The Church Today
The Parish Church of St. Mary the Virgin stands above the High Street in Ecclesfield on the
northern perimeter of the City of Sheffield. The Church is an ancient one and boasts many fine
windows and architectural features.
Sometimes called the "Minster of the moors" - Not because of its size but because in times past
the parish was vast being some 64 square miles in area and reaching almost to the Cheshire
border. The Church is a Grade 1 listed building which has been updated and maintained in an
aesthetically pleasing manner. Externally there is a fine graveyard, lytchgate and war
memorial, the area around the Church is lightly shaded by mature trees and the local Village
green complete with stocks sits close by.
Recent improvements include a new roof, sound system, hearing loop, additional internal
rooms for meetings and activities, a toilet with disabled and baby changing facilities and a
kitchen. The Church has a robed choir, an excellent pipe organ and a music group to support
its regular Sunday services and festival services. St Mary’s is unusual in that it retains four
churchwardens and its patron is now its own Parochial Church Council.
For a fuller history of the Church please click on the Church History bar.
The Old Parish of Ecclesfield
Ecclesfield, a parish-town, in the upper-division of Strafforth and Tickhill, liberty of
Hallamshire; 4½ miles N. of Sheffield, 7 from Rotherham, 10 from Barnsley, 48 from York.
Pop. 7,163. The Church is a vicarage, dedicated to St. Mary, in the deanery of Doncaster,
value, £19. 3s. 4d. p.r. £150. Patron, the Duke of Norfolk.
It is a very extensive parish, the village of which lies due north of Sheffield, and although all
the Nails manufactured in Hallamshire are made in this parish, and it produces both coal and
iron stone, yet still the general character is rather that of an agricultural than a manufacturing
district. --Hunter's Hallamshire.
Originally, Ecclesfield was the parish church for the parish of Hallamshire which included
what is now the City of Sheffield. It was an extensive parish, one of the largest in England.
William the Conqueror gave this parish to Roger de Busli, one of his captains, from whose
posterity it passed through the families of De Lovetot, Vipont, Furnival, Nevil, Talbot, and
lastly, to the noble family of Howard.
At the end of the eleventh century, a new building was erected by the de Lovetot family, Lords
of Hallamshire, and gave it a monastic appropriation, to St Wandrilles in Normandy. The
Priory and church became dissociated in 1310 and transferred to the Carthusian monks of St.
Anne of Coventry. The church was extensively re-built in 1470 to 1500 and most of the visible
building dates from this, with the main columns the oldest features dating back to 1200,
possibly from the de Lovetot building. At the reformation, the patronage passed from the prior
to the lords of the manor and the Duke of Norfolk.
"In the village of Ecclesfield, very soon after the conquest, a religious house was erected,
dependant on the foreign monastery of St. Wandrille. It was under the superintendent of a
Priory; but of its founders we are ignorant." --Hunter's Hallamshire.
The Modern Parish of Ecclesfield
A village on the northern outskirts of Sheffield, now part of Sheffield City, with a population of
7,163. Set in open country and farmland, some manufacturing industry remains but many of
the old companies, such as Newton Chambers, Greens Foundry and Brightside Foundry have
closed as has all nail and file making activity.
Ecclesfield parish church remains, at the heart of Ecclesfield Deanery, part of the Diocese of
Sheffield. The Deanery includes many parishes which were previously part of the old
Ecclesfield parish:- Bolsterstone, Bradfield, Brightside,Chapeltown, Deepcar, Pitsmoor,
Grenoside, Mortomley, Oughtibridge, Norwood, Parson Cross, Southey, Fir Vale, Shiregreen
and Stocksbridge. The church remains an extremely impressive building, still worthy of it's
seventeenth century description "Minster of the moors". It is unusually large for a village
church, and is Grade 1 listed.
Other unusual features include the patronage, which is now with the church's own Parochial
Church Council, and the existence of four church wardens. As a link to the huge parish of the
past, the vicar remains patron of both Bradfield (which is a rectory) and Grenoside Churches.
The building has been sympathetically improved with a new roof and internal rooms
including a toilet and kitchen. The church retains a robed choir and a fine pipe organ with
three services every Sunday plus daily morning prayer.
[Description(s) by Andrew Robinson, 2005, with extracts edited from various 19th century
sources by Colin Hinson © 2007]
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Church and Parish - An Overview
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Welcome to St Mary's Parish Church, Ecclesfield
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