St Peter's Church, Binton
St Peter's Church is the
History
There has been a church on the site since at least 1286. The current church was built in 1875 and has views south over the
Signs of the original church remain, however. A picture of the original church can be seen at the back of the current church. There is a 15th-century font and cover and a mediaeval parish chest with three locks and bound with iron bands. Furthermore, there is a stained-glass window in memory of
The main feature of the church of St Peter is a memorial window by Kempe (1915), dedicated to Robert Falcon Scott and his co-explorers who died in their failed attempt to return from the South Pole. The window shows four scenes of the 1912 expedition. Scott had married Kathleen Bruce, sister of the Reverend Lloyd Harvey Bruce, Binton's rector 1906–24. Scott frequently visited the Rectory (now The Grange). Alongside the window is a memorial cross for the Revd Bruce, with a bronze sculpture of Christ designed by Kathleen.
The church has one bell, cast by Henry Bagley of Chacombe in 1669.
Just to the right of the church
The church supports a colony of nesting swifts.[citation needed]
References
- ^ 'Parishes: Binton', in A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 3, Barlichway Hundred, ed. Philip Styles (London, 1945), pp. 62–65.
- ^ a b "Binton Parish Council – Home". www.binton.org.uk. Retrieved 16 February 2018.