297:, Canon Bob got the developers to allocate a site to Stoke Church for community use. It was a pond, near Bourne Park. After the land drainage specialists and pile drivers had done their bit, it was the turn of the Hon. Jill Ganzoni, who laid the dedication foundation stone of St Peter Stoke Park in 1975. Canon Bob organised endless fund raising efforts; not only fetes and bazaars, but a vegetable stall outside the church hall, and the Rector's Shop in Wherstead Road, which sold virtually anything anyone could lay hands on. Canon Bob left the parish in 1976, to take up the living of Sproughton with Burstall. On retirement, he returned as Honorary Assistant Priest, and was a much appreciated `father' to the church. Canon Bob died in October 1995, and many were those who came to St. Mary Stoke to his funeral, in grateful memory of his passion for his Lord and his leadership from the front during those years. November 1995 saw the death of Eddie Griggs, Verger from 1966 until the time of his death. Persuaded by Canon Bob to move to the small flat above the church hall, with his wife Wyn and four children, Eddie was a dedicated and thorough servant of the church. He is irreplaceable.The red and white altar frontal of the Lady Chapel is dedicated in his memory. Arnold Stiff donated a painted plaque, which can be seen on the north wall, to commemorate St Mary at Stoke's long association with the people of the railway. The names and dates of all past and present Rectors and Vicar are on display in the church, with a new board presented in 1996 in memory of the late Treasurer, Mr John Wells.
242:"Service only once a day - in the morning - there was a very small choir - Mr Wasper family at Gusper Hall and Mr Gowers of Nova Scotia were the only people of distinction who regularly attended the service - sometimes Mr Steward of Stoke Park would attend but not often - occasionally when they arrived at Church they were told there would be no service as the parson was not very well, which they took to mean that he had been too convivial on the previous evening". In 1818, when the expenditure of the parish was £84 6s 8d and income £57 3s 4d, a bell was sold for £25 10s 9d to make up the deficit. "Some of the Clergy were accustomed, in the case of Christenings, to go to the houses of the principal parishioners and Christian the child at home, but Baily Wallis stuck against that practice and would have the infants christened at church, as he said according to the Rubric".
274:
congregation". He was considered a Broad
Churchman, in sympathy with ornate ritual, but who disfavoured Romish practices and respected the dissenters. There are a number of records of his parish meetings, and review of his sermons, available from the Records Office. At one meeting, they discussed how to get the congregation to sit down promptly at the beginning of the service, comparing their practice against that of St. Peter's, where "directly the bell stopped tolling all vacant seats were immediately filled up". They decided that they did the same thing - in which case, said the Rector "If that is the custom there is an end to it". His churchwarden Mr Grimsey concluded by saying "Those who expect to find their seats unoccupied should come regularly and early for them."
223:. The first church was probably made of wood. It was once governed by Ely, a fact lightly made much of by a politician of Stoke. In 970, King Edgar endowed St. Ethelreda (i.e. the Prior and Convent of Ely) with lands in the parish and moiety of jurisdiction beyond the bridge (3 carnicates, peopled by 9 villans, 5 bordars rising to 15, 1 serf, several plough teams). The ceremony for the donation was an occasion of great solemnity, attended by the Queen and the great churchman Dunstan. It remained the property of the convent until the Dissolution of the monasteries.The church hiring was listed as 40 acres of free land, 1 mill, 20 acres meadow, 12 beasts, 20 hogs, 24 sheep and 14 goats.
767:
266:
medieval churches locally.The choir stalls were of Riga wainscot oak, poppy heads richly carved. The large east window glass was donated by Mrs Lacon of the
Goldrood, in memory of her husband Capt. Lacon RN. The west window glass was donated by Mr Charles Forte Gower. In February 1872 the church was reopened. In his sermon, the Venerable Archdeacon Emery BC Canon of Ely preached on Romans 12:4-5, and commented that a new organ was needed. In December 1872 a new organ by GM Holdich was opened, although it was still being paid for, and it was observed that it was too pent up in its chamber. The sermon then was on Galatians 6:7.
58:
246:
backboard of the pulpit was lined with blue velvet bordered with broad gold lace. The church probably dated from the late 15th
Century, and seated 120. We can still see a medieval piscina in the south east corner. The church was described as being "remarkable for being very plain if we do not say ugly". Another commentator notes that "the building was chiefly remarkable for its ugliness and for the circumstance that it was the last church in the town, if not in the county, in which instrumental music was still supplied by one or two dashing fiddlers, a wheezy trombone, and a squalling clarinet".
282:
later came to be known, set to work to renovate the buildings and mobilise the people. The Parish church was badly in need of costly maintenance, and was hemmed in by very old and almost derelict buildings; the former Stoke School and one time
Workhouse. Within months he questioned the sense of having a great Parish Hall in Luther Road - remote from the Church - and proposed to knock down the old school and build a new hall there. "We can't afford things like that!" said the Treasurer. Then, two Church Wardens held office at a time; the Rector picked one, the parish chose the other.
235:
farmhouses, and is one of the suburbs of
Ipswich, containing 60 families. There is one family of note, viz, Nathaniel Turner, Esq. There are no Papists in my parish. There are Presbyterians, and their teachers are Thomas Scott and... Their numbers were decreased lately, some having removed into other parishes, and others conformd to the Church. There are no Quakers in my parish. There are not many who commonly absent themselves from public worship on the Lord's Day, and those of the lowest rank. There are no parish schools or hospital (or almshouses)".
42:
231:
water tower now is. In 1547, an edict was given by King Edward that all 'superstitious' objects be removed from the kingdom. During the
Revolution, Ipswich had a strong following for Cromwell and the puritan movement. The Parliamentary visitor, William Dowsing, records the desecration of "Crosses in Wood, and 2 Cherubim painted; and one Inscription in Brass with `ora pro nobis'" on his visit 29–30 January 1643.
65:
227:
Lane. In medieval
Ipswich there were five Religious Houses, and many of the parish churches were annexed or appropriated to them. Just over the river from Stoke lay the parish of St. Nicholas and the Franciscan Friary dating from 1297. A little farther on, the Priory of St. Peter and St. Paul, a community of Augustinian Canons, had appropriated St. Mary at the Quay and others.
270:
panels; 4 major prophets and 4 evangelists, each with a scroll quoting their words. On the North side, Isaiah, Daniel, St
Matthew and St Mark. On the South side, St Luke, St John, Jeremiah and Ezekiel. In the centre were 4 angels and a central cross in white marble on a gold background with a broad border of red, gold and black.
239:
women! They assumed that the women had to have been the widows of former clerks. 6 August 1811, the vestry purchased a "Burn's
Justice" for the use of the parish, "but whether it was because of the people's pugilistic tendency or not it does not say". From 1812, the parish clerk was chosen by the Rector.
281:
Robert
Bernard Godfrey came as Rector in November 1962, with his wife Joy, to a parish which was run down. Houses were being demolished under clearance schemes, and people were moving out rather than in. The parish had a down-at-heel feel, little changed since the Second World War. "Canon Bob", as he
277:
In Victorian times, the Rectory moved to a house on the corner of Willoughby Road, 56 Belstead Road. In 1962 it was considered cold, damp, far too big and it had a huge garden and expensive upkeep costs. By 1976, the Rectory had moved to 8 Belstead Road. In the early 80's another Rectory was built at
265:
1870–2, the architect William Butterfield designed a new nave, chancel and south porch, more than doubling the size of the original church, which was left as the north aisle and Lady Chapel. Traditional East Anglian flint and the Perpendicular style of architecture were used, as commonly found in the
238:
April 1782 Revd Mr Baily Wallis was appointed Rector, and he died 30 May 1820, after 36 years service. There is a memorial tablet for him in the church. Some hundred years after his appointment, the parish meeting laughed on noting that in that time there had been 9 parish clerks, 3 of whom had been
285:
Canon Bob managed to persuade a contractor to demolish the old buildings by the church for nothing except the value of those bricks and timbers not used to fill in the vast cellars. By 1965, the Parish Hall and the daughter churches of St Edmund's and St Ethelreda's were sold. The £15,000 so raised
253:
In 1868 Revd J.H.Henderson was presented the living. The first ever Curate for the parish was also appointed. Revd. Henderson was an energetic man who soon decided that the church was too small for a parish of nearly 3000 people. He began to "stir the matter, well seconded by leading parishioners".
230:
In medieval times, Stoke was known for its gold cross or rood stood, which was reputed to be gifted with miraculous powers.The Gold Rood of Stoke was probably deliberately destroyed by Puritans, but a house was named after it, which stood until the beginning of the twentieth century, near where the
226:
There is a tradition which says that churches in this area of Suffolk go by the name of St Mary if they were used by pilgrims on their way to the great shrine at Walsingham, Norfolk. In medieval times, Ipswich had its own shrine of Mary, still marked today by the plaque for the Black Virgin on Lady
249:
In 1864, nearly twenty years after the population explosion began (when the railway came), the old church was restored, and a small north transept added. Under the direction of Revd Stephen Croft, the seating was increased to nearly 200. P.R.Burrell did much of the design, although R.M.Phipson is
269:
December 1875 saw the service for the reredos given by Miss Lacon, executed by the Ipswich School of Art. Formerly merely striped with red tile, the stone panels were now filled with full-length figures in oil painting on a gold background in the style of the early Italian school. There were 8
245:
A sketch made in 1839, by Davy, shows the parish church to be a small building with a low western tower and elaborate brick two-storeyed south porch.It had a plaster-covered nave and chancel continuous under a medieval single hammer-beam roof. In 1824 the ceiling was painted sky-blue and the
234:
The Rectory used to be situated between what is now the entrance to the railway tunnel and Hillside Junior School. It had substantial lands, which provided an income for the Rector. In 1763, the then Rector, Revd. Cuthbert Douthwaite, wrote "This parish to a large extent consists chiefly of
273:
Within 12 months of his appointment as Rector, Revd Canon Bulstrode was considered a front rank preacher in the town. His voice was not strong, and his delivery hurried, but he was admired for the originality and freshness of his thoughts, and his ability to "hit out right and left at his
250:
also named. The high pews removed from the nave ("neat benches substituted"), the plaster knocked off the walls, and the hammer beams were adorned with carved angels. The carved angels replaced those defaced by "the ill-directed zeal of the Puritans".
192:
The original nave (now the north aisle) has a medieval single hammer beam roof, with moulded wall plates, angels with shields at the ends of the hammer beams, and figures underneath. The angels are Victorian replacements for those destroyed by
286:
paid for a new church hall next to the church, with a flat on top for the Verger, and a car park in front. The hall has been regularly used, not only by the church congregation, but by other groups including the Red Cross and a ballet school.
300:
In the 1980s the Rector was Revd Canon Dennis Yates, and the benefice included St Mary Wherstead. In 1995 the Church Of England subsumed St Mary Stoke and St Peter Stoke Park into the "South West Ipswich Team Ministry" in the
305:. During the Covid outbreak, the team ministry disbanded and separate parishes were created for each church. St Mary Stoke has the opportunity to focus on the needs of the folk who live on the ridge west of the river.
753:
509:
729:
799:
735:
177:
and the town centre. Its parish was a small farming community which saw a great increase in population with the coming of the railway to this part of Ipswich.
516:
88:
57:
804:
711:
407:
321:
809:
697:
302:
637:
17:
219:
A church has existed on this site since the 10th Century. It is likely that it was one of the St Marys mentioned in the
354:
565:
502:
619:
613:
601:
571:
559:
685:
625:
607:
595:
262:
headed the list, followed by Miss Lacon and the Rector. The Dean and Chapter of Ely contributed £100.
525:
766:
185:
The building is made up of a small medieval church and a large Victorian extension designed by
142:
704:
741:
553:
404:
8:
679:
655:
583:
290:
259:
186:
453:
723:
691:
667:
661:
392:
208:
41:
367:
350:
333:
747:
577:
411:
198:
494:
294:
167:
793:
220:
103:
90:
649:
255:
174:
464:
147:
475:
194:
173:
The church stands in a prominent position at the foot of a ridge near
289:
Not long after, plans were drafted for a vast new housing estate at
337:
163:
442:
422:
202:
159:
127:
123:
486:
349:
Ipswich Churches Ancient & Modern, Roy Tricker, 1982,
524:
64:
791:
403:A History of Ipswich, Robert Malster, quoted in
800:Church of England church buildings in Ipswich
510:
46:Saint Mary at Stoke from the front entrance
517:
503:
359:
393:Medieval English urban history - Ipswich
14:
792:
433:church Contact magazine, November 1995
498:
476:Diocese of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich
303:Diocese of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich
365:
254:There was an appeal for funds, and
211:is buried in a vault of the church.
24:
805:Grade I listed churches in Ipswich
324:by Linda Walker, BBC Local History
25:
821:
765:
63:
56:
40:
480:
469:
458:
447:
180:
436:
427:
416:
405:Ipswich was once part of Stoke
397:
386:
343:
327:
315:
13:
1:
810:William Butterfield buildings
308:
197:. The church was visited by
7:
10:
826:
372:Ipswich Historic Lettering
214:
29:Church in Suffolk, England
782:* Key transposed by Speed
780:
532:
368:"Street name derivations"
334:St Mary at Stoke, Ipswich
141:
133:
119:
85:
71:St Mary at Stoke, Ipswich
51:
39:
35:St Mary at Stoke, Ipswich
34:
338:Suffolk Churches website
423:Hillisde Primary School
201:. There is a medieval
104:52.050202°N 1.152956°E
443:St Peter's Stoke Park
526:John Speed's Ipswich
293:. With support from
638:St Mary at the Quay
584:St Mary at the Elms
187:William Butterfield
156:Saint Mary at Stoke
109:52.050202; 1.152956
100: /
77:Location in Suffolk
18:Saint Mary at Stoke
560:St George's Chapel
546:
410:2011-08-12 at the
295:the Ganzoni family
278:74 Ancaster Road.
209:Richard Hall Gower
787:
786:
775:
774:
763:John Speed's Map
454:St Mary Wherstead
366:van Loon, Borin.
170:area of Ipswich.
153:
152:
16:(Redirected from
817:
769:
644:St Mary at Stoke
578:St Mary-le-Tower
535:
534:
519:
512:
505:
496:
495:
489:
484:
478:
473:
467:
462:
456:
451:
445:
440:
434:
431:
425:
420:
414:
401:
395:
390:
384:
383:
381:
379:
374:. Borin van Loon
363:
357:
347:
341:
331:
325:
322:Going Over Stoke
319:
115:
114:
112:
111:
110:
105:
101:
98:
97:
96:
93:
67:
66:
60:
44:
32:
31:
21:
825:
824:
820:
819:
818:
816:
815:
814:
790:
789:
788:
783:
776:
771:
764:
758:
716:
686:Christ Hospital
672:
630:
588:
528:
523:
493:
492:
485:
481:
474:
470:
463:
459:
452:
448:
441:
437:
432:
428:
421:
417:
412:Wayback Machine
402:
398:
391:
387:
377:
375:
364:
360:
348:
344:
332:
328:
320:
316:
311:
217:
199:William Dowsing
183:
108:
106:
102:
99:
94:
91:
89:
87:
86:
81:
80:
79:
78:
75:
74:
73:
72:
68:
47:
30:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
823:
813:
812:
807:
802:
785:
784:
781:
778:
777:
773:
772:
761:
759:
757:
756:
750:
744:
738:
732:
726:
719:
717:
715:
714:
708:
701:
694:
692:Grammar School
688:
682:
675:
673:
671:
670:
664:
658:
652:
646:
640:
633:
631:
629:
628:
622:
616:
610:
604:
598:
591:
589:
587:
586:
580:
574:
568:
562:
556:
549:
547:
543:
542:
539:
533:
530:
529:
522:
521:
514:
507:
499:
491:
490:
479:
468:
457:
446:
435:
426:
415:
396:
385:
358:
342:
340:by Simon Knott
326:
313:
312:
310:
307:
216:
213:
182:
179:
166:church in the
151:
150:
145:
139:
138:
135:
131:
130:
121:
117:
116:
83:
82:
76:
70:
69:
62:
61:
55:
54:
53:
52:
49:
48:
45:
37:
36:
28:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
822:
811:
808:
806:
803:
801:
798:
797:
795:
779:
770:
768:
760:
755:
754:Brooke Street
751:
749:
745:
743:
739:
737:
733:
731:
727:
725:
721:
720:
718:
713:
709:
706:
702:
699:
695:
693:
689:
687:
683:
681:
677:
676:
674:
669:
665:
663:
659:
657:
653:
651:
647:
645:
641:
639:
635:
634:
632:
627:
623:
621:
617:
615:
611:
609:
605:
603:
599:
597:
596:St Lawrence's
593:
592:
590:
585:
581:
579:
575:
573:
569:
567:
566:St Margaret's
563:
561:
557:
555:
551:
550:
548:
545:
544:
540:
537:
536:
531:
527:
520:
515:
513:
508:
506:
501:
500:
497:
488:
487:St Mary Stoke
483:
477:
472:
466:
461:
455:
450:
444:
439:
430:
424:
419:
413:
409:
406:
400:
394:
389:
373:
369:
362:
356:
355:0-9507064-9-3
352:
346:
339:
335:
330:
323:
318:
314:
306:
304:
298:
296:
292:
287:
283:
279:
275:
271:
267:
263:
261:
257:
251:
247:
243:
240:
236:
232:
228:
224:
222:
221:Domesday Book
212:
210:
206:
204:
200:
196:
190:
188:
178:
176:
171:
169:
165:
161:
157:
149:
146:
144:
140:
136:
132:
129:
125:
122:
118:
113:
84:
59:
50:
43:
38:
33:
27:
19:
762:
730:Old Bar Gate
705:Hanford Mill
650:Stoke Bridge
643:
620:St Nicholas'
614:St Clement's
602:St Stephen's
572:St Matthew's
554:Christchurch
482:
471:
460:
449:
438:
429:
418:
399:
388:
376:. Retrieved
371:
361:
345:
329:
317:
299:
288:
284:
280:
276:
272:
268:
264:
252:
248:
244:
241:
237:
233:
229:
225:
218:
207:
191:
184:
181:Architecture
175:Stoke Bridge
172:
155:
154:
143:Denomination
26:
742:Kings Stret
736:Fish Market
698:Poor Houses
680:Blackfriars
378:4 September
256:Lord Gwydyr
195:iconoclasts
107: /
794:Categories
724:Barre Gate
668:Greyfriars
656:Stoke Mill
626:St Peter's
608:St Helen's
309:References
291:Stoke Park
260:Stoke Park
92:52°03′01″N
712:Bull Gate
336:from the
189:in 1872.
168:Old Stoke
95:1°09′11″E
748:Cornhill
408:Archived
164:Anglican
148:Anglican
120:Location
662:The Key
215:History
203:piscina
162:listed
160:Grade I
137:England
134:Country
128:Suffolk
124:Ipswich
541:Uranus
538:Saturn
353:
465:SWITM
158:is a
380:2019
351:ISBN
752:9)
746:8)
740:7)
734:6)
728:5)
722:4)
710:3)
703:Y)
696:Z)
690:X)
684:W)
678:V)
666:T)
660:S)
654:R)
648:Q)
642:P)
636:N)
624:M)
618:L)
612:K)
606:I)
600:H)
594:G)
582:F)
576:E)
570:D)
564:C)
558:B)
552:A)
258:of
796::
370:.
205:.
126:,
707:*
700:*
518:e
511:t
504:v
382:.
20:)
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.