churchyard in Colmore Row, on the
highest ground in central Birmingham; after it had
ceased to be used for burials the churchyard became
an ornamental garden. St. Philip's has aroused
favourable comment at all periods and is considered
one of the finest of the small group of Baroque
churches built in England at the beginning of the
18th century. (fn. 56) It was designed by Thomas Archer
whose travels in Italy had given him first-hand
knowledge of the work of the great Baroque
architects. He apparently presented his design in
1709, the main body of the church was completed
in 1715, and the tower in 1725. In plan the building
is rectangular with projections at the east and west
ends formed by the chancel and the tower. Originally it consisted of an aisled nave of six bays and a
shallow apsidal chancel with a central rectangular
recess for the altar. The aisles continued westwards
to form vestibules containing gallery staircases on
each side of the tower. (fn. 57) In 1884, under the direction
of J. A. Chatwin, the chancel was enlarged, both by
adding a bay to its external projection and by
extending it internally to include the easternmost
bay of the nave. At the same time the eastern ends
of the aisles were converted into vestries. The arch
from the nave into the tower was opened up to
provide a baptistery, and the west gallery, which had
carried the organ, was demolished. The original
galleries in the aisles were retained and the organ
was placed over the north vestry. (fn. 58) When the church
became a cathedral in 1905 the interior of the church
was redecorated and the vestries were extended.
The chancel, which includes many of the features
of the original design, has tall round-headed
windows and its side bays are formed by detached
Corinthian columns on high pedestals. On each side
a further western bay opens on to the north and
south vestries. The nave has arcades of five bays
each with fluted square Doric pillars and roundheaded arches, the gallery-fronts being at midheight. The ceiling, beneath a low-pitched timber
roof, is flat and coved down to the cornices. Each
aisle, with which is incorporated an east vestry and a
west lobby, has seven side-bays with round-headed
windows and a doorway at each end. Externally the
bays are divided by pilasters supporting an entablature with triglyphs and an open balustraded
parapet with urns. (fn. 59) The round-headed east and
west doorways are each placed between pilasters
which support a pediment. The lower stage of the
tower, which forms the projecting middle bay of
the west front, has a large round-headed west
window and a curved pediment instead of the
balustrade. The round-headed archway to the nave
has pilasters resembling the arcades of the nave;
the ceiling of the lowest stage is saucer-shaped.
The upper stage of the tower, where the Baroque
influence is particularly noticeable, has concave
sides with large round-headed belfry-lights between
broad diagonal piers faced with twin pilasters; these
support pairs of scrolled consoles which embrace a
short octagonal attic stage, in the cardinal faces of
which are clock-dials. Above is a leaded dome with
an open colonnaded lantern bearing a ball and
weather-vane.
The organ-case was built by Swarbrick in 1715
and some of the original pipe work is incorporated
in the modern instrument. The low chancel-screen
is similar in style to the work of Jean Tijou or of his
pupil Robert Bakewell of Derby. The three east
windows and the west window of the tower were
glazed by William Morris from designs by Sir
Edward Burne-Jones. There are a number of 18thand 19th-century mural monuments in the aisles
and the nave arcades. (fn. 60) There were originally eight
bells. For these a ring of ten by Thomas Lester of
London was substituted in 1750–1. Two bells
were replaced or recast in 1772, a third in 1796, and
a fourth in 1823. (fn. 61) The registers of baptisms,
marriages and burials run without a break from
1715, and the series has been described as 'a
pattern of excellence'. (fn. 62) William Higgs (d. 1733),
the first rector, left to the church a theological
library and £200 for future purchases; such of the
books as are thought useful are now kept at the
Clerical Library in Queen's College Chambers and
at the Birmingham Reference Library.
13. The church of THE ASCENSION, Hall
Green, also called HALL GREEN CHAPEL and
originally known as JOB MARSTON CHAPEL
(see V.C.H. Worcs. iii. 242, 244), became a parish
church when a parish was assigned to it out of
Yardley in 1907. (fn. 63) In 1933 the patronage was transferred from trustees to the Bishop of Birmingham,
who appoints to the benefice on the nomination of
himself, the Vicar of Yardley, and the vice-chairman
of the Hall Green Parochial Church Council. (fn. 64) In
1907 parts of Hall Green parish were transferred to
the parishes of St. Mary, Acock's Green, and St.
John, Sparkhill; and part of the latter was transferred to Hall Green. (fn. 65) The register dates from 1704.
14. The advowson of the vicarage of ST.
EDBURGHA, Yardley (see V.C.H. Worcs. iii.
241–4), was held by J. M. Severne in 1859, (fn. 66) and by
the Revd. J. Dodd from before 1890 until 1897, (fn. 67)
since when it has been in the hands of trustees. (fn. 68)
The following parishes have been formed out of the
ancient parish of Yardley: St. Mary, Acock's Green
(1867), St. Cyprian, Hay Mill (1878), St. John,
Sparkhill (1894), Hall Green (1907), All Saints,
Stechford (1932), St. Michael, South Yardley
(1956), and part of Christ Church, Yardley Wood
(1849). In 1948 further parts of Yardley parish were
transferred to the parish of St. Cyprian, Hay Mills,
and parts of Sheldon were transferred to Yardley. (fn. 69)
Places in the parish licensed for public worship
were: St. Michael, South Yardley; the schoolroom,
Sparkhill, 1862–1907; Hay Mill mission chapel (see
no. 64); Stechford iron church (see no. 24); the
South Yardley mission room, 1910–26; Lea mission
room, 1910–40; and Bishop Lightfoot Church Hall,
1939–55. (fn. 70)
15. The advowson of the church of ST. GILES,
Sheldon (see V.C.H. Warws. iv. 203–5), was held by
S. Wingfield-Digby in 1960. (fn. 71) In 1948 parts of
Sheldon parish were transferred to Yardley, and
part of the parish of St. Margaret, Olton, was transferred to Sheldon. (fn. 72) Sheldon mission church, Tile
Cross, was licensed for public worship from 1924
until the Second World War, Marston Green Mental
Hospital from 1937 until the Second World War,
and Garrett's Green Community Centre from 1956. (fn. 73)
16. The church of ST. LAURENCE, Northfield
(see V.C.H. Worcs. iii. 199–200), was enlarged by
the addition of a north aisle at the end of the 19th
century. (fn. 74) The six old bells were replaced in 1927
by a ring of eight by Taylors of Loughborough. (fn. 75)
A vestry on the north side of the church was
completed in 1960. The following parishes have been
formed out of Northfield parish: St. Mary, Selly
Oak (1862); part of St. Francis, Bournville (1926);
part of St. Gabriel, Weoley Castle (1933); and part
of St. Bartholomew, Allen's Cross (1938). In 1933
part of Northfield was transferred to Bournville, (fn. 76)
and in 1939 the parish was enlarged by the addition
of part of the parish of St. Chad, Rubery (Worcs.). (fn. 77)
Places in the parish licensed for public worship were
the Woodland Park Mission (see no. 69) and the
Shenley Fields Homes, licensed from 1928 until the
Second World War. (fn. 78)
17. Out of the ecclesiastical parish of ST. MARY,
Moseley (see V.C.H. Worcs. iii. 189, 190), the parish
of St. Anne, Moseley (1875), and parts of the parishes of All Saints, King's Heath (1863), the
Ascension, Stirchley (1912), and St. Agnes, Moseley (1914), have been formed. The following places
in the parish were licensed for public worship: a
temporary wooden chapel near the Oxford Road,
1879–97; the chapel of the Society of the Incarnation, in Church Road, 1924–6; the Wake Green
Toc H from 1936 until the Second World War and
again from 1952; the Diocesan Home for Girls (in
the parish of Christ Church, Sparkbrook, until
1951) since 1927; and the Uffculme Open Air School,
Queensbridge Rd., since 1952. (fn. 79)
18. Out of the ecclesiastical parish of ST.
NICOLAS, King's Norton (see V.C.H. Worcs. iii.
187–90), the following parishes have been formed:
St. Mary, Moseley (1853), St. Paul, Balsall Heath
(1853), St. Agnes, Cotteridge (1916); and parts of
the parishes of Christ Church, Yardley Wood
(1849), All Saints, King's Heath (1863), the
Ascension, Stirchley (1912), St. Francis, Bournville
(1926), and St. Mary Magdalen, Hazelwell (1932).
The following places in the parish were licensed for
public worship: Stirchley school chapel, 1863–96;
West Heath mission room since 1900; Longbridge
Mission and Monyhull Mission since 1928; (fn. 80)
Cotteridge Church Room, later consecrated as St.
Agnes from 1898. The old bells in the parish church
have been replaced by a ring of eight cast by
Taylors of Loughborough in 1924, except for the
4th which was cast in 1905. The inscriptions of the
original bells are reproduced on the new bells. (fn. 81)