Hill-Bagging

By Dugswell2

Holy Trinity Church, Wray

Until the 19th Century the ancient village of Wray, settled and named by the Vikings one thousand years earlier, never had a church. The village was laid out as a model agricultural township in the 12th century but no church was built. The folk of Wray were obliged to walk three miles to the Parish Church of St Wilfrid at Melling.

The need for a church in the village became pressing as new trades and industries arrived at the beginning of the Victorian age, and as the population increased. Coal miners, hatters, wood workers, nail makers, cloggers and quarrymen joined workers in the old occupations of farm work and domestic service.

Edmund Sharpe of Lancaster designed the church building. Work started in 1839, and was completed the following year. The Bishop of Chester consecrated it on 1st July 1841. It was a plain, rectangular construction costing £700. The land was the gift of the Reverend Hoskins of Canterbury who had inherited farms in the district.

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