Church of St Nicholas - Bellcote - Nicholaston, Gower, Wales.
N 51° 34.503 W 004° 08.884
30U E 420441 N 5714400
Nicholaston Church, dedicated to St. Nicholas - A 14th Century medieval church, rebuilt in 1894, with the addition of an ornamental Bellcote, with a single Bell. Located on the Gower Peninsula, South Wales.
Waymark Code: WMTHG8
Location: South Wales, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 11/26/2016
Views: 1
Nicholaston Church, dedicated to St. Nicholas, was said to have been rebuilt on its present site, stone by stone from an even earlier church that had become besanded near Nicholaston Woods. Of this 14th century church very little remains, however, save for a few foundation walls and slabs of an original medieval cross, preserved in the church porch.
"The church was largely rebuilt in the closing decade of the 19th Century at the sole expense of Miss Olive Talbot. Prior to this Victorian rebuilding, the church was very much an ordinary affair and Miss Talbot, wanting the church to be a memorial to her father - C.R.M. Talbot, of Penrice Castle, let the full swing of Victorian design transform the church into what was later described as a little "jewel box" of a building. The resplendent new church of St. Nicholas reopened in December 1894, just weeks after the unfortunate benefactor, Miss Talbot's, death.
Nicholaston Church stands strangely aloof from its parish, on the seaward side of the A4118 South Gower Road. The church offers no parking spaces (only small lay bys some distance from the church, allow any such facilities). The fabric of the building is believed to have been constructed from stone from Cefn Bryn. Overlooking the Bristol Channel , in a niche over the porch, stands a fine statue of St. Nicholas. Other interesting features of the church include its single bell, which dates from 1518 (but was re-tuned at the time of the church's Victorian rebuilding) and the font which is a carved from a mighty slab of stalagmite.
The best time to view the church is around the time of its Sunday morning service which is held at 11.15 am as it is usually locked for security reasons at other times of the week, however, visitors can request an accompanied viewing." Text Source: (
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"The church of St Nicholas at Nicholaston does not appear in documentary records until 1558 It is set by itself in a small quadrangular churchyard and has never apparently been in a nucleated village. The original structure is thought to have been built in the thirteenth century. It was replaced by the present structure, built in 1892-94 to the design of the architect George Halliday in Gothic Revival style. It features intricate and distinctive carving and craftsmanship in stone and other materials. Of the earlier building the stones of the chancel arch and one roof truss in the chancel are the principal items retained in Halliday's design, which was commissioned by Miss Olive Talbot of Penrice" Text Source: (
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