Not having read about the church before I visited, my jaw dropped at reading this. There is what is palpably a Norman tower arch. The window openings of the bottom two stages are also palpably Norman, round headed and with jamb-stones made of huge chunks of stone. Inside it has a hefty first floor doorway, something inconceivable for an eighteenth century church. To my relief, I found that Pevsner agreed with me. The aisles are mediaeval. A church of these proportions without a west tower? You’ve got this wrong, I think, Caldbeck! Arthur Mee was of the opinion that the 1727 inscription referred only to the top stage (those bell openings don’t look quite right for original Norman). I agree with him. In fact, Pevsner says the church “has a number of problems”.
The big one apart from the dating of the tower is the arcades. The three westernmost bays are different from the others. The Church Guide says that this was because the nave and aisles were extended westwards. If the tower is Norman then this is impossible. Pevsner, noting that the eastern bays look later than the western ones, suggests that the extension was to the east! By his own admission, the problem then is that it implies that the chancel which has a Norman north wall originally was stretched halfway down the nave which seems improbable, to sat the least. We have two pieces of Norman bread but can’t work out what happened with the filling!!
You will find this church a pleasant visit. It is a fine place with a good feel to it. If, though, like ,e you were brought up as a primary school child on a diet of traditional and inoffensive “traditional folk songs” you will know of the song about “John Peel”, the legendary huntsman (not the oddly legendary DJ of the same name!). I still know the first two verses! He was a real person who was born in Ruthwaite but who was buried here at Caldbeck in 1854. Many of us don’t have anything good to say about foxhunting today but that was another era and John is synonymous with the sport, whatever our modern sensibilities.
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