St Luke's Church, Stoke Bardolph
Appearance
St Luke's Church, Stoke Bardolph | |
---|---|
52°58′4.67″N 1°2′20.35″W / 52.9679639°N 1.0389861°W | |
Location | Stoke Bardolph |
Country | England |
Denomination | Church of England |
History | |
Dedication | St Luke |
Administration | |
Diocese | Diocese of Southwell and Nottingham |
Archdeaconry | Nottingham |
Deanery | Gedling |
Parish | Stoke Bardolph |
St Luke's Church, Stoke Bardolph is a parish church in the Church of England[1] in Stoke Bardolph.
History
[edit]The church is built of plain brick dating from 1844, with alterations and extension to the chancel of 1910.
It is in a joint parish with two other churches:
Rev. Thomas Arnold Lee was born in 1889. He was a Durham graduate who had taught in schools in Cambridge, Singapore and Leeds; he had also served as a curate in Southwark Cathedral and at Leeds. During the First World War he had been a chaplain to HM Forces...in 1948 (he became) rector of Gedling with Stoke Bardolph (1948–57), and was made a canon of Southwell in 1955. He then retired to Buckinghamshire, where he was vicar of Grendon Underwood and Edgcott 1957–61. He died in 1972.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ The Buildings of England: Nottinghamshire: Nikolaus Pevsner.
- ^ The Rectors of St Peter's (1853-today) - St Peter's Church, Nottingham, England on-line magazine Archived 2008-05-11 at the Wayback Machine