Church of St Fimbarrus, Fowey | |
Coordinates: | 50.3354°N -4.6357°W |
Location: | Fowey, Cornwall, England |
Designation1: | Grade I |
Designation1 Offname: | Church of St Fimbarrus or St Nicholas |
Designation1 Date: | 13 March 1951 |
Designation2: | Grade II |
Designation2 Offname: | Church yard gateway to east of Church of St Fimbarrus |
Designation2 Date: | 11 March 1974 |
Designation3: | Grade II |
Designation3 Offname: | Remains of pinnacle in churchyard about 20 yards to south east of Church of St Fimbarrus |
Designation3 Date: | 11 March 1974 |
The Church of St Fimbarrus is an Anglican parish church in Fowey, Cornwall, England. Also known as Fowey Parish Church, it is in the Church of England's Diocese of Truro.[1] The church is a grade I listed building and dates from the 14th century.
The church is dedicated to Saint Finbarr and is listed Grade I. It was built in the early 14th century and rededicated in 1336, replacing a previous Norman church. The church was damaged by the French in 1457, and repaired in 1460 by the Earl of Warwick, when the clerestory and the north and south aisles were rebuilt. There is a nave and two aisles with a clerestory, and the aisles are unusually wide; the aisles and the clerestory may be additions of the 15th century. The tower, of the 16th century, is of four stages and has buttresses and bands of ornament. There is an exceptionally fine 15th-century carved wagon roof. The south porch has open arches to the west and east and an eight-ribbed vaulted roof. The font is Norman, of Catacleuze stone, and similar to those of Ladock, Feock and St Mewan. The hexagonal pulpit was made in 1601. The monuments include two brasses of the mid 15th century and those of John Rashleigh, 1582, and Alice Rashleigh, 1602. The most interesting are two later Rashleigh monuments: John Rashleigh, c. 1610, and another of 1683.[2] The church was used as a town hall for a period up to 1684.
In 1899, Kenneth Grahame, author of The Wind in the Willows, married Elspeth Thompson at the church.[3] Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch (1863–1944) is buried in the churchyard.
Fowey Parish Church is a evangelical Anglican church. It had passed a resolution to reject the leadership of women in church.[4] [5] In 2019, its vicar and half the congregation left to form an explicitly conservative evangelical church in the town outside of the Church of England but under the auspices of GAFCON.[6]
In May 2023, the chair of the Parochial Church Council (PCC) stepped down, along with two other members;[7] they had supported the resolution against a female vicar.[8] In July 2023, with a new PCC elected, the council voted unanimously to rescind the resolution and to open the job opening to both men and women.[9] It had been one of 150 parishes in the Church of England that rejected the leadership of women in church (including as vicars or bishops).[10]
In March 2024, the church welcomed a woman, the Reverend Carol Edleston, as "Priest for Fowey".[11] [12]