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St Nicholas Church

Church Events
Church Information
Address:
Parish Church of St Nicholas,
Dane Hill Road ,
Kennett,
Newmarket,
Suffolk
Information about diocese,
The Three Rivers Group of
parishes is part of the Deanery of Fordham and Quy and the Diocese of Ely.
The Group comprises the
parishes of:
- Chippenham - St Margaret
- Fordham - St Peter & St Mary Magdelene
- Kennett - St Nicholas
- Isleham - St Andrew
- Snailwell - St Peter
Each parish has its own
Parochial Church Council (PCC), looks after its own finances and has its own
style of worship.
The ministry team
comprises:
- The Rev'd Mike Banyard, Rector
, E-Mail:- banyardmg1@yahoo.co.uk
- The Rev'd Kate Peacock, Associate
Priest, E Mail:- kate.peacock@btopenworld.com
- The Rev'd Dr. Jenny Cage, Curate.
- The Rev'd Canon Tim Elbourne, Associate Priest
- The Rev'd Sandie Barton, Associate Priest
- Mrs Helen Banyard, Licensed Lay Minister
For more information about the Three Rivers Group of Parishes and the Ely
Diocese click on the following link:-
http://www.threerivers.org.uk
Church Key Holder
7 The Close,
Kennett,
Nr. Newmarket
Suffolk
Tel: 01638 751064
Kennett Church
Contacts
Role
Tel.
Mary Deary Churchwarden 01638 751064
Rev'd Mike Banyard
PCC chairman
Mrs Betty
Lomas PCC secretary
01638 661971
Rev'd Mike
Banyard Temporary PCC treasurer
01638 750989
Mary Deary Deanery synod rep 01638 751064
Stephen Taylor
Choirmaster
Stephen Taylor
Organist
Sunday School
Tower captain
Andrew Stephens
Webmaster
01638-780229
St. Nicholas Kennett Church Services
Once a month at
3~:30pm. Please see notice board in Church Lane for exact details when.
Monday every week. Evening Prayer at 3.30
in Kennett School during Term Time and at Mrs Deary's home every other week.
Phone Mary on 01638 751064
for further details.
Forthcoming Marriages
xxxxxx
Christenings
xxxxxx
St Nicholas Church, Kennett, listed building description
Parish: Kennett
Grade: IIs Listed Description:
Small parish church with an original early C13 nave, north aisle, and chancel
extended later in C13 by one bay with three very fine windows and double piscina.
The tower appears to be late C13 or early C14, and to have been completed
later in C14. The north doorway is transitional in style and noteworthy. The
north porch, chancel arch and screen, and tower arch are C15. The roofs are
modern and were possibly rebuilt after wartime bomb damage. Walls of flint and
rubble originally plastered, with limestone and clunch dressings, clunch arcade,
piscina and openings. Graded slate gable roofs with modern stone parapets and
kneelers.
West tower and angle buttresses of four stages; embattled parapet, shallow
plinth. Sealed belfry lights to west facade, two centred west doorway arch of
two chamfered orders, second stage three light window in two centred arch with
intersecting mullions; belfry window of two, cinquefoil lights with a quatrefoil
in two centred arch.
North elevation: north porch has partly resorted C15 moulded arch. North
doorway with round headed arch and label terminating at moulded imposts has two
slender detached ringed shafts with water leaf capitals and moulded bases. North
aisle, unbuttressed, with long and short stone quoins, similar to rear wall of
tower and with original flint courses has three lancet windows, one a modern
replacement.
Chancel, with original C13 flint coursing has a straight joint where it was
extended later in C13. The lancet sanctuary windows, all partly restored, have
detached shafts with deeply moulded bell capitals and bases, those in the east
window have shafts with rings. The north window has two lancet lights, the south
window three, and the east window three lights with a common label and head
stops. The late C13 double piscina with foiled drains has two deeply moulded two
centre arches with trefoiled inner arches, divided by detached shafts with
deeply moulded caps and bases. Label has finely carved foliate stops and central
boss.
North arcade of three bays and one bay terminating in wall of tower has two
centred, steeply pitched arches of two chamfered orders with labels; octagonal
piers with plain capitals and bases. C15 tower arch and chancel arch, two
centred with two chamfered orders, moulded capitals and bases and semi octagonal
piers. The screen, contemporary with the chancel arch is carved on both sides,
the central arch a blind ogee with rosettes in the spandrels was once painted.
The font, early C14 square limestone with chamfered corners stands on single
shaft with moulded capital and base and square plinth. Stained glass windows,
C19, by A Gibbs, 38 Bedford Street, London.
Additional Information:
Formerly listed grade A: , as Church of St
Nicholas, List No 17/1.
Grade amended and address amended at Date Listed: 01/12/51
Grid Reference: TL 69986835 Easting:
5699800 Northing:
2683500
Church History

In 1256 Kennett had a church, whose advowson remained in the hands of the lords
of the manor throughout the Middle Ages. In 1557 John Willoughby, held the
right of presentation, which was exercised by successive lords of the Petre
family in the late 16th century. In 1643 John Chenery presented Oliver
Bryant, suggesting that the Petre family had sold that turn, but in 1696 the
lord of the manor, Sir Samuel Barnardiston, presented. The advowson remained
attached to the lordship during the 18th, 19th, and early 20th centuries, but in
1751 the bishop presented by lapse. In 1958 the advowson was not sold with the
lordship to Mr. G. Lofts, although he believed that he had the right to choose
the rector. In the late 20th century the patronage was held by the heirs of Mrs.
Sickles, who lived in Philadelphia (U.S.A.). Proposals to unite the
benefice with the neighbouring living at Chippenham in 1929 came to nothing,
owing to the opposition of Kennett's squire. The living was nevertheless
thereafter held in plurality with neighbouring livings in Suffolk and
Cambridgeshire, and since 1974 was held with neighbouring Fordham, whose vicar
was in charge at Kennett in 1997.
The living remained an unappropriated rectory during the Middle Ages. In 1279
the rector had 30 a. of glebe. During the 17th and early 18th centuries
the 35 a. of glebe was divided between the three fields in 24 blocks of 1/2-2 a.
Under the inclosure award of 1823 the rector was allotted 31¾ a. His main
portion, 29 a. of arable, lay south of the church. The new rectory house
was built on that land in the early 1830s, reducing the arable to 28 a. In
1912 a plan to sell the glebe to the lord was rejected, but 3/4 a. was sold in
1925 at the insistence of the rector. In 1947 the remaining glebe was sold,
except for 3/4 a. reserved as the site for a new rectory house, but finally sold
in 1967.

In 1254 the rectory was valued at £8, and the rector received another 5s.
from land in neighbouring Elveden (Suff.). In 1291 it was taxed at £12,
and in 1535 valued at £11 10s. 8d. In the late 13th century
the lord of the manor paid part of his tithe in kind with corn, and calves.
About 1650, when the tithes were often taken by composition, the rectory yielded
c. £60 a year, and was worth no more in the early 18th century.
In the 1830s the gross income of the living was £135 a year, its net income
£116. In 1837 the rector was awarded a rent charge of £200 in lieu of his
tithes: in 1851 his gross income was £223, comprising £200 from commuted tithes,
and £23 from the glebe rent. By 1887 the worth of the living had declined
to £180 gross, and in 1928 the glebe rent had fallen to only £5. In 1929 the
rector's request for an augmentation was rejected, but in 1931 he was given an
additional £13 a year.
There was a parsonage house in 1279. In 1674 it had 4 hearths, and in
1712 a barn and stable yard were attached to it. The rectory house, which
may have stood north-east of the parish church beside the old village street,
was dilapidated and probably demolished in the late 1840s. William
Godfrey, however, reported ample accommodation in 1851. In 1897 a new
rectory was built opposite the church at the southern end of the village street.
Between 1901 and 1929 it was occupied by successive rectors. In 1937 the
drainage was improved, and a modern bathroom installed. That house,
however, was too large to maintain, and in 1947 it was sold off, remaining in
private ownership thereafter.
In the 14th century Kennett was held successively by six rectors, one serving
for 33 years. There was a rapid succession of six rectors between 1439 and
1465, but John King served from 1465 until 1509. In the 16th century the parish
was served by eight rectors: James Slater was deprived in 1555 for simony. His
successor remained in office until 1580. In the early 17th century successive
rectors held the living in plurality with neighbouring parishes in Suffolk.
In the late 17th and early 18th centuries John Fairclough (d. 1696) and his son
Richard (d. 1751) served in succession, effectively acting as squires. The
living was held by John Bullen, 1756-75, and by his son Thomas, 1810-13, in
plurality with livings in Suffolk, while Anthony Richardson was rector during
the intervening years. In 1806 he preached at Kennett on every Sunday.
George Mingay, who took over as vicar in 1813, also conducted services c.
1813-20 in Chippenham and Wicken for their absentee incumbents. After 1827,
following his appointment as chaplain to the duke of Rutland and rector of
Wistow (Hunts.), he was probably rarely at Kennett, resigning in 1833.
His successor, William Godfrey (d. 1900), was a popular incumbent, respected
and admired by the parishioners. He paid for the restoration of the parish
church in 1859, and brought numerous benefits to the village. Problems,
however, arose after his death as a result of confusion between glebe and
manorial land. His successor resigned in 1912 to take over the
neighbouring living at Chippenham. Ernest Wooton served Kennett until he
resigned in 1929 because of old age, under pressure from the patron and his
ecclesiastical superiors. Wooton also served Kentford, assisted by a
curate, and sought to improve the value of Kennett.
Between 1603 and 1676 the number of communicants increased from 50 to 63.
The number receiving communion was c. 20-25 in the early 19th century,
but in 1873 had risen to 46, before falling back to c. 23-25 c.
1885-97. Communion was celebrated four times a year in 1806 and 1820, in
1813 only three times a year, and in 1873 there was only one celebration a year.
There was one service every Sunday during the early 19th century, and by 1851
two morning services and an evening one. Both in 1851 and in 1897, although
there were no dissenters, about a third of the adult parishioners did not
regularly attend church.

The parish church, named for ST. NICHOLAS by 1279, stood next to the main
village street until c. 1865-73. After the diversion of the road
eastwards it was approached by a hedge-lined avenue. Its design has been
described as 'a miniature Ely cathedral', with its 15th-century west tower
dominating the church and the surrounding landscape.
 The church, built of
flint and rubble, also includes a chancel and an aisled nave with north porch.
The nave and north porch date from the late 12th and early 13th centuries, and
the chancel from the 13th century. The lancet windows at the east end date from
the late 12th century or early 13th. In the nave there are 14th-century arcades
of four bays, with octagonal piers and double chamfered arches, and a
14th-century rood screen and font. The double piscina dates from the 13th
century, and has flowered drains and grape clusters carved at the ends of the
moulded arches. In 1859 the church was thoroughly restored at the rector's
expense, and in 1866 his sister paid for new stained glass. The church
plate and oak altar are mid 19th-century. There are memorials to Sarah Chenery
(d. 1607), and to Oliver Godfrey (d. 1817) and his son William (d. 1843) and
grandson William (d. 1900), set on the south wall of the chancel and in the west
wall of the nave. There are three bells, one of which dates from the 13th
century. An organ, built by the students of Soham village college in the
1960s, is placed on the north wall of the chancel. The rector J. C. F. Hood left
£250 for the maintenance of the church in 1957. A new burial ground of 8,100 sq.
ft. was laid out beyond the churchyard walls in 1985. In 1996 masonry bees ate
into the church walls and damaged the flints.
The small rhyme commemorates Sara Chenerye, who died in 1607 at the age of
25, during childbirth. Two more limina, I thought: the mightiest of all.

[The inscription says : here lyeth Sara Chenerye interd, that may (for
bewtye) iustly be preferd, but more for splendor of hir vertuous minde, so faire
beyonde dame naturs beautye shinde this vertuous, beauteous, chast, and loving
wife in blome of yeares, in childbed lost hir life. Obiit Anno Domini 1607
aetatis sua 25.]
In Remembrance
KENNETT - Roll of Honour
This memorial is a
plaque inside the St. Nicholas Church.
|
1914 - 1918 |
Harry BARBER |
Royal Fusiliers. Acting Corporal, 36318, 11th Battalion. Killed in
action Tuesday, 23rd October 1917 in France & Flanders. Age 20.
Enlisted Newmarket, resident Kennett. Son of George and Harriett
Barber, of Barrow Green, Barrow, Bury St. Edmund's. Commemorated on
TYNE COT MEMORIAL, Zonnebeke, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Panel 28 to
30 and 162 to 162A and 163A |
Ernest Thomas BULLETT |
Coldstream Guards Pte. 5th Reserve Bt., d 10/2/1915, age 23, wounded
at La Bassee and died at Newcastle Hospital. Buried: KENNETT (ST.
NICHOLAS) CHURCHYARD, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom. Son of Walter
and Eliza Maria Bullett, of Station Yard, Kennett. Born Kentford,
Suffolk, enlisted Walthamstow, Essex, resident Kennett. |
Arthur Edward HARDING |
R.H.A. Drv. 20th Trench Mortar Bty., Royal Field Artillery, died of
wounds 5/10/1916, age 26, buried: GROVE TOWN CEMETERY, MEAULTE,
Somme, France. Son of Charles and Sarah Ann Harding, of Hall
Cottages, Kennett, Newmarket, Cambs. Born Newmarket, enlisted
Consett, Durham. |
Benjamin LAWRENCE |
East Kent Reg. 6th Bt. (From gravestone - Gassed 14/3/1916 at
Halluch, France, d 2/3/1917 (N.B. 1917 on gravestone, 1919 CWGC - as
he does not appear in the SDGW 1919 would seem more appropriate),
age 22 at Kennett). Buried in Kennett Churchyard. |
William MOSS |
R.N. probably:
William Moss, Boy 1st Class J/22017 H.M.S. "Bulwark.", Royal Navy
who died on Thursday, 26th November 1914. Age 17. Son of William and
Ann Moss, of Little Livermere, Suffolk. Commemorated on PORTSMOUTH
NAVAL MEMORIAL, Hampshire. Panel 3. |
Albert Edward TIMMINS |
Grenadier Guards 3rd Bt., d 8/10/1915, commemorated: LOOS MEMORIAL,
Pas de Calais, France. Son of Edward and Martha Elizabeth Timmins.
Born Flanhamlock, Brecon, enlisted Bury St. Edmund's. |
|
1939 - 1945 |
Roy Ernest NEWMAN |
Sgt. 202 Sqdn. R.A.F.V.R., d 4/8/1943, age 22, commemorated:
RUNNYMEDE MEMORIAL, Surrey, United Kingdom. Son of Herbert William
and Annie Newman, of Kennett, Cambridgeshire. |
Charles Alexander SORE |
Spr. 705 Army Troops Coy., Royal Engineers, d 26/9/1944, age 43,
buried: TILLY-SUR-SEULLES WAR CEMETERY, Calvados, France. Son of
Henry and Minnie Sore; husband of Mabel Gladys Sore, of Kennett,
Cambridgeshire. |
[Frederick] Walter Ollis STREET-PORTER |
F/O, 114 Sqdn. R.A.F.V.R., d 14/1/1942, commemorated: RUNNYMEDE
MEMORIAL, Surrey, United Kingdom. |
Kenneth Reginald TURNER |
Possibly: Flt. Sgt. 55 Sqdn.,
R.A.F., d 7/4/1944, age 21, buried: ASSISI WAR CEMETERY, Italy. Son
of Reginald Ernest Willie and Elizabeth Mary Turner. |
|