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St John the Baptist
New Alresford
On the 17th of August, 1898 the
reconstructed Church of St. John the Baptist was reconsecrated by
the Bishop of Winchester and reopened for divine worship.
Extensive rebuilding under the direction of Sir Arthur Blomfield,
the eminent Victorian church architect and Diocesan architect to
Winchester Cathedral, was now complete. This beautiful building
stands today as a tribute to his skills and expertise, providing New Alresford with a church worthy of its heritage.
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| interior looking
towards the Altar |
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| One of the
memorials |
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Interior
looking back |
History
The Liberty of Alresford or Alresforda', which comprised the
parishes of Old Alresford, New Alresford and Medstead, was
probably granted by Cynegils (King of the West Saxons from 611 to
643 AD) to the Bishop of Winchester upon his baptism and
admission into the Christian faith. The boundaries confirmed in
subsequent Anglo Saxon charters are identical to the parish
boundaries existing today. In the Liberty the Mother Church of St.
Mary the Virgin was established at Old Alresford with chapelries
of St. John the Baptist at New Alresford and St. Andrew at
Medstead. The Bishop of Winchester remained Chief Lord of the
Liberty until its transfer to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners in
the mid-nineteenth century.
This Church, serving the community on the south side of the
Alresford Marsh and dedicated to St. John the Baptist, was built
on the high knoll almost due south of the mother church on the
opposite bank. People of Alresford have worshipped continuously
on this hallowed ground for over twelve hundred years. Reference
to the Domesday Book of 1086 confirms the establishment of the
Church and states under the
"Land of the Bishop of Winchester
- In Fawley Hundred - Wakelin Bishop of Winchester holds
Alresford in Lordship. It is and always was in the Bishopric",
and it included "3 Churches at £4".
At the beginning of the thirteenth century Godfrey de Lucy,
Bishop of Winchester, enlarged the fishpond supplying his palace
at Bishops Sutton by constructing the Great Weir at Alresford. He
then replanned New Alresford in the pattern existing today, thus
expanding another market for trade and commerce in his vast
estates throughout Wessex. This market established some 120
families each having a town dwelling together with strips of arable land in the Common Fields together
with a seat or pew in the parish church. As in other market towns
and communities Bishop de Lucy would have modernised or rebuilt
the Church of St. John the Baptist, and some fragments preserved
today can be attributed to this period. The construction of the
Great Weir also caused the trade route between Winchester and
Southampton to London to run through New Alresford, rather than Old Alresford, and the
market prospered.
To assist the curate in charge of the chapelry in New Alresford
the Brotherhood or Fraternity of Jesus was formed. It was endowed
with property in the town supported with parcels of land in the
Common Fields "Towardes the fyndynge of a priest called the
brotherhood priest to the intent that he should synge within the
parishe church of New Alresford as well as for the ayde and help
of the curate as also for the ease of the inhabitants there for
that before the foundation of the said Brotherhood they had no
pryste but only a curate." Following the fate of the
monastic foundations, this Brotherhood was suppressed in the
reign of Edward VI and its possessions became the property of the
Crown, but were returned to Alresford by Queen Elizabeth some
forty years later.
As did many towns, over the years Alresford suffered the ravages
of a number of fires. During the seventeenth century four serious
outbreaks are recorded, the most disastrous occurring in 1689.
"On the first of May about nine o'clock
in the morning, fire broke out in The Soke, the season being dry
and a north east wind blowing hard, so that in about three hours
were burnt down and consumed to the ground the dwelling houses of
a hundred and seventeen families including the Market House and
also the Church, the damage by the oaths of the sufferers
amounted to the sum of £24,500 and upwards."
A Royal Brief excited compassion throughout
the whole kingdom and some two-thirds of the total cost was
subscribed.
Basically the Church consisted of a three aisled, Hampshire barn
roofed structure having north and south entrances, a western
tower and an eastern chancel. The timber roofs were covered with
local reed thatching. Window openings, doorways and arches had
typical twelfth-,thirteenth- and fourteenth-century
embellishments and mouldings, fragments of which have survived and are displayed in the glazed
cabinet in the church.
Records and photographs concerning the rebuilt church in 1689 are
available and give an accurate picture of the building prior to
the reconstruction by Sir Arthur Blomfield in 1898. In these we
find that the western tower and perimeter walls of the body of
the Church had been saved and, with a new tile covered roof and
smaller chancel, divine worship was resumed within four years. With the addition, at
successive times, of west, north and south galleries, then a
north chancel aisle chapel followed by a western vestry, two more
centuries were to pass before major structural works again became
necessary.
However, the year 1851 was of great significance to New Alresford
and the Church of St. John the Baptist. It was in this, the first
year of the incumbency of George Sumner (.later to become Bishop
of Guildford and whose wife, Mary Sumner, established the
organization of the Mothers Union), that the parish was separated
from Old Alresford and became a distinct ecclesiastical benefice
with William Brodie inducted as the first Rector of New Alresford. This gave great impetus to the Church
and within the next few years many improvements in furnishings
and fittings were performed by local craftsmen, and all by
voluntary subscriptions. But by 1895 much major repair work again
became necessary and the Parochial Council sought the help and
advice of the Diocesan architect, Sir Arthur Blomfield.
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| Some of the
graves of French Napoleonic War Prisoners in the Churchyard |

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