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St Martin's Church, Lincoln

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Location
  
Lincoln, Lincolnshire

Denomination
  
Church of England

Years built
  
1740

Architectural style
  
Georgian architecture

Country
  
England

Consecrated
  
9th-10th Century

Year built
  
1740

Diocese
  
Diocese of Lincoln

St Martin's Church, Lincoln httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

St Martin’s Church was among the oldest churches in the city of Lincoln, England. It has been suggested that during the Saxon Period and during the Danelaw, St. Martin was considered to be the patron saint of Lincoln. The church is likely to have been associated with the rare St. Martin silver pennies minted in Lincoln, probably before 918 A.D, when Lincoln was taken back from the Danes by the Saxons.

Contents

History

The church stood at the top of Lincoln High Street in the downhill area of Lincoln, before the land rises steeply to ‘‘uphill’’ Lincoln, which is dominated by Lincoln Cathedral. In the Medieval period the area around St Martin’s church was the commercial centre of Lincoln and it stood very close to the Norman Jew's House and Jews Court. The church was largely destroyed in the English Civil War in 1643 and left as a ruin until 1739-40 when it was rebuilt in a Georgian style. This is the church that was recorded by the artist Samuel Hieronymus Grimm around 1784. About 1812 a new aisle was added to the church by the Lincoln architect William Hayward. Then in 1873 it was suggested that whole of the church should be demolished to make way for a larger church. Due to the intervention of the Mayor of Lincoln, the tower, which was a prominent landmark on the Lincoln skyline was saved until it was demolished in about 1930. Much of the decorative stonework from the demolished church was used in the new church of St Andrew in Canwick road which was built in 1876-7, but this church was demolished in 1970

St Martin’s Church was rebuilt in 1873 in West Parade at the corner with Orchard Street by the architect A S Beckett. An application was made to demolish the replacement church in 1966 and after a legal hearing the building was demolished in 1970.

Today, only the graveyard, which lies between St Martin’s Lane and Garmston Street remains. The graveyard has been paved with some of the grave-slabs from the old church.

Church Silver

Surviving objects from the church included the communion plate which consisted of three communion cups silver with paten covers and two silver flagons. One of these cups with a paten cover made by an unknown maker with initial 'A' and hallmarked in London in 1569, is now on display in the Lincoln Cathedral Treasury.

Monument to Sir Thomas Grantham

The Grantham family were an important and long established family in the parish, who occupied the prebendal house of St Martin's on the High Street. The family monuments were in

the north aisle of the chancel of the church. Of these monuments, one was a particularly fine Renaissance monument to Sir Thomas Grantham ( died 1630) and his first wife Frances (Puckering)(died 1610). Sir Thomas was an M.P for Lincoln and Lincolnshire.This monument is now in the church of St Mary le Wigford, Lincoln. The tomb, which now lacks its canopy, is made from alabaster sourced from Nottingham, and is likely to be the work of the noted sculptor Maximilian Colt The tomb has had a very chequered history. When Edward James Willson visited the church in 1807 he found the canopy had fallen and broken the faces of the recumbent figures. It was later moved into the church tower In 1889 a Mr Justice Grantham, who claimed to be a descendent, removed the tomb without permission to Barcombe in Sussex. The remaining fragments of the effigies were reclaimed and placed in St Benedict's Church Lincoln, where in 1956 Sir Francis Hill says that the mutilated fragments lay after unseemly neglect and ill-usage.

Sometime before 1985 the tomb chest and fragments were reassembled in St Mary -le Wigford and this was recorded by the Church Monuments Society. However, subsequenty more of the figures have re-appeared including the lion on which Sir Thomas rests his feet, and the figures have been re-arranged.

Grave slab in St Martin’s Churchyard to the Rev Francis Harvey and John Harvey.

Amongst the grave slabs now used as paving in St Martin’s Churchyard is a very fine memorial slab to the Rev Francis Harvey who died aged 29 years in 1711 and John Harvey who died in 1758. The grave slab is carved in cameo lettering on a black marble slab with the family coat of arms above. There are two very similarly carved black marble slabs, the source of which is yet to be identified, in the east end of the chancel of Lincoln Cathedral. These distinctive grave slabs were presumably produced in a local workshop. Details of Francis Harvey are given in Alumni Cantabrigienses. He was the son of Francis Harvey of Lincoln and went to school at Newark. He became a fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge in 1708.

The St Martin of Lincoln silver Penny

These very rare silver coins were minted in Lincoln shortly before the end of Danish rule in Lincoln. The obverse of the coin has a sword and is crudely lettered Sancti Marti and on the reverse is a cross and is lettered Civit Lincolia, for Lincoln. It has been argued that at this time St Martin was the patron saint of Lincoln and that these coins were minted in the vicinity of St Martin's church, the main commercial centre of Lincoln then. Currently about 14 examples of these coins are known and one from the Sir Francis Hill collection is in the Usher Gallery. A particularly fine specimen of a St. Martin penny was found in the Vale of York Hoard in 2006.

Literature

  • Antram N (revised), Pevsner N & Harris J, (1989), The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, Yale University Press.
  • Pevsner N & Harris J, (1964), The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, Penguin. pg.144.
  • Stewart I. (1967) The St Martin Coins of Lincoln British Numismatic Journal, Vol.36, pp46–54. [4]
  • Venables E. (1875-6) The Destroyed churches of St Paul and St Martin in the City of Lincoln. Associated Architectural Society Reports and Papers, Vol.13, pp. 208–216.
  • References

    St Martin's Church, Lincoln Wikipedia