Our
History
The church was built in 1841,
originally consisting only of the present nave, and began life as St.
Stephen's Chapel within the Parish of Frensham. A tower was
incorporated in the planning, and nave and tower were completed in 1846
being consecrated on 24th March by the Rt. Rev. C. R. Sumner, Bishop of
Winchester.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson of Aldworth
and Farringford, (Aldworth was the name of the house he built in
Haslemere, on Blackdown, where the poet lived until death in 1892) was
associated with the financial support of the project, but the person
primarily concerned with the development was James Simmonds
(1784-1868), Master Paper-Maker, who owned Sickle Mill and lived at
Cherrimans.
His diaries (recently published by
the Tabard Private Press) mention a number of occasions when he visited
people to discuss how money could be raised. It seems that if people
wanted a church they would have to be prepared to pay towards its cost
- and the gifts that came were not not merely in cash. In a manner
reminiscent of the people of Israel giving towards the building of the
temple, we can read an entry from James' diary for 16th August 1841 'Mr
Harding will bring over rafters for the new church, given by Mr
Davidson'.
A copy of the diaries may be viewed
- by members only - at the Haslemere Educational Museum. James
Simmonds is buried beside his wife Charlotte in the churchyard.
His son James, Justice of the Peace, was Churchwarden at the time of
the Diamond Jubilee celebrations of Victoria's reign, in 1897.
In 1850, Charles Candy was
appointed priest-in-charge. The Parish of Shottermill was divided from
the Parish of Frensham in 1875, and Charles Candy was appointed the
first Vicar. He remained in charge of the parish for the next thirty
six years - the longest incumbancy of any minister to the parish.
Also around 1875, J. W. Penfold, a
well-known local architect, added the chancel and north vestry and
renewed the roof and buttresses of the nave. The estimate was for
£1,000. The builder was Pink of Milford and the church was
reopened on 22nd June 1876.
The church continued to grow by
degrees. In 1879 the south porch was built, and in 1884 Rev. George
Purdue began his twenty years of ministry to the parish. On 10th
September 1902 a faculty was granted for the erection of' a baptistery
to the south of the tower and choir-vestry to the north of it.
Finally, in 1909-10 the north aisle (Lady Chapel) was built, donated by
Mrs Turner in memory of her husband Robert Turner, former Churchwarden.
The lady chapel was consecrated in 1917.
In 1927, the division of the
Diocese of Winchester occurred and Shottermill Parish became
incorporated into the Diocese of Guildford. Today, the Parish is
a constituent of the Godalming Deanery, in the Archdeaconry of Surrey,
in the Diocese of Guildford.
Today the church has undergone significant internal modification
following completion of the first phase of its
Church Building Project.
The most obvious result of which has been the modernisation of the Church to include underfloor heating, a Baptismal pool and much greater flexibility in seating arrangements. The new church configuration appears
in our
Church photographs .
PARISH PRIESTS
1846 Leslie Badham
Priest-in-Charge
1848 Charles Candy
Priest-in-Charge
1875 Charles Candy Vicar
1884 George Purdue Vicar
1904 Hugh Tudor Vicar
1909 Edwin Clifford Frend Vicar
1933 Cyril Job Vicar
1939 Leslie Towner Vicar
1951 Stanley Hoffman Vicar
1965 Denis Hyde Vicar
1974 Colin Tickner Vicar
1991 Andrew Jones Vicar
2000 Andrew Gready Vicar
2007 Danny Wignall Vicar