A Crafty Cup of Coffee at St Peter and St Paul’s

Keen on crafts, or just on the chance for a crafty cup of coffee, cakes and a good chat? St Peter and St Paul’s at Algarkirk will be opening its doors to a new craft club starting on Wednesday, 22 July from 10 to 12 noon, and all are welcome.

Over the coming months Craft Club leader, Diana Reid, and other clever-fingered folk will be introducing a number of “taster” sessions to allow people to have a go at all sorts of traditional crafts, from felt making to knitting and model making to tapestry and card making.  In between there will be opportunities for members to bring their own projects in to show and share with others or even to ask for advice. And it will all take place in the coffee area of the church where members will be able to also enjoy a cuppa, some delicious cake and a chat.

“It is amazing how many skilful people there are out there who would love the chance to share what they are doing or to learn something new,” Diana said.  “There are also a lot of people who perhaps have not had the chance to learn, but would like to.”

The monthly Coffee, Craft and Cake club is part of the community vision that we have for the future of Algarkirk church: part of making it a resource for all the people of the local community.
There will be no charge for club membership, although, as always, donations are welcome. If you would like to attend but have no transport please contact us.

Heritage Lincolnshire Joins the Team

Dreams of conserving the beautiful but endangered church of St Peter and St Paul in Algarkirk have come a step closer to being realised with the appointment of Heritage Lincolnshire as Project Officers. The appointment has been funded through a development grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.  

Algarkirk Major Project Group (AMPG) Leader, Audrey Young, said: “It is wonderful to be able to bring the knowledge and expertise of Heritage Lincolnshire on board to help us with our plans for the church. Conserving the building and developing the role the church can play in supporting the local community is something that can benefit everyone in the parish. Having Heritage Lincolnshire on our team will take those hopes and dreams a big step closer to reality.”

Liz Bates, Chief Executive Officer of Heritage Lincolnshire said, “We are absolutely delighted to be working with the community in Algarkirk on this exciting project. As a Trust we have been interested in the Church and the historic landscape around it for some time and so we are really looking forward to meeting everyone and getting started. The group leading the project have some fantastic ideas and we will do all we can to help achieve the goal of conserving the ‘Cathedral of the Fens’.”

Liz will be working alongside her colleague Natalie Lunt in the planning stages and in June 2015 Natalie will take up the role of Project Officer. The role will be to promote the project and to trial some of the activities that will be delivered if all of the funding is successfully raised. The aim is to encourage local people will come along to those activities and offer feedback on the project plans as they develop. There will also be training volunteers to help the group to get ready for future stages of the project. The Project Officer will be talking to local and regional partners to gain help and advice and of course fundraising will be an important task. The team will be aiming to build on local support and to identifying additional sources of funding.

Music in the Church

This Saturday, 14th March, Algarkirk presents  The Boston Plainchant Choir performing a selection of Gregorian Chant in St Peter and St Paul’s Church. It starts at 6.30 followed by refreshments.

Church gets a £175,000 lifeline after facing closure

Algarkirk’s 800-year old parish church has been given a lifeline – with a £175,000 development grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund. This is the first step in a £1.8 million project to restore the endangered St Peter and St Paul’s Church – but now community help is needed to match fund a percentage of the grant. In 2010 the church faced closure but locals took action to unless action to clean it up, forming a group to put the current project plan together which aims to conserve and re-establish the church as a resource for the whole community. It has been driven by a group of volunteers who formed the Algarkirk Major Project Group (AMPG), with the support of parish priest Father Gary Morgan, the Diocese of Lincoln and the village community. Father Morgan said: “The church used to be a focus for village life, and now it is hoped that, thanks to the vision and hard work of the project group, it can become so again – not just as a place of worship, which it will always be, but also as a centre of heritage, learning, and community enjoyment.”

“The initial funds will enable the group to consult with technical building and architectural professionals and to employ a project officer who will focus on making sure students, experts and, above all, the local community can be involved in returning St Peter and St Paul to its former glory,” said AMPG founding member Diana Reid. “Plans for the next two years, before we submit our application for full project funding, include taster workshops in stained glass conservation, stone masonry and other traditional crafts.

“The AMPG will also be hosting activities for the community so information about the project can be shared. Look out for coffee mornings and a book swap, which will now take place on every second Saturday of the month, and on the October 24, the project group hosted a Ladies Pamper evening at the village hall,” explained Jayne Maskell, also a founder member of the AMPG.

A spokesman from the Diocese of Lincoln Church Buildings Department said: “This is a Grade I listed building of national significance. It is a large Fenland church, the earliest parts of which date from the late 12th century, with phases of development following in 13th, 14th, and late 15th centuries. Between 1850 and 1854 the church was extensively restored by R. C. Carpenter, who collaborated with the famous Victorian designers J. G. Crace, Hardman & Co. and A.W.N. Pugin to produce a stunning scheme of decoration in the chancel. Later, a substantial scheme of stained glass windows by the important nineteenth-century manufacturers Clayton and Bell was installed.”

The project’s success now depends on the support of the local community – with about £40,000 now having to be met by the group and its supporters.

The aim is for this to be achieved through local fundraising, and through volunteer work at the church. Father Morgan added: “Algarkirk has become a fragmented community geographically. We hope this development will help draw everyone together. But without the support of our community, we cannot succeed,” “This initial grant is not the end of the story,” said AMPG leader Audrey Young. “This is only the first step in our aim to make St Peter and St Paul a community resource for the next 100 years. But it does mean, as they say, that we are now ‘in it to win it’”

Vanessa Harbar head of HLF East Midlands said: “We’re pleased to provide initial support to restore this historically-important church. The village community have worked hard to get to this point in their quest to secure the future of the building and open it up for wider community use. We now look forward to working with the group to help plans develop further.”

Thieves strip the lead from the roof and porch costing thousands of pounds worth of damage


Just as we were about to send out a Press release announcing the appointment of Heritage Lincolnshire as project officers for the Algarkirk Church Heritage project, along with the launch of our Church Vision for the church as a community resource, when on Sunday night/ Monday morning, thieves stripped the lead from the nave roof and porch and damaged the stained glass of the west window.  The  photos show where the lead has been stripped: the men in the photos are specialist roofers from CEL.

 
Not only has about 30 foot of lead been taken from the Nave roof, and the porch been stolen, but the beautiful stained glass of the West window has also been damaged during the theft.  That loss is irreparable.

After all the hard work and tireless commitment of those who have been working to bring the church back into a fit state for the community to use as a place of worship and a community resource, this is a devastating set-back.

Just as we were about to really move forward in our “Church Vision” project, with the appointment of Heritage Lincolnshire as project officers, and the announcement of a launch date on 16th May, we are now going to have to raise more funds and generate even more support. We will do it: we are determined to go ahead with the launch, but this pointless crime has made everything so much harder.  We hope people will rally round our efforts and help support our attempts to save this very special church for today and the future.

The people who did this may make a comparatively small profit from selling the lead which has been forensically treated and should be traceable but that gain will bear no relation to the enormous devastation and hardship they have caused by ripping it from the church: it is truly heart-breaking.