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St John the Baptist's Church, Bamford facts for kids

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St John the Baptist’s Church, Bamford
Bamford church.jpg
St John the Baptist’s Church, Bamford
St John the Baptist’s Church, Bamford is located in Derbyshire
St John the Baptist’s Church, Bamford
St John the Baptist’s Church, Bamford
Location in Derbyshire
53°20′52.8″N 1°41′36.67″W / 53.348000°N 1.6935194°W / 53.348000; -1.6935194
Location Bamford
Country England
Denomination Church of England
History
Dedication St John the Baptist
Consecrated 17 October 1860
Architecture
Heritage designation Grade II* listed
Architect(s) William Butterfield
Groundbreaking 1859
Completed 1860
Specifications
Height 108 feet (33 m)
Administration
Parish Bamford and Derwent
Deanery Bakewell & Eyam
Archdeaconry Chesterfield
Diocese Derby
Province Canterbury

St John the Baptist church is a C of E church in Bamford in the Hope Valley, Derbyshire, England.

History

The building that is seen today is largely a William Butterfield restoration dating from 1860, with a bell tower. The new church was consecrated on 17 October 1860 by the Bishop of Lichfield.

Parish status

The church is in a joint parish with St Michael and All Angels' Church, Hathersage.

Organ

A pipe organ was built by Albert Keates of Sheffield. It was rebuilt and extended in 1958 by T.C. Wilcock of Sheffield. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.

The bells and tower

A peal of six bells was provided at the rebuilding in 1860 by Naylor, Vickers and Co of Sheffield. The tower currently has six ringable bells, cast in 1998 by John Taylor & Co to mark the Millennium. The modern bells have sprung metal stays instead of wooden ones. The Treble weighs 1 hundredweight 3 quarters and 12lb (94.4 kg). The tenor weighs 1 hundredweight and 26lb (215.2 kg). The bellringers practice on Wednesdays.

The churchyard

Exhumations from the cemetery of the village of Derwent were re-interred in St John's churchyard after the construction of the Ladybower Dam submerged that village during the Second World War. Also in the graveyard is a grave marking the dead from Tin Town (Birchinlee), a temporary village made to house the workers who built the Derwent and the Howden dams in 1902. There is also a memorial for the dead of the Holocaust. The churchyard contains war graves from World War I of two male soldiers, a female member of Queen Mary's Army Auxiliary Corps and a Royal Air Force airman.

Location

Main Road, Bamford, Hope Valley, Derbyshire, England, UK

Opposite St John's Close

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