Bell Tower - St Petrock - Exeter, Devon
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 50° 43.368 W 003° 31.937
30U E 462428 N 5619134
Bell tower of St Petrock's church, Exeter, with a ring of 6 bells.
Waymark Code: WM15V69
Location: South West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 02/28/2022
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member pmaupin
Views: 0

Bell tower of St Petrock's church, Exeter, with a ring of 6 bells.

Ring of 6, tenor 5–0–0 in B
Bells 6 (full-circle ring)
Tenor 5–0–0 (560 lb or 254 kg) in B (964.5 Hz)
Overhauled
1987 by Arthur Fidler
Peals View 20 peals in the Felstead Database
Also Ground floor ringing chamber
Bell Weight Nominal Note Diameter Dated Founder Canons Turning
1 2–2–0 1618.0 G♯ 22.63" 1742† Abel Rudhall Y  
2 2–1–26 1440.5 F♯ 22.75" 1693† John Stadler Y  
3 2–3–8 1285.0 E 24.63" c1460† John Danyell Y  
4 4–0–0 1213.5 D♯ 26.88" 1677† Thomas III Pennington Y  
5 3–3–24 1083.0 C♯ 27.88" 1683† Thomas III Pennington Y  
6 5–0–0 964.5 B 30.38" c1610† (unidentified) Y  
Other bells
Bells
Bell Weight Nominal Note Diameter Dated Founder Canons Turning
Unused 8–2–3 1130.0 C♯ 32.88" 1740† Thomas Lester Y  
Details of frames
Frame Bells Year Material Maker Truss Layout
2 1878 Oak Harry Stokes 6.A  
1 1878 Oak Harry Stokes 6.A 5.3

SOURCE - (Visit Link)

The early medieval church was built in the northwest corner of the cathedral precinct, which was used until the 17th-century as the town cemetery.  Aligned west to east along the High Street, this seems to have been a straightforward building consisting of merely western tower, nave and chancel (these are the parts that are open today).

"The north wall fronting the High Street has a lofty wall with a three bay nave and west tower. The lower part of the nave has a north west entrance under an ogee hood. East of this are two blind semi-circular arches. The clerestory has three, three bay clerestory windows with renewed panel tracery in the side windows and flowing tracery in the central one. Above the clerestory is an embattled parapet. The tower is unbuttressed and has no windows in its square portion. The north wall bears a stone tablet recording the opening to view of the building during street-widening in 1905. The top of the tower has broaches which turn the structure octagonal: this has single, square-headed traceried windows and is topped by an embattled limestone parapet. Behind this is a small louvred turret of 1736.

The interior is now divided into two parts. The north part, what was probably the original church with tower, nave and chancel, remains in religious use with its original orientation and is divided off from the rest by a timber and glass screen. There is an arch (filled in by a glass screen of 1985 by the Harrison Sutton Partnership) between the nave and chancel with a moulded head and responds: large angel busts, holding shields, form the capitals. The details of this arch and its capitals are repeated in the piers to the arcades and to the pier supporting the south west angle of the tower: this unusual pier and arch design is derived from work at the cathedral but the angels would seem to be of the 1820s scheme.

Within the tower is a notable relief of the Last Judgment by John Weston of Exeter: a fragment of a larger (signed) monument formerly in the demolished church of St Kerrian, Exeter, it is one of a number of such panels carved by Weston.

The structural history of the church is both unusual and complex and led Nikolaus Pevsner to memorably describe it as `among the most confusing of any church in the whole of England.' Originally aligned east-west along the High Street it originally probably consisted of a tower, nave and chancel (the last now an interdenominational chapel). When enlargement was needed the cramped site meant that this was only possible on the south. Extensions took place from the early 15th century to the late 19th."

SOURCE - (Visit Link)

Address of Tower:
St Petrock's
10 Cathedral Yard
Exeter, Devon England
EX1 1HJ


Still Operational: yes

Number of bells in tower?: 6

Relevant website?: [Web Link]

Rate tower: Not listed

Tours or visits allowed in tower?: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Please post an original picture of the tower taken while you were there. Please also record how you came to be at this tower and any other interesting information you learned about it while there.
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