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St Michael's Church, Kirkham

St Michael's Church, Kirkham
Kirkham Parish Church.jpg
St Michael's Church, Kirkham, from the southeast
St Michael's Church, Kirkham is located in the Borough of Fylde
St Michael's Church, Kirkham
St Michael's Church, Kirkham
Location in the Borough of Fylde
Coordinates: 53°47′03″N 2°52′16″W / 53.7843°N 2.8710°W / 53.7843; -2.8710
OS grid reference SD 427,323
Location Church Street, Kirkham, Lancashire
Country England
Denomination Anglican
Website St Michael's, Kirkham
History
Dedication St Michael
Architecture
Status Parish church
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Grade II*
Designated 20 September 1985
Architect(s) Robert Roper,
Edmund Sharpe,
Joseph Hansom (?)
Architectural type Church
Style Gothic Revival
Groundbreaking 1822
Completed 1853
Construction cost £5,000 (nave)
(equivalent to £460,000 in 2015)
Specifications
Capacity 600
Spire height 150 feet (46 m)
Materials Ashlar sandstone, slate roofs
Administration
Parish Kirkham
Deanery Kirkham
Archdeaconry Lancaster
Diocese Blackburn
Province York
Clergy
Vicar(s) Rev Rick Bunday
Assistant priest(s) Rev Kevan Thorn
Laity
Reader(s) Alan Sawyer
Director of music Edward Rugman
Churchwarden(s) Caroline O'Brien
Caroline Wordsworth
Flower guild Christine Lever
Parish administrator Barry Dann

St Michael's Church is in the town of Kirkham, Lancashire, England. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building. It is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Blackburn, the archdeaconry of Lancaster and the deanery of Kirkham.

The earliest evidence of a church on the site is in 684 AD. Kirkham was one of the oldest foundations in Lancashire and one of only three listed in the Doomsday Book as existing in Amounderness. This hundred was part of the vast possessions of Roger earl of Poictou and the church was held by the Priory Church of St. Mary, Lancaster. William of York (died 1154) issued a charter to return the church to Shrewsbury Abbey. In a later charter, dated 5 December 1280, King Edward I conveyed the advowson of Kirkham to the abbott and convent of Vale Royal Abbey which held the church until the Dissolution in the reign King Henry VIII. It was then given to the dean and chapter of Christ Church, Oxford.

The first recorded vicar, in May 1239, was Will de Ebor, also described as "Cancus de Ebor" and said to have been appointed by Richard Duke of Cornwall.


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