CHURCHES
The church of ST. PAUL, the
largest in Bedford, consists of a chancel
60 ft. 4 in. long by 23 ft. 5 in. wide,
with north organ-chamber and vestries and a south
chapel 52 ft. 8 in. by 19 ft. 2 in., a central tower
18 ft. 8 in. square, surmounted by a tall spire, north
and south transepts, a nave 77 ft. 11 in. long by
19 ft. 10 in. wide, with north and south aisles of a
like width.
A great deal of rebuilding and alteration has taken
away from the historical interest of the church, but
it is a very fine building, well proportioned and
imposing; and the modern work, which includes the
tower, transepts, north aisle and vestries, has been made
to harmonize with the old. The chancel seems to have
been rebuilt in the 15th century, and the south chapel
is probably of that date; but the nave and south aisle,
and originally the tower and transepts, belong to the
beginning of the 14th century; and the oldest work
now in evidence is the south door of the nave, which
is of the second half of the 13th century. Nearly all
the window tracery in the church is modern.
The chancel has a large modern east window of
six cinquefoiled lights in 15th-century style, and near
the east ends of the north and south walls are restored
14th-century windows of three lights, probably old
work re-used at the rebuilding of the chancel, which
is wider than the tower or the nave.
On the north side of the chancel two modern
arches lead into the organ-chamber, and a 15th-century doorway, with a moulded head dying into
splayed jambs, opens into the vestry; on the south
side a modern arcade of three bays, like that opposite,
leads into the chapel. There is a clearstory with four
windows in the north wall and five on the south, each
of three trefoiled lights; and the roof, in six bays, is a
fine piece of 15th-century work, repaired, with cresting
at the plate level and fourteen wooden figures below
the braces of the tie-beams.
The vestry is in two stages, and is 15th-century
work much repaired; its position accounts for the
blank bay of the clearstory on this side.
The tower, which is rebuilt, stands on four piers,
with hollow-chamfered arches and clustered responds;
it has angle buttresses above the roof of the church, and
an embattled parapet, above which rises a tall stone
spire with three sets of spire lights. There are two
windows on each face of the belfry stage, each of two
trefoiled lights with tracery under pointed heads.
The south chapel has a modern east window of
five cinquefoiled lights under a four-centred head, and
in its north jamb is a 15th-century canopied niche
with a moulded corbel for an image. In the south
wall is a window of three cinquefoiled lights, of which
the sill forms sedilia, and in the east jamb is a 15th-century piscina with two chamfered arches resting on
a detached octagonal shaft having a moulded capital
and base; to the west of this are a similar window,
the tracery of which is now being replaced by one of
a modern design, and two modern windows of three
lights and a modern south doorway. The chapel
roof is restored 15th-century work with moulded
timbers in four bays.
The south transept has a large south window of
five cinquefoiled lights, with tracery under a pointed
head; the arch opening into the chapel is modern, in
15th-century style. The north transept is of the
same character, but has a clearstory window at the
south-east. Both transepts open to the nave with
wide arches of the same detail as the tower arches, and
built at the same time.
The nave has a south arcade of five bays with tall
arches of two hollow chamfers springing from slender
quatrefoil shafts with early 14th-century moulded
capitals and bases; the north arcade is modern and not
quite an exact copy of the south. The west window
of the nave is modern and consists of five cinquefoiled
lights with tracery under a four-centred head; the
nave roof is 15th-century work repaired with moulded
timbers in five bays and wooden figures standing on
the backs of eagles below each tie-beam. Under the
west window is a modern doorway similar to that in
the south aisle, and near it are two rain-water pipes
with heads dated 1671 and 1715.
The south aisle has a 13th-century south doorway
with three moulded orders and two shafts in each jamb,
with moulded capitals and bases. At the west end is
a large window like that in the nave, and in the south
wall are four three-light windows, with modern
tracery of 15th-century style inserted in the older
wall, and having above them a range of five threelight clearstory windows, one of which is blank,
being blocked by the roof of the south porch.
The south porch is of the 15th century in two
stories, and the outer arch is four-centred under a
square head with spandrels ornamented with foliage
in which are a portcullis and a ragged staff on a shield
with a cabled border. There are blocked three-light
windows in the upper story on the east and west sides,
and on the south a like window, flanked by niches
containing figures of St. Paul and St. John the Evangelist. The windows of the lower story are of three
uncusped lights under a square head. The porch has
an embattled parapet, diagonal buttresses, a plinth
panelled with quatrefoils and a stair-turret in the
north-east angle. The ceiling of the lower stage has
moulded beams and carved bosses and is contemporary with the porch.
The north aisle and porch are modern, but the doorway of the porch contains a few 15th-century stones.
The font, which is in the south aisle, has a modern
octagonal bowl resting on a 14th-century octagonal
shaft and having small engaged columns at the angles
and ball flowers and rosettes on the base.
In the north-east corner of the south chapel is a
part of a large stone canopy of 15th-century date,
elaborately panelled, and probably belonging originally to the high altar.
At the west end of this chapel is a screen partly of
15th-century date with open tracery in three bays
on each side of a central doorway. There are some
15th-century stalls in the chancel with carvings on
the arms; they have several old misericorde seats,
mostly badly damaged; one shows the front of a
castle and another has the central part defaced, but
bears a shield each side: (1) a cross engrailed, with
a label of three points; (2) three roundels, with a
similar label.
In the chancel is a fine mural tablet to Thomas
Christie 1697 and his wives Alice and Anne, and
opposite is the monument and effigy of Andrew
Dennys, rector of St. John's, standing in his pulpit;
he died in 1633. In the south chapel is the brass of
Sir William Harpur, Alderman and once Lord Mayor
of London, who died in 1573, and his last wife
Margaret; he was the founder of the Grammar
School and his coat is Azure a fesse between three
eagles or with a fret between two martlets azure on
the fesse. On the walls of the chapel are mural
monuments to Thomas Hawes, 1689, and to Grace
wife of John Elstow, 1699.
Over the south doorway of the church, formerly in
the chapel, is a monument to John Paradine, 1686,
his wife Martha, 1717 and their daughter Capell
1718, with the arms Sable two bars ermine between
three griffons' heads razed sable. There are several
indents of brasses, and under the tower a fine slab
with a 14th-century marginal inscription, 'Muriel
Calt gist issi de sa alme [dieu eyt merci et ki pur]
lealme priera xi jours de pardun avera.'
There are ten bells; a ring of eight by Lester
of Whitechapel (1744), some of which have been
recently recast, and two trebles added by Taylor in
1897.
The plate consists of a silver chalice and paten
dated 1570, a silver plate, 1698, a silver chalice,
1718, two silver-gilt chalices and patens, 1842, a
silver-gilt flagon, 1842, and a silver plate, 1824.
The registers previous to 1813 are in five books
and date from 1565. There is also a collection of
bishops' transcripts for the archdeaconry.
The church of ST. CUTHBERT is cruciform,
built in the 11th-century style on the site of an
earlier church about 1847. The aisles were added
in 1865, and the nave extended westward and an
organ chamber built in 1877. The present vestry
and a second organ chamber were added in 1886 and
the porch to the north transept built.
There is one bell by Taylor & Co., hung in 1900
to replace a smaller one of 1831 by T. Mears.
The plate consists of a small Elizabethan chalice,
a cover paten of 1569—the former is inscribed
'SENTE COUDBERD' and the latter with the date 1570
—a chalice, possibly of 1774, although the date letter
is almost entirely obliterated, and a set consisting of a
chalice, a paten, a salver and a flagon, which were
presented to the parish in commemoration of the
dedication of the new church by Thomas Wooldridge
in 1847; they are all of that date. There are also
a paten of 1896 and a modern plated one.
The registers previous to 1813 are in five volumes:
(1) all entries 1607 to 1737, with a break between
1672 and 1679; (2) the same 1737 to 1802,
marriages stopping at 1753; (3) marriages 1754–94;
(4) marriages 1794 to 1812; (5) baptisms and
burials 1803 to 1812.
The church of ST. PETER DE MERTON
consists of a chancel 23 ft. long by 17 ft. 9 in. wide,
a central tower 16 ft. 9 in. square, nave 63 ft. 6 in.
long by 23 ft. 6 in. wide—the north and south aisles
14 ft. 3 in. wide—the north aisle extending eastward
to form an organ-chamber and vestry—and a west
narthex. The nave has been rebuilt in modern
times, the rich 11th-century south doorway—removed
from the church of St. Peter de Dunstable when it
was demolished in 1545—being retained. This is
in three orders, the inner order being square-edged
with a cheveron ornament, the middle order having a
quirked bowtel with a spiral band on which are small
pellets, and the outer order a plain bowtel; each
jamb has three shafts with scalloped capitals and
diapered abaci, and one of the shafts in each jamb is
worked with cheveron-shaped bands with pellets.
The old nave was much smaller than the modern
one, and though apparently mediaeval formed no part
of the early church to which the tower and present
chancel belong.
These are the west tower and nave of a small
aisleless church, the chancel of which has been
destroyed. They are perhaps of the 10th or 11th
century, built of small limestone rubble without
wrought quoins or window dressings, except in the
belfry windows, which are now for the most part in
modern stone, and the western angles, which have
long and short quoins or the traces of them. There
is a good deal of herring-bone masonry in the tower
walling, but as far as can be seen this does not occur
in the chancel, which has quoins in long and short
work at the north-west and south-west. In its north
wall, near the east end, is a blocked round-headed
window which is probably as old as the wall; it is
double splayed and built in small stones. The east
wall is probably of late date, and contains a modern
three-light window; the old nave has evidently been
shortened and was probably some 10 ft. longer.
In the north wall in addition to the early window
are three others, a 13th-century lancet filled with
fragments of old glass, a plain two-light window of
uncertain date, perhaps 14th-century work, and at
the north-west a plain square low-side window. The
south wall contains a two-light window near the
east end, which is a copy of that opposite, and below
it is a piscina of two trefoiled arches and a pierced
trefoil above, copied from one discovered during the
restoration of the church; further west are a modern
door and a two-light window with new tracery of
15th-century style. The east arch of the tower is
plain 14th-century work in three chamfered orders
with moulded half-octagonal capitals and responds.
The tower has a modern corbel table and embattled
parapet, and belfry windows in modern stonework on
the south-east and west, with round-headed arches
inclosing two sub-arches with a central shaft and early
capital. Below on the north and south are a pair of
plain round-headed windows, all now blocked except
one on the north side, and on the east face is a triangular
headed doorway formerly opening to the roof of the
old nave. One of its stones is a piece of interlaced
carving re-used. The tower arch opening into the
nave is modern, but on the north side—now opening
into the organ chamber—is a roughly cut round-headed
arch of early appearance but doubtful date; it may
have been cut through the wall after building, but
nothing can be certainly said on the point. Nor is
it clear into what it opened. In the south wall is a
two-light window with modern tracery, apparently
an insertion of no great age. On the west wall of
the tower are to be seen the lower stones of the
western angles, and on the north angle several courses
of the upper long and short quoins; those at the south
angle have been taken out.
The font at the west end of the nave is 14th-century work, with an octagonal bowl panelled on each
side and resting on an octagonal panelled shaft and base;
the panels are enriched with well-cut conventional
flowers, and there appear also a cross flory and the
letters I.H.S.
The old glass in the lancet window of the chancel
is stated by Parry (1827) to have been collected from
various places in Bedford; it is of various dates,
15th, 16th and 17th centuries, the later glass being
Flemish.
The ring of six bells was recast in 1894 by Taylor.
The communion plate consists of a cup and cover
paten, the cup having the date letter for 1683, two
modern cups, a flat paten of 1807, a modern paten
and flagon and a Georgian Sheffield-plate flagon.
The registers prior to 1813 are in five books: (1) all
entries 1572 to 1648; (2) 1649 to 1707; (3) 1708
to 1743; (4) 1744 to 1812, marriages ceasing in
1753; and (5) marriages 1754 to 1812.
The church of ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST consists of a long chancel 49 ft. 10 in. by 20 ft. 7 in.,
with a north vestry and an organ chamber, a nave
48 ft. 10 in. by 16 ft. 5 in., and a west tower
11 ft. 11 in. by 10 ft. 5 in.
The building has lost much of its interest through
the work of restorers (fn. 1) during the 19th century. In
1869–70 considerable alterations were made. The
organ chamber was added, and the chancel arch
rebuilt in its somewhat awkward position. The
vestries were built later, and have been twice enlarged, first in 1889 and again only two years ago.
The walls of the church are of rubble with worked
dressings, and are plastered over on the interior. This
fact, together with the work of the restorers, make
the history of the building difficult to trace. Although
the earliest detail is of 14th-century date, the nave is
no doubt that of an earlier building, to which a large
chancel was added about the year 1330, while the
tower was not built until early in the 15th century;
the building stood thus until the alterations of the
last century already referred to.
The east window is modern and of three lancets,
set within the jambs of an earlier window, which can
be seen on the inside. In the north wall of the
chancel, just to the east of the rebuilt chancel arch, is
a modern pointed doorway opening into the vestry,
while beyond the arch is a blocked 14th-century
doorway.
During the restoration of 1869 a fine 14th-century
piscina and three sedilia were brought to light in the
east end of the south wall of the chancel. The sedilia
are separated from one another and from the piscina
by small attached shafts with moulded capitals and
bases supporting trefoiled ogee arches, the whole
under a horizontal moulded label dropping vertically
at either end, on the east to a carved head stop
immediately above the capital of the east respond to
the piscina, and on the west and over each shaft to
the capitals themselves. Cut in the spandrels between
the arches and the hood moulds in quite an irregular
manner are a number of small trefoils. The piscina
basin is circular, and has been restored on the front,
as also are the bases to the four westernmost shafts
and part of the upper portion of the sedilia. The
seats of the sedilia are about 18 in. lower than the
piscina basin. Over the sedilia is a modern two-light
window, the sill of which appears to be original 14th-century work. To the west of the cross arch are two
modern lancets, the westernmost set within a wider
blocked window, whose jambs only are visible inside.
The original chancel arch is pointed and of two
orders; the angles of the inner one are wave moulded,
while the outer one consists of a splay and hollow
chamfer. The responds are shafted and have moulded
capitals and bases. In its present position, the arch
not being the full width of the chancel, small openings have been cut through the modern walls on
either side to allow passage along the north and
south. The modern inserted arch between the
chancel and nave is pointed and springs off corbels.
Modern buttresses have been built along the north
and south walls of the church, while at the south-east
corner of the chancel is an original but restored
diagonal one in two stages, and a similar one is built
at right angles to and at the north end of the east
wall. A modern string course runs round the inside
of the chancel at varying levels, but the external string
is apparently in the main original.
The nave is lighted by six modern lancets, three in
each wall. Between the two westernmost lights on
the south can be seen on the outside the east jamb of
an original window. Under the west window in the
same wall is what appears to be the line of an original
door jamb.
The tower stands on a panelled but much restored
base, and is divided externally by string courses into
three stages and crowned by an embattled parapet,
most of which is apparently modern. On the south-east corner is a stair-turret, containing a vice having
solid oak treads, entered from the inside through a
doorway which still has its original door, and on the
western angles are five-stage diagonal buttresses which
stop at the level of the bell chamber floor; buttresses
of the same description, only built at right angles to
the respective north and south walls, strengthen the
north-east corner of the tower and the south-east
corner of the stair turret. The tower arch is two-centred and of two orders; the outer with ogee angles
is continuous, but the inner, which is chamfered, is
carried by semi-octagonal responds having moulded
capitals and bases, now restored.
The west doorway, which is four-centred within a
square head, has also been completely restored. Over
it, lighting a gallery dividing the ground stage of the
tower internally into two, is a 15th-century pointed
window of three cinquefoiled lights with a vertical
traceried head under a moulded hood-mould.
Below the string course marking the ringing chamber,
on the west front, is a small modern panel carved with
the Paschal Lamb, while above the string is a niche
containing the modern figure of St. John. The
ringing stage is lighted from the north and south
by small four-centred lights; the bell chamber from
each side by a window of two cinquefoiled lights with
a quatrefoil under a pointed head, having a moulded
label. At the corners of the string below the parapet
are grotesque heads.
The pulpit is modern, but part of the font is
apparently of 13th-century date. The bowl stands
on a central circular stem and four small shafts, one
at each angle. The central stem is original, as are
all the moulded bases, though the step on which they
stand is quite modern.
On the floor of the chancel is an inscription to
Paul Faldo, rector of the church and master of the
Hospital, who died in his fifty-first year, 12 April
1714, cut on an old slab having the matrices for
a head and shoulder brass, an inscription and a
cross paty. By the side of the slab are two others,
one to Edward Bourne, another rector of the parish
and master of the Hospital, who died 28 June 1713;
the other to his wife Susanna daughter of John and
Mary Robins of Buckingham, who died 25 September
1698, aged fifty-nine.
There is one bell by T. Mears, 1827.
The plate consists of a chalice and cover paten,
inscribed 'FOR THE PARISHE OF S. IOHN THE BAPTIST IN
BEDFORD 1726'; a paten of 1726 inscribed 'THE
PARISH OF ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST IN BEDFORD 1726,' and
a modern flagon.
The registers previous to 1813 are in four volumes:
(1) all entries 1669 to 1719; (2) 1720 to 1789,
marriages stopping at 1754; (3) marriages 1755 to
1812; (4) baptisms and burials 1790 to 1812.
The church of ST. MARY consists of a chancel
37 ft. 3 in. by 21 ft. 6 in., a vestry and organ
chamber to the north of the chancel, a central tower
12 ft. by 13 ft. 2 in., north transept 13 ft. 8 in. by
12 ft. 6 in., south transept 12 ft. 3 in. by 12 ft. 9 in.,
nave 61 ft. by 20 ft. 8 in., north aisle 10 ft. 8 in.
wide, and south aisle 9 ft. 3 in. wide.
The earliest details belong to a fine cruciform
church of 12th-century date, consisting of chancel,
central tower, transepts and an aisleless nave of the
normal length of 60 ft.; the tower and south
transept are still fairly perfect, and masonry of the
same date remains in the north transept and nave.
The great irregularity in the plan of the tower and
transepts, and the fact that the former is narrower
than the nave, suggest that this work, early as it is, is
not the first on the site, and that the tower is probably set out over the lines of an earlier chancel,
round which, after a common form of enlargement,
transepts and a chancel have at the same time been
added. The west wall of the south transept is in
the same line as that of the tower, set obliquely to
the axis of the nave, instead of being at right angles
to it, and the east wall of the transept seems to have
been set out parallel to its west wall. The east wall
of the tower, however, is very nearly at right angles
to the axis of the nave, so that the tower is wider on
the south than on the north. The chancel was
rebuilt in the 14th century outside the lines of the
older chancel, and it seems that a north chapel,
narrower than at present, was added at the same
time. There is no evidence of any enlargement of
the nave until the north aisle was added in the early
part of the 16th century, and the south aisle is
modern. Nearly all the old work is obscured by
19th-century alterations, and the entire church,
except the chancel, has been plastered and whitewashed internally. The chancel has been much
repaired and its walls stripped of plaster; the east
window is modern, consisting of five cinquefoiled
lights set within the jambs of a 14th-century window.
Beneath it is a modern reredos of carved stonework.
The south wall is divided into three bays by buttresses,
in each of which is a three-light window of 14th-century style, the tracery being modern but the jambs
and heads in part of 14th-century date. Beneath the
western of these three windows are a trefoiled lowside window, its inner jambs being probably of 14th-century date, and a doorway of which the stonework
is all modern. The sill of the south-east window is
carried down to form two sedilia, with the bowl of a
piscina, the canopy of which has been cut away, to
the east of them. In the north wall is a like window
till lately blocked up; a modern credence was set in
its blocking. The large organ chamber to the north
of the chancel has been rebuilt with old rubble
walling, and has in its north wall a window of two
lights, the inner label of which seems to be re-used
14th-century work belonging to the same time as
that of the chancel. The four arches under the
tower have been mutilated and plastered; they are
now of a single order with plain round arches, but
may have had an inner order originally. The west
arch has an ugly modern label with an attempt at
dog-tooth ornament and a modern chamfered string
at the springing. Over the east face of the east arch
is a small modern lancet with a carved label, and in
spite of the modern pointing which disfigures the
chancel the bonding lines of the early chancel walls are
plainly traceable. The north transept has been much
altered and its east wall is entirely modern. Its north
wall, which is probably in part original, is plastered
externally and gabled, but was probably once as high
as the south transept. In it is inserted a new squareheaded window of three lights with plain threecentred heads. On the west side is a two-centred
drop arch into the north aisle. The south transept
retains its original proportions, being very tall for its
width, and has heavy ashlar angle dressings and
rubble walling, a good deal of which is set in herringbone fashion. It has a modern south window of
three cinquefoiled lights of 15th-century style, and
high in the east wall an original round-headed window,
quite plain, and now blocked with masonry. Below
it to the north is the south jamb of what seems to be
a 13th-century lancet, its north jamb being overlapped by the present chancel wall. There is also
on the east wall an external staircase, the only
approach to the tower, leading through a modern
door to a door in the south wall of the tower. The
nave arcades are in four bays and much modernized;
the arches are of two moulded orders separated by a
hollow, springing from slender piers, consisting of
four shafts attached to a square with the angles
chamfered off, each shaft having a semi-octagonal
moulded capital and base. The north arcade is of
16th-century date, and the south is a modern copy
of it. The east bay of the latter has a half arch only
butting against a deep east respond, which is part of
the south wall of the aisleless nave, and was perhaps
left to support the tower. The north aisle has plain
square-headed and uncusped four-light windows and
a north doorway, the inner arch of which is in two
orders, facing inwards, with a square head and carved
spandrels, inclosing shields bearing a heart and crossed
keys. The west end of the nave is embattled with
crocketed pinnacles and gargoyles at the angles and
square buttresses in three stages between it and the
aisles. The wall probably contains 12th-century work,
but has been refaced. The west window has been
rebuilt and consists of three cinquefoiled lights with
moulded jambs and tracery of 15th-century style
under a four-centred head. Under it is the west
doorway with similar jamb-moulds, the inner order
of which has a four-centred head and the outer a
square; in the spandrels is carved foliage with plain
shields; on each side is a square buttress. The south
aisle is modern, built of ashlar walling, terminating in
an embattled parapet, like the north aisle; it is divided
into four bays by buttresses, in each of which is a
square-headed window of four cinquefoiled lights. In
the west end of each aisle is a window of three lights
like the window of the north transept. The central
tower is a very interesting piece of early masonry
in rubble walling with heavy ashlar quoins. No
herring-bone masonry is visible. It is of four stages,
the second stage being hidden by the roofs, and has
lost its original finish, now ending with an embattled parapet having crocketed pinnacles and
gargoyles at the angles of 15th-century date. The
walls have a marked batter, and the top stage seems
to have had two or perhaps three small plain roundheaded windows on each face. The middle window,
if such there were, on each face has been destroyed
by the insertion of a two-light 15th-century window.
The third stage is architecturally the most important,
with wide round-headed openings on each face
inclosing two smaller openings, whose arches spring
from a central shaft and shafted responds. The
capitals are of plain cushion type, with tau crosses or
Greek crosses on the vertical faces; the capitals of
the responds are much weathered, but have in one
case at least a spiral volute. The tower walls set
back at the springing line of these openings so that
the face of the main arch is some inches behind that
of its jambs. There is a modern wood screen across
the west end of the nave forming a western lobby
and supporting a gallery. At the west end of the
nave is a modern painted octagonal font with
traceried panels. In the chancel are three 17th-century chairs in oak, with the date 1652 on one of
them, and in the vestry is a 17th-century altar table.
To the south of the altar table in the chancel are two
13th-century coffin lids set in the floor, and there is
one on the north side. On the south wall are
brasses to Dr. Giles Thorne, formerly rector and chaplain to Charles II and Archdeacon of Buckingham,
1671, and to his wife, 1663. Her brass is in the
style of the early part of the century, with badly
engraved kneeling figures of herself and three
daughters, surmounted by a shield bearing on a
cheveron three lions' heads razed. Above is a small
brass plate with a Latin inscription to William
Thorne, who died in infancy in 1640. On the east
wall of the organ chamber is an alabaster and black
marble monument to Bridget wife of John Barbor,
1660, on the south wall a monument to Mary
Lysons, 1682, and William Farrell. A large modern
altar tomb to Francis Greene stands here, and on the
north wall of the nave is a marble slab to John
Beaumont, 1698.

Plan of St. Mary's Church, Bedford
There are six bells: the treble by J. Eayre of
St. Neots, 1748; the second by Richard Chandler,
1682; and the third by Newcombe of Leicester,
1604. The fourth bears six shields, with no inscription or date. The fifth is by Richard Chandler,
1682, and the tenor, of 1609, is an alphabet bell by
Hugh Watts.
The plate consists of a communion cup of 1569,
with the inscription 'The Paryshe of Saynt Maryes
in Bedford, J. C. T. W., 1570,' a cover paten of
1721, and a standing paten of 1684 inscribed 'Ex
Dono Oliveri St. John Armigeri 1685.'
The registers previous to 1813 are in ten books:
(1) all entries 1541 to 1636, the first two years of this
are now missing, but are included in a published
volume; (2) 1558 to 1645; (3) 1653 to 1698;
(4) 1699 to 1720; (5) 1720 to 1757; (6) marriages (printed) 1754 to 1802; (7) the same, 1802
to 1812; (8) baptisms and burials 1757 to 1789;
(9) the same, 1790 to 1812; (10) baptisms and
burials (stamped) 1790 to 1794.