THE WORK OF IPSWICH HISTORIC CHURCHES TRUST
Ipswich Historic Churches Trust was established in 1979 following wide concern by the Borough Council and local people that four of the finest medieval churches in the town centre were about to become redundant as places of worship. The Trust’s primary object was the preservation and maintenance for the public benefit of redundant churches of all denominations which are of historical or architectural value.
In 1981, the churches of St Lawrence, St Peter, St Clement and St Stephen were passed to the Borough Council by the Church Commissioners for a nominal sum and then offered to the Churches Trust on long leases. The intention was that the Trust would undertake repairs and find appropriate new uses. St Nicholas became redundant in 1985 and was also passed to the Trust via the Borough Council. All five churches are Listed Grade 2* for their special architectural and historic interest and are considered of outstanding importance not just in their own right but also for their contribution to the street scene.
In 1986 the Trust undertook a major survey of nineteenth century churches and chapels. This resulted in recommendations that the best examples should be protected. Eleven buildings nominated were confirmed by the Government.
The Trust has undertaken phased programmes of major repairs to all of its churches with financial assistance from the Borough Council, matched initially by grants from the Department of the Environment, after 1984 from English Heritage.
Some works, like the repair of St Clement’s tower in 1981, have followed unexpected structural problems; others to make good vandalism such as major roofing repairs at the same church in 1995 after an arson attack. Many, however, are cyclical repairs of the kind required only several generations apart. The tower of St Lawrence was strengthened and stabilised in 1993-4, for example, because no significant repairs had been carried out since 1882 when the architect Frederick Barnes had built this decorative casing around the plain crumbling fifteenth century original.
Currently St Stephen is in use as the Ipswich Tourist Information Centre and has proved a very popular and successful conversion used by several hundred thousand visitors per year.
In 2001 St Nicholas was transferred back to the Diocese of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich for conversion to uses associated with the administration of the Diocese located in the adjacent Churchgates House. These works together with improvements to the churchyard were completed in May 2005.
The Trust has supported the Borough Council’s proposals for a new public, social use for St Lawrence. The church will be converted during 2007/8 into a new Cafe and community venue which will offer an excellent, convenient central location and appropriate reuse for this narrow and tall church situated between the principal shopping streets.
The prospects for the remaining two Trust churches, St Clement and St Peter will be enhanced now that the regeneration of Ipswich Waterfront is underway. Both churches offer exciting large spaces for potential public uses in conjunction with the development of the adjacent sites. St Clement is likely to be used as part of the proposals for the new University Campus Suffolk. St Peter has acheived funding through the Heritage Lottery Fund under the title `Music for Health’ which will see the church adapted to local concert, rehearsal and educational uses. This has received financial backing of over £100K from the Borough Council.
St Peter is famous for among other things, it's important 12th Century Tournai Marble font. This is one of the finest and largest English examples and the Trusts 1983 report about it about it can be downloaded below.
12th Century Tournai Marble Font [1.62Mb]
The Borough Council has worked jointly with English Heritage and four local primary schools in a pioneering project to with English Heritage as a cross-curricular approach to citizenship. The challenge for pupils was to think about ways that the other churches could be re-used in the future whilst still protecting the buildings. A teacher from each school took part in a two-day placement, sponsored by the Suffolk Education Business Partnership, to prepare for the project. They spent time with the Council’s Conservation Officer learning about the churches and looking at resources such as maps and plans. They then wrote their own schemes of work linked to existing history, geography or RE studies.
Pupils visited St Stephen’s (the Tourist Information Centre) to look at how a church could be converted while retaining the surviving features. Then they looked at one of the empty churches (St Lawrence and St Peter) and investigated its location and collected information about the its shape and size, remaining features, materials and decoration, to help with their own designs. Back at school pupils brainstormed ideas for new uses and then presented their ideas as models, plans, pictures and written work culminating in an exhibition of pupils' work in a shopping centre in Ipswich. This enabled pupils to share their ideas with a wider audience and to raise awareness of the redundant churches.
The report explaining the work of this national exemplar project can be downloaded using the following link.
www.english-heritage.org.uk/upload/pdf/old_churches_citizenship.pdf
Although the medieval St Mary-at-Quay Church (Grade 2* listed) is also redundant it has been in the care of the London-based Churches Conservation Trust for many years. Its tower has recently been extensively repaired. St Michael, a large Victorian church (Grade 2 listed) by the Ipswich architect E Fernley Bisshopp is redundant and the new owner is seeking an appropriate use and this will come forward in due course.
St Clement, St Peter and St Lawrence are show in engravings done by the Suffolk topographical artist and printmaker Henry Davy (1793-1865) and are part of a series completed in 1840-41.

St Clement

St Peter

St Lawrence
Related Pages
Considerations when changing the use of an historic building
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