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HER Number (PRN):00607
Name:Former Church of St Michael, Upton Cressett
Type of Record:Building
Protected Status:Listed Building (I) 1367566: FORMER CHURCH OF ST MICHAEL, UPTON CRESSETT

Monument Type(s):

  • PARISH CHURCH (12th century to Mid 19th century - 1100 AD to 1858 AD)

Summary

A now redundant church, dedicated to St Michael, the nave and chancel dating from the C12, with an early-C13 south chapel and C14/C15 timber south porch; restored in 1858. It is protected by Grade I Listing. In the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.

Parish:Upton Cressett, Bridgnorth, Shropshire
Map Sheet:SO69SE
Grid Reference:SO 6559 9245

Related records

00947Related to: Upton Cressett deserted medieval settlement (Monument)
00608Related to: Upton Cressett Hall (Building)
04581Related to: Upton Cressett Moat and Fishponds (Monument)

Associated Finds: None recorded

Associated Events

  • ESA4772 - 2000 WB on Drainage Works at the Church of St Michael, Upton Cressett by Marches Archaeology (Ref: MUC00A)
  • ESA593 - 1960 field observation by the Ordnance Survey
  • ESA594 - 1979 field observation by the Ordnance Survey
  • ESA8442 - 2014 DBA and landscape assessment of wind turbines at Criddon Hall Farm, Upton Cressett by The Landscape Partnership (Ref: 13/01983/FUL)

Description

Small C12 fabric with late medieval timber porch and bellcote. South chapel C19. Formerly north aisle to nave of which the blocked C13 arcade survives. Good C12 chancel arch with three orders of shafts. Deconsecrated and suffering from neglect <2>
Referred under the Pastoral Measure, 1968. In that year a wall painting was rediscovered on the west wall of the south chapel. <7>

The Church of St., Michael has been declared redundant and is now in the care of the Redundant Churches Commission. It has been given a complete overhaul, including considerable work to the bellcote, which has been completely re-leaded, the ‘bells removed and hung at a lower level, where they can now be seen. The fine Norman font, which had been taken elsewhere has been returned to its original home. In the chapel there is considerable evidence of medieval wall painting and it is hoped that during the year that this will be dealt with by an expert in these matters. <8>

Evaluated for MPP in 1990-1, High score as one of 20 Parish Churches <11>

A watching brief was undertaken on remedial drainage works at the Church of St Michael, Upton Cressett in 2000. This revealed an earlier ground surface, of possible medieval date. The foundation trench of the nave was also uncovered, as was part of the foundations of the nave and south chapel. The insertion of drains in the 18th-20th centuries had caused extensive disturbance. <12>

List Grade Amended from II to I, List Description Amended 30/10/2102. <14>

New List Description:
History
The Church of St Michael dates from the C12, though it may be on the site of an earlier, Saxon church as there are indications that some of the fabric may be re-used from this period. The church is first mentioned in sources in 1291, but stylistically must date from the C12. The settlement of Upton Cressett dates back to the Saxon period, and the church, together with the adjacent Upton Cressett Hall (C14 and later), was once part of a medieval settlement which survives as earthworks in fields to the south-east. The settlement was known as Ultone in the Domesday Book; a name which comes from the Anglo-Saxon word 'Upton' meaning 'higher settlement'. In 1165, Upton formed part of the Barony of Fitz Alan, being held for some generations by the descendants of Alan de Upton. The Cressetts first appear as Lords of Upton towards the close of the C14, when the family succeeded to Upton and gave their name to the place. The present Upton Cressett Hall dates from this period and later, and was constructed on a medieval moated site set above the church, which must have been the site of the earlier manor house. The life of the medieval settlement is largely undocumented and although its date of desertion is unknown this may have come shortly before, or have been a consequence of, emparkment. Upton Cressett Park is first mentioned in 1517 in Wolsey's Inquisition of Enclosures when it was alleged that Thomas Cressett had emparked 40 acres of arable land; it is possible that the village was abandoned when the deer park was created. The nave and chancel date from the C12, and in the early C13, a chapel was added to the south of the chancel. Although this chapel has long been known as the Cressett Chapel, it clearly pre-dates the tenure of the Cressett family, and thus must originally have been built for the de Upton family. It is unusual for a chapel of this size to be attached to the chancel at this early date, but this is likely to be explained by the importance of the family at the Hall. In the same period, a north aisle was added to the nave, though it was subsequently demolished. Some alterations to the chapel were made in the post-medieval period: a watercolour painting of the church by the Reverend E Williams dated August 1789 shows that the doorway and window openings were all square-headed at this date, the windows glazed with small panes. The building underwent Victorian 'restoration' in 1858, with repairs made in pink sandstone, and alterations to some of the windows, most obviously those in the chapel, as well as the replacement of its roof.
Along with Upton Cressett Hall and Gatehouse, the church became largely disused in the C20, and suffered from neglect and decay; it was closed in 1959 due to its dangerous condition, and formally declared redundant in 1970, the same year in which it was listed at Grade II. A wall painting in the Cressett chapel was rediscovered in 1968. The church was vested in the Redundant Churches Fund (now The Churches Conservation Trust) in 1972, and much repair work was undertaken at this date.
Details
MATERIALS: the church is built from local sandstone rubble with ashlar dressings, and the roofs are covered in plain clay tile; the bellcote is weatherboarded and surmounted by a spirelet clad in lead. The C19 work can be distinguished from the earlier phases by the use of a pink sandstone for the restoration, which contrasts with the pale buff sandstone of the earlier work.
PLAN: the building is orientated east-west, and has a nave and slightly narrower chancel. A chapel runs parallel to the south wall of the chancel; the south porch is set towards the western end of the south elevation of the nave.
EXTERIOR: the nave and chancel are C12 in date, possibly re-using some Saxon material. The south side of the nave has a Norman doorway flanked by round-arched windows remodelled in Early English style. The doorway has two orders of shafts with a variety of naïve foliage designs to the capitals, and two orders of chevrons carved on the round arch, which has an unrelieved tympanum. One of the shafts to the right-hand side has been lost. The wide door is of plank and batten construction, with decorative nail studding. Towards the western end of the roof the bell turret is set on the ridge; its sides are weatherboarded, and the short spirelet is clad in lead worked in a lozenge pattern. The doorway is partly obscured by the C14/C15 timber-framed and gabled porch, which is formed from jowled uprights, tie beams and raking struts, with arch braces meeting a central cusp. The roof has purlins and short windbraces. The south chapel and chancel form a double pile at the eastern end of the building. The early-C13 chapel has a narrow entrance doorway with trefoil head dating from the C19 restoration of the church, with paired trefoil-headed lancets to the right of the same date. The chapel has a steeply-pitched roof with high, coped verges. The east end has a lancet of the C19, with a quatrefoil window above. The east end of the chancel has a Norman window remodelled as a lancet in the C13. The north side of the chancel has a single round-arched lancet. The north side of the nave shows clearly the arches of the two-bay arcade of the since-demolished C13 north aisle. A window of paired lancets is set within each archway. The west end has a single round-arched lancet window of the C12. This window and several of the others have diamond-leaded panes; another has rectangular panes with coloured margin glazing.
INTERIOR: the interior space is dominated by the Norman chancel arch, which has three orders of shafts with foliate and geometric carving to the capitals, and three orders of chevron carving to the arch. A pointed-arched recess to the right may mark the site of a stair to a former rood loft, or might be associated with an earlier pulpit. The windows are deeply splayed. The west end of the nave has three massive jowled posts with arch-bracing supporting the bell-frame, which houses two bells, one of circa 1300, the other of 1701 by Abraham Rudhall of Gloucester. The place of the fourth post is taken by the blocked arcade to the north wall, from the demolished C13 north aisle. The arcade is expressed internally by the central, circular pier with a shallow, circular capital and double-chamfered arches with polygonal responds, and some foliate carving to the capitals. The main roof truss to the nave has tie beam, principal rafters, collar and a central post rising from the tie beam to the collar, with raking struts to either side; the remainder of the nave roof is of collar-rafter construction with ashlar pieces, and cusped, curved windbraces. The floors are covered in terracotta tile, some with slip decoration. The chancel has a raised dais and wrought-iron and timber altar-rail of C19 date. There is a plain square aumbry in the south wall. The roof of the chancel is of simple A-frame construction apparently dating from the C19 restoration. High in the south wall the remnants of a former window are evident. The remainder of the south wall of the chancel has been largely removed in the creation of a wide arched opening with a very shallow arch, almost four-centred, with beaded moulding to the edges, giving access into the early-C13 south (Cressett) chapel. The chapel has terracotta-tiled floor, and a hammer-beam roof of slender scantling dating from the C19.
WALL PAINTING: the Cressett chapel has a painting on its west wall dating from circa 1200. The subjects include an angel, an enthroned king, and a broad band of foliate scrollwork in reddish-brown tones. The style of the scrollwork is identical to that in the wall paintings at nearby Claverley, and it is to be supposed that they are by the same hand.
FURNISHINGS: the font is Norman, and tub-shaped. There is cable moulding to the top rim and to the base, and the exterior is carved with tall, round-arched arcading. The pulpit, which has timber panels on a polygonal stone base, dates from the C17 and has carved arcading and foliate motifs in carved lozenges.
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Selected Sources
Book Reference - Author: Pevsner, N and Newman, J - Title: The Buildings of England: Shropshire - Date: 2006 - Page References: 668
Website Reference - Author: H. Thornhill Timmins - Title: Nooks and Corners of Shropshire, 1899 - Date: 15 May 2012 - URL: http://www.melocki.org.uk/nooks/Nooks.html
Book Reference - Author: Cash, W, revised Pike, A - Title: St Michael's Church, Upton Cressett, Shropshire (Churches Conservation Trust pamphlet) - Date: 2001
Other Reference - Description: Record photographs of the church and wall paintings, 1966 and 1983, from English Heritage Archives
Article Reference - Author: Bear, R - Title: Upton Cressett: Hall, Gatehouse and Church - Date: 1972 <14>
EH Assessment Report issued October 2012. <15>

Photograph taken on 21st November 2015. <16>

Shropshire Archives hold a watercolour of the Church of St Michael, Upton Cressett (Reference 6001/372/1/107), by Reverend Edward Williams, dated to 1789. A small-scale thumbnail can be found via their online catalogue: https://www.shropshirearchives.org.uk/collections/getrecord/CCA_X6001_19_372A_107 <17>

Sources

[00]SSA20722 - Card index: Shropshire County Council SMR. Site and Monuments Record (SMR) cards. SMR record cards. SMR Card for PRN SA 00607.
[01]SSA2390 - Card index: Ordnance Survey. 1979. Ordnance Survey Record Card SO69SE7. Ordnance Survey record cards. SO69SE7.
[02]SSA599 - List of Buildings: Department of the Environment (DoE). 1974-Feb-01. 4th List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest. Vol 823-0. List volume. p236.
[03]SSA2391 - Photograph: Ordnance Survey. Xerox of Photo,part of OSRC SO69SE7. Black and white.
[04]SSA1810 - Monograph: Cranage D H S. 1900. An Architectural Account of the Churches of Shropshire Vol 4. Vol 4. p370-373.
[05]SSA110 - Monograph: Pevsner Nikolaus. 1958. Buildings of England (Shropshire). Buildings of England. p306.
[06]SSA872 - Monograph: Forrest H E. 1914/15. The Old Houses of Wenlock. p72.
[07]SSA2388 - TEXT: Council for the Care of Churches. 1968. Upton Cresset, St Michael, Salop (Diocese of Hereford) Two page Report.
[08]SSA2394 - Article in serial: Beard R. 1972. Upton Cresset: Hall, Gatehouse and Church. Shropshire Newsl. No 42. 6-7.
[09]SSA10552 - Monograph: Moran Madge. 1982. Notes for the Vernacular Architecture Group Conference, Shropshire.
[10]SSA2392 - Photograph: Burrow Ian. 1976. Pastoral Measure Notice inside Church, Upton Cresset. Colour. 35mm.
[11]SSA20084 - TEXT: Horton Wendy B. 1990/ 1991. MPP Evaluation File.
[12]SSA20776 - Watching brief report: Wainwright Jo. 2000. The Church of St Michael, Upton Cressett: a report on an archaeological watching brief. Marches Archaeology Series. 150.
[13]SSA23518 - Monograph: Newman J & Pevsner N. 2006. Buildings of England: Shropshire. Buildings of England. P668.
[14]SSA599 - List of Buildings: Department of the Environment (DoE). 1974-Feb-01. 4th List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest. Vol 823-0. List volume. p 236 120th Amendment (From II to I, Description) 30/10/2012.
[15]SSA24146 - Advisory designation documentation: English Heritage. Oct-2012. Notification Report - Advice Report - 01 October 2012 - Former Church of St Michael - Case Number 470698.
[16]SSA27226 - HER comment: Haynes J B. 2014 onwards. Comments by J B Haynes, HER Compiler.
[17]SSA2272 - Painting: Williams E Rev. 1785-1823. Watercolours of Shropshire churches, chapels etc.. Watercolour. https://www.shropshirearchives.org.uk/collections/getrecord/CCA_X6001_19_372A_107.
Date Last Edited:May 7 2020 9:51AM