Students at St Saviour's
What's it like to be a student at St Saviour's church?
St Saviour's Guildford Christmas 2015
Come and join us for a merry little Christmas.
Christmas Vox Pop St Saviours HD 1080p
Andy Ruddy- Falter- Live at St Saviour's Church
'Falter' Live at St. Saviour's Church, Guildford. 1/5/12.
andyruddy.com
facebook.com/andyruddymusic
St. Saviour's Church
Music: Flux Pavilion - I Cant Stop
Mike Norris welcome video
St Paul's Church manager popped across to the UK to visit us and find out what St Saviour's is like. Just to help Mike and Bex feel as welcome as possible of course! Look to find out the results
Church
St Margaret Church-Bowers Gifford
Do we ignore war memorials?
With Revd Andy Wheeler, of St Saviour's Guildford.
Saint John the Evangelist Newtimber Sussex Church & Cemetery
The church was built in the thirteenth century - some of the parishioners would have lived in the Saxon Settlement of Saddlescombe.
The Nave and chancel are Early English work although the walls were resurfaced and the windows renewed in the restoration of 1875.
The West Tower was built in 1839. A list of former rectors starting in 1270 can be seen on the south west wall of the nave.
The church bell was originally 18th century. It became badly cracked and St Swithuns church in East Grinstead gave one of theirs in exchange. The font is 19th Century but the block of wood used as a stand for the water ewer is a piece of mediaeval rood screen and still has some of the original carving and traces of colour.
The Pulpit is Jacobean and has 10 panels carved in the style of the 17th century
The Lectern is modern incorporating 2 ancient carved figures found in the vestry. It was given in memory of Mary Prizeman a former churchwarden in 1983. The original lectern, a finely carved wooden eagle was stolen.
Frank Wiscombe Remembrance 8 May 2018 (Intro and Tolling of Bell)
Francis Frank Wiscombe was born in the Dorset village of Whitchurch Canonicorum, just a few miles from Lyme Regis, on 19th August 1880. He was baptised at the parish church, St Candida and Holy Cross, on 5th September.
Frank was the son of Jane Wiscombe, the unmarried daughter of John and Anna Wiscombe, and he never knew who his father was. Frank lived with his mother and grandparents before moving up to London to be with a Whitchurch girl, Elizabeth Hodder, who was working as a housemaid. They lived in Crouch End, where there were still open Fields within walking distance, and Frank worked as a cattleman.
Frank and Elizabeth married at St Saviour’s, Upper Holloway, on Boxing Day 1900. They moved south, to Tooting Graveney, where they had a daughter, Bessie, and then came to Banstead, living at Merton Cottages (now no.13), Shrubland Road. Frank worked as a farm labourer at the Asylum on Banstead Downs.
London County Council encouraged their staff to join up when war broke out, promising to keep their job open and continuing to pay the salaries of their employees while they were with the Armed Forces. Frank attested at Guildford in January 1915 and joined his home county's regiment, the Dorsetshire Regiment.
He was posted to the 6th (Service) Battalion and trained at Wareham and Romsey before going to France in July. They held trenches at Ypres throughout the autumn and winter of 1915. In February 1916, Frank was wounded during an attack on The Bluff and was invalided out for treatment for several months.
He returned to action in July, while the Battle of the Somme was being fought, and was transferred to the 2nd Duke of Edinburgh’s (Wiltshire Regiment), who had been badly cut up in the early Fighting. He fought on the Somme in 1916 and then on the First days of the Battle of Arras and the Third Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele) in 1917. In both battles, their experience on the First day was severe enough that they were unable to take part in the rest of the Fighting.
Frank was a stretcher-‐bearer and was lucky enough not to be in the line with his battalion when the Germans attacked in March 1918. The 2nd Wiltshires were virtually wiped out. Frank then served at Ypres in a composite battalion of Wiltshires and Bedfordshires during the Fourth Battle of Ypres and was with them when the Germans attacked south of Ypres on 8th May. Frank had done a dangerous job in difFicult circumstances in some of the deadliest battles of the war and come through but now his luck ran out. He was reported wounded and missing that day. His body was later recovered and he is buried at Klein-‐Vierstraat British Cemetery. He was 37.
Researched and presented by James Crouch of the Banstead History Research Group (bansteadhistory.com)
St. Saviour's Church | Crossing the Bar (2014)
Originally Uploaded July 2014
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Performed at St. Saviour's Church - Pimlico
Filmed by Keith Knox
Lord, I Have Loved the Habitation
Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises
Lord, I Have Loved the Habitation · The Ecclesium Choir
British Church Music Series 10: Music of Richard Shephard
℗ 2006 Priory Records
Released on: 2006-12-12
Music Publisher: Royal School of Church Mus
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Drone Footage over Thomas Coats Memorial Church. Paisley, Scotland
Fantastic footage courtesy of who has let the paisley.org.uk website share these stunning videos over Paisley.
Find out more about the town of Paisley by visiting our website
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DJI Spark Drone footage - YORKSHIRE SKIES - St Saviour Church Richmond Hill
01 12 17 St Saviour Church, Richmond Hill.
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The church was built between 1842 and 1845 to designs by architect John Macduff Derick. The church was anonymously funded by Dr. Pusey, Regius Professor of Hebrew at Oxford, a leading advocate of the Oxford Movement. A tall spire, modelled on the spire of St. Mary's, Oxford and pinnacles along the eaves were not built. The building was grade I listed on 26 September 1963
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Status - Parish church
Heritage designation - Grade I listed
Designated - 26 September 1963
Architect - John Macduff Derick
Architectural type - Church
Style - Gothic Revival architecture
Groundbreaking - 1842
Completed - 1845
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Quiet Hours by onlymeith (c) copyright 2012 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license.
Our Saviour's Anglican Church Holds 2017 Festival Of Nine Lessons And Carols
John Joubert: O Lorde, the maker of al thing
The Choir of Somerville College, Oxford
Robert Smith (organ)
David Crown (conductor)
Christ Church Christiana Hundred, Wilmington (Delaware)
3 July 2014
Website:
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Conductor's Website:
Organist's Website:
Recorded and edited by Stefan Schwarz
(
Installation of George Clarkson as Dean (Various) - Guildford Cathedral Choir (Barry Rose)
Guildford Cathedral Choir, directed by Barry Rose:
Installation at Guildford Cathedral, 9 September 1961:
(The installation of George Clarkson as Dean of the cathedral by the Bishop of Guildford, George Reindorp, was the choir’s first major “occasion” since the Consecration in May of the same year. The circumstances were controversial because of the decision by the Church of England not to appoint former Provost Walter Boulton to the post of Dean and to choose George Clarkson, then Bishop of Pontefract, instead – an issue to which the new Dean refers in his Address)
Processional hymn: Christ is made the sure foundation (“Westminster Abbey”)
Hymn: Come, Holy Ghost, our souls inspire (“Veni Creator Spiritus”)
INSTALLATION: Rt Rev George Reindorp, Bishop of Guildford
Anthem: Ubi caritas et amor (Brian Easdale)
Hymn: Ye watchers and ye holy ones (“Lasst uns erfreuen”)
ADDRESS: Rt Rev George Clarkson, Dean of Guildford
Hymn: O worship the King (“Hanover”)
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Publicity drive for The Ghost Tour of Guildford, 22nd January 2011
White Lion Walk kindly allowed me and a lot of other local events free publicity in their arcade one Saturday in January 2011. We all went out for a photo shoot for the Surrey Advertiser and, sure enough, when the photo was published you couldn't even see any part of me, let alone my face!
Frank Wiscombe Remembrance 8 May 2018 (Eulogy and Prayers)
Francis Frank Wiscombe was born in the Dorset village of Whitchurch Canonicorum, just a few miles from Lyme Regis, on 19th August 1880. He was baptised at the parish church, St Candida and Holy Cross, on 5th September.
Frank was the son of Jane Wiscombe, the unmarried daughter of John and Anna Wiscombe, and he never knew who his father was. Frank lived with his mother and grandparents before moving up to London to be with a Whitchurch girl, Elizabeth Hodder, who was working as a housemaid. They lived in Crouch End, where there were still open Fields within walking distance, and Frank worked as a cattleman.
Frank and Elizabeth married at St Saviour’s, Upper Holloway, on Boxing Day 1900. They moved south, to Tooting Graveney, where they had a daughter, Bessie, and then came to Banstead, living at Merton Cottages (now no.13), Shrubland Road. Frank worked as a farm labourer at the Asylum on Banstead Downs.
London County Council encouraged their staff to join up when war broke out, promising to keep their job open and continuing to pay the salaries of their employees while they were with the Armed Forces. Frank attested at Guildford in January 1915 and joined his home county's regiment, the Dorsetshire Regiment.
He was posted to the 6th (Service) Battalion and trained at Wareham and Romsey before going to France in July. They held trenches at Ypres throughout the autumn and winter of 1915. In February 1916, Frank was wounded during an attack on The Bluff and was invalided out for treatment for several months.
He returned to action in July, while the Battle of the Somme was being fought, and was transferred to the 2nd Duke of Edinburgh’s (Wiltshire Regiment), who had been badly cut up in the early Fighting. He fought on the Somme in 1916 and then on the First days of the Battle of Arras and the Third Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele) in 1917. In both battles, their experience on the First day was severe enough that they were unable to take part in the rest of the Fighting.
Frank was a stretcher-‐bearer and was lucky enough not to be in the line with his battalion when the Germans attacked in March 1918. The 2nd Wiltshires were virtually wiped out. Frank then served at Ypres in a composite battalion of Wiltshires and Bedfordshires during the Fourth Battle of Ypres and was with them when the Germans attacked south of Ypres on 8th May. Frank had done a dangerous job in difFicult circumstances in some of the deadliest battles of the war and come through but now his luck ran out. He was reported wounded and missing that day. His body was later recovered and he is buried at Klein-‐Vierstraat British Cemetery. He was 37.
Researched and presented by James Crouch of the Banstead History Research Group (bansteadhistory.com)