Church of the Ascension, Malvern Link

Church in Worcestershire, United Kingdom
52°07′41″N 2°19′52″W / 52.127969°N 2.331116°W / 52.127969; -2.331116LocationMalvern Link, WorcestershireCountryUnited KingdomDenominationAnglicanWebsitemlwc.churchHistoryFounder(s)Louisa Vavasour LivingstoneDedicated3 October 1903 (1903-10-03)Consecrated4 October 1989 (1989-10-04)ArchitectureFunctional statusActiveHeritage designationGrade II Listed[1]Designated20 June 1991 (1991-06-20)[1]Architect(s)Walter Tapper[1]StyleEarly EnglishYears built1902 to 1903AdministrationDioceseWorcesterArchdeaconryWorcesterDeaneryMalvernParishMalvern Link with CowleighClergyVicar(s)As of 22 April 2018[update], The Rev. Phillip Johnson

The first completed work by the renowned architect Sir Walter Tapper, this is a Grade II listed church in the parish of Malvern Link and Cowleigh. The church was the gift of Louisa Vavasour Livingstone in memory of her husband Arthur Guinness Livingstone, the former Archdeacon of Sudbury.[1] The foundation stone was laid on 19 December 1902, and dedicated by Bishop Charles Gore of Worcester on 3 October 1903.[2]

As the church was paid for entirely by Mrs Livingstone, the parish used funds allocated to a planned Mission Hall for Newtown to instead build the hall adjacent to the Church.[2]

The grounds have not been consecrated for burial.[2]

Exterior

The design is in the Early English style with lancet windows, and features a stone relief of the Ascension by Harry Hems[1] on the tower. Twelve yew trees line a path to the main South door. There is no other external decoration. The nave roof is of Cumberland slate and the stonework is from Guiting quarry in the Cotswolds.[2]

The tower contained two bells until the sixties, when they were sold to raise money for electrical work.[2]

Interior

The high altar is of stone, a feature of the influence of the Oxford Movement, with a triptych hanging above it, which is closed during Lent.[2] The saints portrayed on the triptych are connected with the life and work of Arthur Livingston: St Patrick (Irish ancestry); St Frideswide (depicted with Christchurch, Oxford, where Livingstone was educated); Hugh of Lincoln; The Venerable Bede, as Livingston was Canon of Durham; St Ethelreda of Ely and St Edmund of East Anglia, due to Livingstone's connection with Sudbury.[2] This is the work of Sister Catherine Ruth of the All Saints' Community, Margaret St., London.[3]

The chancel screen, the font cover and the cross and candlesticks on the altar are the work of George Bainbridge Reynolds, while the rood is the work of an unknown artist from Oberammergau.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Historic England. "Church of the Ascension, Malvern Link (Grade II) (1349465)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Smith, Rev. David S. M. (2003). The Church of the Ascension: A History and Guide (4th ed.). The Warden and District Church Council of the Church of the Ascension.
  3. ^ Sir Charles Nicholson; Charles Spooner. Recent English Ecclesiastical Architecture. Caxton House, Westminster, London: Technical Journals Ltd. pp. 122–126.
  • Official Site
  • Historic England
  • Church of England
Church of the Ascension, Malvern Link
  • Relief sculpture of the Ascension by Farmer & Brindley, London.
    Relief sculpture of the Ascension by Farmer & Brindley, London. [1]
  • Main door and entrance path
    Main door and entrance path
  • Exterior Eastern view
    Exterior Eastern view
  • Exterior Western view
    Exterior Western view
  • High Altar
    High Altar
  • Interior Eastern view
    Interior Eastern view
  • Interior Western view
    Interior Western view


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  1. ^ Sir Charles Nicholson; Charles Spooner. Recent English Ecclesiastical Architecture. Caxton House, Westminster, London: Technical Journals Ltd. pp. 122–126.