Bill and Brenda Shepherd – Andreas, Isle of Man
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Mike_bjm
N 54° 21.848 W 004° 26.475
30U E 406356 N 6024993
This bench is sited in the churchyard of St. Andrew, in front of the west gable of the church, in the village of Andreas.
Waymark Code: WMX09E
Location: Isle of Man
Date Posted: 11/07/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member bluesnote
Views: 0

This bench is sited in the churchyard of St. Andrew, in front of the west gable of the church, in the village of Andreas. Multiple vertical wooden slate form the backrest and the wooden slates of the seat run from front to back. The bench has wooden armrests made of the same light wood. The dedication is in black-lettering on a brass-coloured rectangle plate in the centre of the back rest.

The dedication on the bench is as follows:
“IN LOVING MEMORY
OF
BILL and Brenda Shepherd 2009”

The original churchyard lies to the north of the present church but has later extensions to the east and west. All parts of the churchyard are contained within stonewalls.

The extension to the east contains a number of War Graves Commission war graves in addition to some private graves of servicemen who served at RAF Andreas during and immediately after World War II. This part also contains an interesting headstone recording the deaths at sea of William James and James Shimmin see (visit link)
and
(visit link)

St. Andrew’s is part of the Parish of The Northern Plain and is one of six churches in this Parish the others being St. Mary de Ballaugh, Ballaugh Old Church, St. Patrick's In Jurby, St. Jude in St. Judes and St. Stephen in Sulby.

The Church was built in 1802, or possibly 1800, of Manx Stone from Sulby Glen on the site of an ancient Keeill or chapel dedicated to St. Columba; and is claimed to be one of the oldest on the Island. The bell tower was added later in 1869 and was designed by Henry Christian.

The Church was dedicated on 1st November 1821 - All Saints Day.

The Church is now largely Victorian in appearances thanks to substantial additions but there is in fact the shell of a late Georgian building underneath.

An earlier church stood just to north of the present church (on the right as you enter cemetery), its site marked by a slight hillock, though no visible structure remains. There remain faint traces of the circular rhullick that once surrounded this earlier church present churchyard.

There have also been finds in the churchyard dating from the Viking period, including swords and other weapons. Indications of still earlier activity have also been found in the immediate vicinity of the churchyard, in the form of both Neolithic and Bronze Age burials and prehistoric worked flints.

There is a collection of carved at the rear of the church. The more significant of the these are listed below:

Andreas 99 – Gaut’s Cross

Andreas 121 – Sigurd Cross

Andreas 128 – Thorwald’s Cross

Andreas 131 – Sandulf’s Cross

source: (visit link)

source: Churches of Man by Jonathan Kewley (ISBN 978-1-899602-82-7)

source: An Introduction To The Architecture of the Isle of Man by Patricia Tutt (ISBN 978-1-907945-10-6)

source: Archaeological Sites of the Isle of Man up to 1500 by Andrew Johnson & Allison Fox (ISBN 978-0-9554043-5-1).
Where is this bench located?: Churchyard of St. Andrew, in front of the west gable of the church, in the village of Andreas

Who is this bench honoring?: Bill and Brenda Shepherd

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