St Thomas the Martyr, Bristol

St Thomas the Martyr
Church of St Thomas the Martyr
Biserica Ortodoxă Română Bristol
The 15th-century tower
St Thomas the Martyr
51°27′10″N 2°35′29″W / 51.4527°N 2.5914°W / 51.4527; -2.5914
LocationSt Thomas Street, Redcliffe
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
History
StatusRedundant
Foundedc. 1170s
DedicationThomas Becket
Architecture
Architect(s)James Allen (nave)
William Venn Gough (tower top/interior)
StylePerpendicular Gothic (tower)
Neoclassical (nave)
Groundbreaking1791 (nave rebuild)
Completed14th century (tower)
21 December 1793 (nave)
Construction cost£5,000 (1793 nave)
£3,877 (1880 restoration)
Closed19 December 1982
Listed Building – Grade II*
Official nameChurch of St Thomas Including Wall, Gates and Gateway
Designated8 January 1959
Reference no.1202562

St Thomas the Martyr is a former Church of England parish church on St Thomas Street in the Redcliffe district of the English port city of Bristol. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a Grade II* listed building.[1]

The building comprises a 14th-century tower attached to a late 18th-century nave and aisles designed by James Allen. Historically a chapel of ease to Bedminster, it became a significant place of worship for the wealthy merchant class of Redcliffe. Although the church survived the Bristol Blitz of World War II, the congregation declined in the post-war period. It was declared redundant and is now in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust,[2] having been vested in the Trust on 17 February 1988.[3]

The building is currently leased by the Churches Conservation Trust to the Romanian Orthodox Parish of Saints Constantine and Helena (Romanian: Parohia Sfinții Împărați Constantin și Elena).[4] The parish was founded in 2011 and is led by Father Ioan Claudiu Moldovan, who also serves as the area's Dean for the Southwest and Wales.[4][5]

History

Early history

The church was likely founded in the 1170s, a period of expansion for Bristol south of the River Avon driven by the prosperity of the wool trade. It was dedicated to Thomas Becket, who was martyred in 1170; the dedication may have been influenced by Becket's role as Chancellor when Bristol received its earliest charter.[6] Throughout the Middle Ages, St Thomas's, along with its neighbour St Mary Redcliffe, functioned as a chapel of ease to the mother church of Bedminster, rather than as an independent parish church.[7]

By the 15th century, the church had been enriched by the area's wealthy merchants, becoming the second largest church in the city after St Mary Redcliffe. The medieval structure was spacious, and the 1673 map by James Millerd depicts it with a central lantern tower or cupola on the nave roof. This was a feature noted in 1480 by the chronicler William Worcester, who measured the church and described the surrounding topography, including a pentice (covered walkway) and a "square house of freestone" for the water conduit.[8] The church became the burial place for several generations of the prominent Canynges family, including William Canynges the Elder (d. 1396) and his son John Canynges (d. 1405).[9] Other notable chantries were founded by John Stokes (1383), John Burton (1454), and Richard de Welles (1333); another was established for intercessory prayer for King Richard II.[10]

The parish was a site of religious dissent in the early 15th century. Following the Oldcastle Revolt of 1414, several parishioners were tried for Lollardy in the church before commissioners of the Bishop of Bath and Wells. In 1499, further heresy trials were conducted involving parishioners accused of opposing pilgrimages and the veneration of images.[9]

Reformation and Civil War

During the English Reformation, the church was a venue for significant preaching; in Lent 1553, the reformer and future martyr Bishop Hugh Latimer preached at St Thomas's.[11] However, the dedication to Thomas Becket became politically dangerous due to Henry VIII's campaign against the saint. In 1538, the King issued a proclamation declaring Becket a traitor; consequently, the church was often referred to as "St Thomas the Apostle" to avoid royal displeasure. The church seal was altered in 1566 to read "Thomas the Apostle of Jesus Christ", though the original dedication was eventually restored in common usage.[6]

The church played a role in the English Civil War. In 1645, following the Parliamentarian recapture of Bristol, the vicar Thomas Collins was sequestrated from the living. During the Interregnum, the church lacked a regular incumbent, relying on stipendiary preachers paid by the vestry.[12] The admiral William Penn, father of the founder of Pennsylvania, was baptised at St Thomas in 1621.[7]

By the 18th century, the area around the church had become a bustling commercial district. In 1710, the vicar complained that the noise from the cattle market held in the streets was hindering church services.[7] The Seven Stars, located beside the church, is historically significant for its association with Thomas Clarkson, who in 1786 collected evidence there from sailors regarding the slave trade, which contributed to the abolition movement.[7]

18th-century reconstruction

By the late 18th century, the medieval fabric, with the exception of the tower, was deemed structurally unsound. In 1789, the architect James Allen, a parishioner living in St Thomas Street, declared the roof and walls dangerous.[13] Despite the medieval building being described by the historian William Barrett as "next to Redcliff, the largest as well as most elegant building", the decision was made to demolish it.[6]

An Act of Parliament was obtained in 1790 to raise funds for the rebuilding. Construction began in 1791, and the new church opened on St Thomas's Day, 21 December 1793. Allen's design was a classical preaching box, intended to be spacious and well-lit, retaining the 15th-century tower at the west end.[13] The reconstruction cost approximately £5,000. Allen went bankrupt the same year the church opened.[6]

19th and 20th centuries

The church underwent significant alterations in the Victorian era. In 1878–80, the architect William Venn Gough carried out a substantial reordering. This involved cutting down the 18th-century high box pews, removing the three-deck pulpit, and installing stencil decoration which was later criticised by architectural historians as "hideous".[14] The restoration cost £3,877; a deficit in funding was avoided by a timely legacy of £500 from Jane Steele, the daughter of the mason who had built the church in the 1790s.[15] Gough also remodelled the top of the medieval tower in 1896–97, adding the pierced parapet and pinnacles to what had previously been described as a "bare, dilapidated summit".[16][17] The church established strong military links during the early 20th century. Before it became the spiritual home of the Royal Tank Regiment, it hosted annual church parades for veterans of the South African War (1899–1902) that concluded at the Boer War Memorial.[18]

Although the church escaped major damage during the Bristol Blitz—a bomb reportedly demolished a shelter in the churchyard but was contained by a brick grave—demographic changes in the city centre led to a decline in the congregation.[19] It ceased to be a parish church in 1956, becoming a centre for industrial mission.[7] During the 1960s, the church hall was used by the Bristol community of the Polish Church in Exile, who held services there in Church Slavonic.[20]

The church was finally closed for regular worship on 19 December 1982. While the diocese claimed the closure went "almost unnoticed", it was strongly criticised by the Old Comrades' Association of the 44th Royal Tank Regiment, who regarded St Thomas's as their spiritual home and maintained a war memorial there.[21][22] In 1989, plans were approved to convert the building into the headquarters of the Orchestra for Europe, a training orchestra for young musicians, but the scheme was delayed by ecclesiastical law and eventually abandoned.[23][24]

Current usage

The building is currently leased by the Churches Conservation Trust to a Romanian Orthodox Church community (Romanian: Biserica Ortodoxă Română Bristol) who use it for worship on Sundays and special days.[25] The community celebrated its first patronal feast at the church in May 2012, an event attended by the Romanian Ambassador Ion Jinga. During this service, a cross for the new altar was donated by the religious singer Teodora Țucă Păunescu.[26] Ambassador Jinga returned to the church for a second official visit in May 2013, addressing a congregation of over 200 people regarding the Romanian diaspora in the United Kingdom.[27] The parish hosts public tours and concerts as part of the annual Heritage Open Days festival.[28]

The church is also used as a venue for secular events, including concerts by artists such as Lady Nade and candlelight performances, as well as art installations like Hew Locke's Colston (2006).[29][30] In 2022, the Trust was awarded a grant of £28,550 by the Enovert Community Trust to carry out urgent conservation work, including re-roofing the tower and lobbies to repair significant water damage.[31]

Architecture and fittings

Exterior

The church presents a mix of architectural styles, combining a Perpendicular Gothic tower with a late Georgian Classical nave. The body of the church, built 1791–93, is constructed of Bath stone ashlar and render. The most significant architectural feature of Allen's design is the east elevation facing St Thomas Street. This facade treats the almost windowless east wall as a variation of a Venetian window; it features paired Ionic pilasters and a central arch topped by a pediment containing a carved cherub's head and swag. The original semi-circular east window was replaced in 1888 by the current circular wheel window.[1] The north elevation is plain, rendered with cement, and pierced by simple semi-circular arched windows.[13]

Situated outside the church on the south side is a conduit known as The Pipe. It was originally fed by a spring on Pylle Hill and has supplied water to the parish since at least the early 15th century. It served an essential role in the local wool trade.[32]

Tower

The 15th-century tower at the west end features three stages with diagonal buttresses and an octagonal stair turret on the south-east corner, capped by a spirelet. The parapet and pinnacles are Victorian additions by Gough. The tower contains a ring of eight bells. The tenor bell was originally cast in 1666 by Roger Purdue of Bristol and bore the inscription: "This bell speaks out, when me you hear come and appear, though Thomas did doubt".[33] However, by 1880 the tenor was chipped, and it was recast by Llewellins & James in 1894. The oldest bells in the ring are the 5th (c. 1425) and the 6th (c. 1480).[34]

Interior

Interior of the church, looking east toward the 1716 reredos
Interior of the church, looking west

The interior is a spacious classical hall, divided into a nave and aisles by square piers with Tuscan capitals supporting semi-circular arches. The nave ceiling is a barrel vault intersected by cross vaults for the clerestory windows, decorated with plaster ribs and cherub heads, a motif repeated throughout the church.[13] The interior was painted white in the late 20th century, removing the Victorian stencilling and lightening the space.[14]

The west end is dominated by a substantial organ gallery of dark oak, dating from 1728. It is supported by Roman Doric columns and features a broken pediment with a central medallion. This gallery was retained from the medieval church during the 18th-century rebuilding.[13]

13th-century figures at the entrance of the church

St Thomas's retains several significant fittings from the earlier church. The reredos is a piece of early 18th-century woodwork (1716), carved from Flemish oak with Corinthian columns, entablature, and a pelican in piety. In 1906, the panels of the reredos were filled with paintings by the German artist Fritz von Kamptz, depicting scenes such as the Sermon on the Mount and the Good Samaritan.[7] On either side of the western entrance to the nave are two carved wooden figures of St Thomas and St John the Baptist; these were discovered in 1940 built into the walls of the nearby Burton's Almshouse during renovations.[35]

The north aisle contains a monument to John Herman Kater (d. 1803), a sugar refiner; appropriately, the tablet is surmounted by a sculpted sugarloaf.[36] Other fittings include a sword rest (1637) for the Lord Mayor of Bristol, a pair of 17th-century chests, and a marble font installed in 1879. A cutlass, reportedly picked up after the 1831 Bristol riots, is preserved in the vestry.[11] Four medieval stone roof bosses, including one depicting two dragons, were returned to the church in 2017. The church previously possessed a set of rare 13th-century Limoges enamel candlesticks and a 14th-century Vulgate Bible. The Bible, one of only three of its type in England, was damaged by floodwater in the tower during the Second World War but was restored in 1977; both the candlesticks and the Bible are now held in museum or archive collections for preservation.[9][37]

Organ

The medieval church housed a notable organ built by John Harris in 1729, which was admired by George Frideric Handel.[38] It was moved to the new church in 1793 and subsequently rebuilt by W. G. Vowles in the 19th century and William Hill & Son & Norman & Beard in 1955. A fire in 1991 caused by an electrical fault destroyed the pipework; the 18th-century case survived, and pipes from the redundant church of St Werburgh were subsequently installed.[39] The organ casing contains historic graffiti, including the name "A Webber" and dates such as "1771" and "1773", which predate the instrument's move to the new building.[40]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Historic England, "Church of St Thomas including wall, gates and gateway, Bristol (1202562)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 11 April 2015
  2. ^ Church of St Thomas the Martyr, Bristol, Churches Conservation Trust, retrieved 30 November 2016
  3. ^ Diocese of Bristol: All Schemes (PDF), Church Commissioners/Statistics, Church of England, 2011, p. 3, retrieved 2 April 2011
  4. ^ a b "Spiritual Joy in Bristol on the Fifth Sunday of Lent". Romanian Orthodox Archdeaconry of the United Kingdom. 6 April 2025. Retrieved 29 December 2025.
  5. ^ "Deaneries: South-West and Wales". Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Retrieved 29 December 2025.
  6. ^ a b c d Manson, Michael S. (Autumn 1983). "A Short History of the Church of St Thomas the Martyr, Bristol". Avon Past. 9. Avon Local History & Archaeology: 29–31.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Bettey, Joseph (2001). The Church of St Thomas the Martyr, Bristol. Series 4. Vol. 152. Churches Conservation Trust.
  8. ^ Fleming, Peter (2023). Time, Space and Power in Later Medieval Bristol. Bristol Record Society. p. 161.
  9. ^ a b c Lewis, Esther. "The hidden history of Bristol St Thomas the Martyr in the fifteenth century" (PDF). Churches Conservation Trust.
  10. ^ Taylor, John (1872). A Book about Bristol. Houlston and Sons. p. 150.
  11. ^ a b "The Church of St Thomas". Western Daily Press. 31 May 1911. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ Harlow, Jonathan (2017). Religious Ministry in Bristol 1603–1689: Uniformity to Dissent. Bristol Record Society Publications. Vol. 69. Bristol Record Society. ISBN 9780901538383.
  13. ^ a b c d e Ison, Walter (1952). The Georgian Buildings of Bristol. London: Faber & Faber. pp. 84–88.
  14. ^ a b Gomme, Bryan; Jenner; Little (1979). Bristol, An Architectural History. Lund Humphries. pp. 102–104. ISBN 9780853314097.
  15. ^ "Restoration of St Thomas Church". Bristol Mercury. 30 November 1880. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
  16. ^ Foyle, Andrew (2004), Bristol, Pevsner Architectural Guides, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, pp. 110–111, ISBN 9780300104424
  17. ^ "Rambling Observations: No. XIII - The Church of St Thomas". Bristol Mirror. 5 November 1842. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
  18. ^ "South African Veterans". Western Daily Press. 28 May 1934. p. 7 – via Newspapers.com.
  19. ^ "St Thomas's Church". Western Daily Press. 25 October 1943. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
  20. ^ Thomas, Christine (25 May 1967). "Polish 'Exiles' Get Priest of Their Own". Bristol Evening Post. p. 40 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ Prestage, Mike (11 November 1982). "No protests over death of church". Bristol Evening Post. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
  22. ^ Onions, Ian (18 November 1982). "Church closure under attack". Bristol Evening Post. p. 38 – via Newspapers.com.
  23. ^ "Europe's musical pride on the move". Bristol Evening Post. 18 August 1989. p. 13 – via Newspapers.com.
  24. ^ "Doubts over St Thomas'". Bristol Evening Post. 1 November 1989. p. 62 – via Newspapers.com.
  25. ^ "The Romanian School in Bristol". Romanian Cultural Centre London. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 29 December 2025.
  26. ^ "First anniversary of the Romanian Orthodox Community in Bristol" (Press release). Embassy of Romania to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. 21 May 2012. Retrieved 29 December 2025.
  27. ^ "Ambassador's of Romania visit to Bristol" (Press release). Embassy of Romania to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. 20 May 2013. Retrieved 29 December 2025.
  28. ^ "Valuing Versatility - Heritage Open Days, St Thomas the Martyr, Bristol". Headfirst Bristol. 10 September 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2025.
  29. ^ "Review: Lady Nade, The Church of St Thomas the Martyr". Bristol24/7. 22 October 2022.
  30. ^ Wills, Mary; Dresser, Madge (2020). The Transatlantic Slave Economy and England’s Built Environment: A Research Audit (Report). Research Report Series. Vol. 247. Historic England. p. 65. ISSN 2059-4453.
  31. ^ "CCT awarded £28,550 by Enovert Community Trust for Bristol conservation project". Churches Conservation Trust. 6 January 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2025.
  32. ^ "Historic Bristol Parish: Pipe, Almshouses and Market of St. Thomas". Western Daily Press. 13 December 1932. p. 6 – via Newspapers.com.
  33. ^ "Inscriptions on Bristol Bells". Western Daily Press. 18 November 1862. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
  34. ^ "Bristol, S Thomas M [12039]". Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers. Central Council of Church Bell Ringers. Retrieved 23 December 2025.
  35. ^ "Discovery at St Thomas". Western Daily Press. 29 June 1940. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
  36. ^ ""To be, or not to be?"". Western Daily Press. 28 December 1946. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
  37. ^ "Rare bible gets top treatment". Bristol Evening Post. 19 July 1977. p. 9 – via Newspapers.com.
  38. ^ Boeringer, James (1983), Organa Britannica: Organs in Great Britain, 1660-1860: A Complete Edition of the Sperling Notebooks and Drawings in the Library of the Royal College of Organists, London and Toronto: Associated University Presses, p. 337, ISBN 9780838718940
  39. ^ "Avon, Bristol, St. Thomas the Martyr (City), St. Thomas Street". National Pipe Organ Register. British Institute of Organ Studies. Retrieved 24 December 2025.
  40. ^ Linda Wilson. "The Church of St Thomas the Martyr, Bristol: Drawings, graffiti and possible ritual protection marks". Raking Light. Retrieved 24 December 2023.