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6. Our Churches
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6.1 St Mary's
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6.1.1 The Nave
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The Nave has a west wall and half of the south wall of 12
th century date; the doorway is of that date and above it is a 15
th century window, with modified
Perpendicular tracery, filled with glass given by Charles Egerton Legge in 1880
in memory of his father, Henry, and his brother, William Douglas. The font is
19th century and replaces a 12
th century square basin which rested on five
shafts. Nearby, in a glass case are three flutes
and a pitch-pipe; one flute,
made by Bland & Weller, was played by William Mitchell (1805-1859), the leader
of the church band and choir; another (also by a London maker whose name is
indistinct) is said to have been played by Thomas Wackford in 1824 (he was
born in 1807); a third flute, by Whitaker & Co. Of London, 1821, belonged to
Arthur J. Bridle; the pitch- pipe was the property of William Mitchell. In the
south wall of the nave are
two windows; the westernmost was inserted in 1671,
the other in the 19th century and contains glass in memory of
Rachel Mary
Theobald (1870- 1959). On this south wall are the following memorials,
reading from west to east:-
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Stone tablet
to the 27 men of this parish who were killed in the 1914-
1919 war [see list here].
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Stone tablet to Col. Edgar Thomas Inkson
, VC, DSO, churchwarden for
13 years; d. 19 Feb 1947.
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Stone tablet
, with the badge of the
Royal Sussex Regiment, to William
Edward Sydney, son of Rowland and Maude Paget, killed in action in
Eritrea, 8 April 1941.
The centre aisle of the nave is paved with floor slabs which, reading from east to
west, are memorials to:-
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John Compton, gent., son of Richard and Joan, d. 26 August 1781, aged
75; Ann, his sister, d. 4 Nov. 1788, aged 63; Edward, gent., brother of
John and Ann, d. 7 Nov 1788, aged 71.
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John Compton, d. 30 March 1719, aged 81.
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Ann, wife of John Compton
, d. 1 [rest gone] and Thomas Compton
[buried 8 July 1737].
Between slabs 1 and 2 is a
nail driven into the crevice; the story of this is that
'a
drunken atheist one night boasted that he was going into the church, and there
loudly proclaim his disbelief, driving a nail into the floor as evidence of his feat.
He was found dead there the next morning, having driven the point through his
smock, and thus unable to rise from his knees'. The man obviously died from
fright.
The arcade separating the nave from the north aisle retains one
13th century
circular column between the second and third bays.
'The first and forth bays
reproduce the design of the ancient responds, and were pierced in the 19
th
century through what was formerly a solid wall east and west of the arcade'; the
pointed arches are of two orders. Above the easternmost arch hangs a carved
and painted example of the Royal Arms as used between 1603 (accession of
James I) and 1688 (end of the reign of James II), except for the period of the
Commonwealth; they were also probably used from 1702 (death of William III)
until 1707 when the arrangement of Royal Arms was altered as a consequence
of the Union with Scotland.
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