
St Peter de Merton Churchyard - De Parys Avenue, Bedford, UK
N 52° 08.364 W 000° 27.994
30U E 673366 N 5779569
St Peter de Merton is a church in Bedford. It is located on the east side of De Parys Avenue and to the north of St Peter's Green. The current church was built in the 14th and 15th centuries. The main part of the cemetery is south of the church.
Waymark Code: WMQKRW
Location: Eastern England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 02/29/2016
Views: 1
The churchyard does not appear to be used these days but it is well maintained with some interesting headstones. The St Peter de Merton blog tells us:
Some notable tombstones
St. Peter’s Green was part of the old churchyard, and there were bones lying under every part of it. There were some interesting graves – those of Viscount De Vismes, one of a family of refugees from the horrors of the French Revolution; Monsieur Dupont the first Frenchman to teach French at Bedford Grammar School at the beginning of the last century; and Dr. Hook, for many years Head Master of the Grammar School, who died in 1811. In addition to his headmastership, he held two village livings, but he evidently was not a very good head master, for when he died he left four boys at the School. In S. Peter’s Churchyard was also buried Dr. Thackeray, whose name should be long remembered in Bedford history. No man ever had such a public funeral as his, in 1832. He was physician and surgeon of Bedford Infirmary, of which he was a great benefactor, and he died from attending people through a very violent outbreak of cholera. John Wesley preached underneath S. Peter’s Church tower, and the green recalled the riotous election scenes at the hustings.
The church of St Peter de Merton is Grade I listed with the entry at the Historic England website briefly telling us:
Mainly C14 and C15, restored. Rubble and ashlar, old and machine tile roofs. Norman tower and South doorway. Fine octagonal C14 font.
Wikipedia has an article about St Peter de Merton church that tells us:
The Parish Church of St Peter de Merton with St Cuthbert is an Anglican church on St Peter's Street in the De Parys area of Bedford, Bedfordshire, England.
The site has been used for Christian worship for more than a millennium. Although the current church is not that old and ruins of the earliest churches—probably build of wood—are no longer present, it does still house architectural artifacts among the oldest in Bedford. At one time, appointments within the church were made by the Augustinian Canons who had founded Merton Priory in Surrey. Their connection persists in the name 'de Merton' even though the English Crown took over patronage of St Peter after the Dissolution of the Monasteries of the 16th century.
The rubble and cement tower of the church was constructed in Saxon times, as was an arch and a doorway which are set in the belfry's east wall. Notable Norman work in the church building includes an exterior doorway arch (originally from another Bedford Church) in the south porch. The chancel's font, priest's door and windows were added in the 13th and 14th centuries. A reproduction of an original fenestella from this time was added in the south wall of the sanctuary in the 19th century.
As well as the 19th century additions to St Peter's previously mentioned, the church was enlarged at this time, and restoration work was undertaken. Additions included the vestry, aisles and west porch, as well as an extension to the nave. Work to the building in the 20th century included the paintings on the east wall, the tower ceiling decoration, the construction of the chapter house and the Burma Star stained glass window. Following the closure of the neighbouring parish church of St. Cuthberts in 1974, St. Peter's was also dedicated to Cuthbert of Lindisfarne.
St Peter's Church is a busy and active Anglican Parish in the heart of Bedford. The church is part of the Bedford Council of Faiths, and has many links to other churches and community groups. The church has strong links in particular with Bedford School located near to the church.
Church services are held every Sunday at 8.00am, 10.15am and 6.30pm. The church is open on Tuesday mornings, with a Midday Prayer service at 12 noon. Holy Communion is celebrated on Thursday at 10.30am. A coffee shop is open at the church on Saturdays from 10.30am for an hour.
The blog of St Peter de Merton has an extensive article about the church's history.