Our Lady and St Anne's Church, Widemouth Bay

Coordinates: 50°47′24″N 4°33′05″W / 50.789993°N 4.551509°W / 50.789993; -4.551509
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Our Lady & St Anne's
Interior in 2004
Map
50°47′24″N 4°33′05″W / 50.789993°N 4.551509°W / 50.789993; -4.551509
DenominationChurch of England
ChurchmanshipAnglo-Catholicism
History
StatusActive
Architecture
Functional statuschapel of ease
Completed1929
Specifications
Capacity22
Number of floors1
Materialstimber, asbestos
Bells1
Administration
DioceseTruro
DeaneryStratton
ParishPoundstock

The Church of Our Lady and St Anne is a small Anglican church in the village of Widemouth Bay, Cornwall.

The church was built in 1929 as a private oratory and was originally located at the opposite end of the village. Despite its relatively modest age, there are two conflicting theories regarding whom it was originally built for. One holds that it was created for three priests, Claude, Reginald and Frank Kingdom, whose family were the squires of Whitstone, Bridgerule and Poundstock.[1] The brothers used it as a retreat each summer for writing their sermons for the rest of the year. The other theory contends that it was built for two women, identified as Miss Kirby and Miss Topham, who allowed the three brothers to use it each year.[2]

In the 1930s, Widemouth Bay expanded after rising to popularity as a seaside resort, and in 1940, the lightweight church was moved to its present location, a site which had been acquired by the vicar of Poundstock. Our Lady and St Anne's became a chapel of ease for the growing population, who had previously had to travel to St Winwaloe's in Poundstock.

The church has a garden, but this contains no headstones. It has a timber summerhouse, which its congregation built in 2006,[3] and which is used as a community meeting-place. The church's modest dimensions earned it a place in Dixe Wills' 2016 book Tiny Churches.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "BBC Domesday Reloaded". Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  2. ^ Wills, D (2016). Tiny Churches. Dubai: AA. ISBN 9780749577681.
  3. ^ "Stratton Deanery". Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  4. ^ "Bude & Stratton Post". Retrieved 10 November 2017.