that the design of such churches probably followed the best practice of domestic building since stone domestic buildings were rare at this time. To the inexpert eye (such as my own) the half-timbered buildings of Herefordshire and Cheshire might seem pretty similar but, in fact, there is a world of difference in building design and technique.
Anyway, it was the Norman Grosvenor family of Hulme Hall a mile and a half away who built a chapel here. It was not a full-blown church in that it was not licensed for baptisms and marriages. The mother church was Great Budworth seven miles away - it has a very fine parish church - which provided the officiating priests at Lower Peover and which may have been reluctant to lose such revenue-earning functions. The present church probably dates to the 1340s by which time a “perpetual curate” was probably in situ, although still appointed by and answerable to Great Budworth. The remarkable thirteenth century dugout parish church chest survives.
The church we see now has roofs over both aisles and the nave but this was not the case until 1852. There had been a single roof covering all three cells. It must have been of barn-like proportions! The nave roof still has some of the original timbers. The aisles were narrower and lower than they are now. South and north chancel chapels were added in 1610 and 1624 respectively.
The sixteenth century stone tower which presumably replaced a timber predecessor, in my view, grates somewhat visually. One can only speculate that the patron wished to add some perceived “dignity” and grandeur to it all. At this point it is worth noting that the very nature of a timber church precludes the sort of droll mediaeval decoration that can so delight us on stone churches. Only the tower’s somewhat unflamboyant gargoyles are the exception and, in truth, look anachronistic, even a bit silly, on this church.
The atmosphere within is surely unique. It is a great barn of a place with timber from the roof to the improbable sea of pews below. Some of these are family pews of the local Shakerley, Cholomondely and Laycester families. Only the stone font intrudes. Automatic lighting is installed which is a very mixed blessing for photographers and those who wish to see the church as our forefathers would have seen it, but without it this must be a gloomy place indeed. It is a place to be enjoyed for its uniqueness and its atmosphere above all things. But the timberwork here is a thing of beauty and of chocolate box perfection. “Where have all the chocolate box pictures gone?” “Gone for Jigsaws every one”. Yes, I know I am showing my age!
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