Parish Of St. Mary - La Grève de Lecq, Jersey, Channel Islands
Posted by: dtrebilc
N 49° 14.741 W 002° 11.981
30U E 558248 N 5455075
The Coat of Arms of the Parish of St. Mary are on the base of this wayside cross is one of 12 erected to celebrate the Millennium on the island of Jersey.
Waymark Code: WMM2TA
Location: Jersey
Date Posted: 07/10/2014
Views: 2
Each of the 12 parishes that make up the island of Jersey had a similar wayside cross erected for the millennium.
The La Société Jersiaise
website has the following information about the crosses.
"The 12 crosses were erected in each of the Island's parishes as a gift from the States. The project is one of those sponsored by the Millennium Fund to mark 2,000 years of Christianity.
It is believed that wayside crosses were once abundant throughout the Island, until they were all but destroyed during the Reformation. Little evidence now remains of them.
The design selected is based on the cross which now stands at Elizabeth Castle, which was erected there in 1959 to mark the site of the Abbey of St Helier. It is believed to be an excellent reproduction of a medieval wayside cross.
The proposed design, which features a slender granite cross atop a solid granite base, including an octagonal supporting collar, will be around 8-ft high. The inscription of the date and the appropriate parish crest on the base of the crosses is at the discretion of the individual parishes."
This cross is situated in the Parish of St. Mary at Grève de Lecq.
The plinth on which the cross stands has the parish coat of arms of a fleur de lis on a shield. Underneath the arms are the words
A.D. 2000
ST. MARY
The Parish of St. Mary
This parish is situated in the north west of the island and covers an area of 3,604 vergées (6.5 km²).
It has the smallest population of all the parishes in Jersey, having only 1,752 residents in 2011.